Legal scholars suggest former president’s complaint may bring the attention he craves but doesn’t present a serious legal argument
Donald Trump may have filed lawsuits against Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, claiming he and other conservatives have been censored – but legal scholars say his case is likely doomed to fail.
The former president was suspended from Twitter, Facebook and YouTube following the 6 January Capitol attack over fears he would incite further violence. Trump on Wednesday filed class-action lawsuits in federal court in Miami against the three companies, arguing these suspensions violated the first amendment, despite the fact that the companies are private and therefore subject to different rules.
“Trump has the first amendment argument exactly wrong,” said Paul Barrett, deputy director of the NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights. “The first amendment applies to government censorship or speech regulation. It does not stop private sector corporations from regulating content on their platforms.” Continue reading...
http://dlvr.it/S3GrTd
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
The After Dark Bandit
The police couldn’t figure out how the perpetrator ripped off two banks at the same time. Until they discovered there wasn’t just one robber...
-
At the New York Times trial, the former governor was impressive at first. It didn’t last. BY SETH STEVENSON | Slate FEB 10, 20228:31 PM S...
-
A tale of two hot dog vendors claims the top spot in this year’s voting, outpolling four other favorites. All five are presented here. Dec. ...
No comments:
Post a Comment