The Atlantic

The Hypocrisy Underlying the Campus-Speech Controversy

Conservative lawmakers can’t seem to decide how they feel about government influencing private institutions’ speech policies.
Source: Graeme Sloan / Sipa / AP

Earlier this month, Congress held a dramatic hearing with the heads of three private corporations that manage important forums for public debate. Members of Congress criticized these leaders in the strongest possible terms for their alleged failure to stem harmful speech on their property. The White House weighed in the next day to denounce the leaders’ equivocal answers, and both the Biden administration and Congress have announced multiple investigations into whether these and other institutions have violated federal law by not cracking down on this speech.

The previous paragraph obviously describes the efforts by federal lawmakers to pressure university presidents to more aggressively police anti-Semitic speech on campus. But it could just as easily describe another recent pressure campaign—the one directed at social-media platforms. These companies’ CEOs, too, have been to account for their by the White House, been , and had with government employees about what speech they allow on their platforms.

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