- #141
BobG
Science Advisor
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turbo-1 said:If there is to be a referendum on set-backs that would protect organic crops (including valuable seed crops) from contamination by GMO crops, what would happen? Monsanto will jump right in and buy up all the available ad-time in news-hours and prime-time in our tiny broadcast TV market, and the organic growers will not be able to get their message out. "Free speech" to the people with the deep pockets - no access to the media for small farmers that don't have a lot of money.
The specific example might seem to be an exception, but it does illustrate what I meant by asking whether freedom of speech protects just the content, or does it mean the effort to present a message can't be restricted either. I.e. - freedom of speech means the media (the "roads") have to be unregulated as well.
I can think of a more relevant example of the media, i.e. the "road", being spoiled so badly it became unusable, even if this example didn't pertain to campaigns. During the Schiavo fiasco, one group of people figured out a way to overwhelm search engines so any search for Judge Greer, the judge that decided the case, only displayed page after page of Greer hate sites. That went beyond presenting a viewpoint. That reached the point of deliberately destroying the internet as a medium for finding information. It was the equivalent of blowing up the bridges to bring the flow of information to a halt.
Google revised their algorithms to supposedly prevent that from happening in the future, but I'd predict that new ways to jam search engines will be as prevalent as new viruses and malware. Particularly contentious issues will be jammed so badly by both sides that no one will be able to learn anything about the issue except from Rachel Maddow and Sean Hannity.
The definition of freedom of speech and separation of the content of speech vs the media used to present that speech goes beyond just election campaigns.
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