Keeping up with the corruption of the Covid regime feels like drinking from a firehose. The volume of the fraud, the pace of new discoveries, and the breadth of the operations are overwhelming. This makes it imperative for groups like Brownstone Institute to digest the onslaught of information and communicate salient themes and dispositive facts, particularly given the dereliction of mainstream media.
On Monday, the House Judiciary Committee released a report on how the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) ācolluded with Big Tech and ādisinformationā partners to censor Americans,ā adding to the informational firehose we work to imbibe.
The 36-page report raises three familiar issues: first, government actors worked with third parties to overturn the First Amendment; second, censors prioritized political narratives over truthfulness; and third, an unaccountable bureaucracy hijacked American society.
- CISAās Collusion to Overturn the First Amendment
The House Report reveals that CISA, a branch of the Department of Homeland Security, worked with social media platforms to censor posts it considered dis-, mis-, or malinformation. Brian Scully, the head of CISAās censorship team, conceded that this process, known as āswitchboarding,ā would ātrigger content moderation.ā
Additionally, CISA funded the nonprofit EI-ISAC in 2020 to bolster its censorship operations. EI-ISAC worked to report and track āmisinformation across all channels and platforms.ā In launching the nonprofit, the government boasted that it āleverage[d] DHS CISAās relationship with social media organizations to ensure priority treatment of misinformation reports.ā
The switchboard programs directly contradict sworn testimony from CISA Director Jen Easterly. āWe donāt censor anything⦠we donāt flag anything to social media organizations at all,ā Esterly told Congress in March. āWe donāt do any censorship.ā Her statement was more than a lie; it omitted the institutionalization of the practice she denied. The agencyās initiatives relied on a collusive apparatus of private-public partnerships designed to suppress unapproved information.
This should sound familiar.
Alex Berenson gained access to thousands of Twitter communications that uncovered concrete evidence that government actors ā including White House Covid Advisor Andy Slavitt ā worked to censor him for criticizing Bidenās Covid policies.
White House Director of Digital Strategy Rob Flaherty privately lobbied social media groups to remove a video of Tucker Carlson reporting the link between Johnson & Johnsonās vaccine and blood clots.
Facebook worked with the CDC to censor posts related to the Covid ālab-leakā hypothesis. Company employees later met with the Department of Health and Human Services to de-platform the ādisinformation dozen,ā a group including Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.
These were not cherry-picked examples – they were part of an institutional collusion to strip Americans of their First Amendment rights. Journalists Michael Shellenberger and Matt Taibbi exposed the āCensorship Industrial Complex,ā a collection of the worldās most powerful government agencies, NGOs, and private corporations that worked together to silence dissent.
The Supreme Court has held that it is āaxiomaticā that the government cannot āinduce, encourage, or promote private persons to accomplish what it is constitutionally forbidden to accomplish.ā Yet, CISA has joined the disturbing tendency of public-private partnerships designed to impede Americansā right to information and freedom of speech.
- Political Operatives
Second, these programs were not idealistic attempts to promote the truth; they were calculated programs designed to quash inconvenient but truthful narratives.
The report outlines how CISA censored āmalinformation – truthful information that, according to the government, may carry the potential to mislead.ā Journalist Lee Fang later wrote that the malinformation campaign āhighlights not only the broad authority that the federal government has to shape the political content available to the public, but also the toolkit that it relies upon to limit scrutiny in the regulation of speech.ā
In this system, uncensored information has a tacit government approval, amounting to a system of widespread propaganda.
āState and local election officials used the CISA-funded EI-ISAC in an effort to silence criticism and political dissent,ā the report notes. āFor example, in August 2022, a Loudon County, Virginia, government official reported a Tweet featuring an unedited video of a county official ābecause it was posted as part of a larger campaign to discredit the word ofā that official. The Loudon County officialās remark that the account she flagged āis connected to Parents Against Critical Race Theoryā reveals that her āmisinformation reportā was nothing more than a politically motivated censorship attempt.ā
The officials supporting the operation remained unrepentant in their aim to advance political agendas. Dr. Kate Starbird, a member of CISAās āMisinformation & Disinformationā subcommittee, lamented that many Americans seem to āaccept malinformation as āspeechā and within democratic norms.ā
Of course, the program explicitly violated the Constitution. The First Amendment does not discriminate based on the veracity of a statement. āSome false statements are inevitable if there is to be an open and vigorous expression of views in public and private conversation,ā the Supreme Courtās controlling opinion held in United States v. Alvarez. But CISA – led by zealots like Dr. Starbird – appointed themselves the arbiters of truth and worked with the most powerful information companies in the world to purge dissent.
This was part of a larger political campaign.
Hunter Bidenās laptop, natural immunity, the lab-leak theory, and side effects of the vaccine were all censored at the governmentās behest. The truth of the reports were not at issue; instead, they presented inconvenient narratives for Washingtonās political class, who then used the Orwellian label of āmalinformationā to lend cover to eviscerating the First Amendment.
- The Terror of the Administrative State
Third, the report exposes the increasing power of the administrative state. Federal bureaucrats rely on anonymity and unaccountability. Private industry employees could never oversee a disaster like the Covid response and maintain their jobs. Itād be like if BPās head of safety for the Gulf of Mexico received a promotion after the oil spill.
But unelected officilals like CISA officials enjoy ever-increasing power over Americansā lives without having to answer for their calamities. Suzanne Spaulding, a member of the Misinformation & Disinformation Subcommittee, warned that it was āonly a matter of time before someone realizes we exist and starts asking about our work.ā
Spauldingās comment reflects the power that CISA wields and the benefit it derives from its lack of public exposure. Most Americans have never heard of CISA despite its overwhelming influence over lockdowns.
In March 2020, CISA divided the American workforce into categories of āessentialā and ānonessential.ā Within hours, California became the first state to issue a āstay at homeā edict. This began a previously unimaginable assault on Americansā civil liberties.
The House Report indicates that CISA was a central actor in censoring criticism of the Covid regime in the ensuing months and years. The agency is representative of the cabal of censorial and unaccountable officials engaged in public-private partnerships designed to keep us in the dark.
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