Reps. Eshoo and Jerry McNerney (D-CA) sent a letter – on Congressional letterhead and signed specifically as members of Congress – accusing conservative news outlets of misinformation and asking a dozen television providers what they plan to do about it. Are they truly blind to the First Amendment concern here, or did they simply hope no one would take notice?
Garbage In, Garbage Out
The letter clearly pushes the narrative that conservatives are misinformed and that certain outlets maliciously spewed fake news. To which bastions of unbiased truth and journalistic integrity do the members of Congress turn? Amongst the list of sources in the endnotes is USA Today, Vox, Slate, CNN, and HBO's Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. Yes, John Oliver, the British comedian. His contribution to the letter was that "the kind of misinformation [OANN] is spewing right now could end up getting people killed."
"Some purported news outlets have long been misinformation rumor mills and conspiracy theory hotbeds that produce content that leads to real harm," the letter explains. What evidence supports this? According to the corresponding endnote, they base this on an analysis from USA Today calling election-fraud claims "baseless" and a 2016 Vox article blaming Trump's election on fake news. Yes, that's right; one article suggests Trump's was a fraudulent win while the other says any concern Biden won by fraud is baseless.
But, like most related stories from the leftist press, the esteemed members of Congress take it a step farther by explicitly stating that conservative "fake news" led to the Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol. According to the opening lines of the letter:
The Best Defense Is … Hypocrisy And Error?
While on the topic of flawed presuppositions, how about a look at Rep. Eshoo's understanding of the First Amendment? "The First Amendment, my friends, starts with four words: Congress shall make no laws," she explained.
Well, yes, but no.
"Congress shall make no laws" is five words – and the last word isn't even correct. Talk about an unfortunate slip after saying that "it's always worthwhile to listen, and listen well," and that "we have a lot of misinformation going on right in the middle of this hearing." Just to be clear, here's the First Amendment, in full:
- Democrats supported the right to protest – even to the extent of calling violent riots "mostly peaceful protests" – and tried to stop local and state governments (which aren't Congress) from policing the riots.
- Democrats argued that protesting the National Anthem is protected political speech – and lambasted sports teams and leagues (which aren't Congress) for forbidding such protest.
- Democrats – including these two – are perfectly willing to let Congress make a law "respecting the establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The Equality Act, which these two co-sponsored, would explicitly end religious organizations' right to refuse to hire LGBTQ employees, including ministers, despite multiple scriptural restrictions, including the requirement that a church leader be "the husband of one wife" (1 Timothy, 3:2). This prohibits "the free exercise thereof."
Authority Implied
While the letters don't technically represent Congressional action requiring the recipients to drop certain networks, the authors' authority to make such demands is certainly implied – and intentionally so. Did Reps. Eshoo and McNerney accidentally send these letters out with "Congress of the United States Washington, DC 20515" at the top? Did they unintentionally sign their names above the printed "Anna G. Eshoo Member of Congress" and "Jerry McNerney Member of Congress"? Of course not.
It is exactly for this reason that the DoD restricts even retired soldiers from engaging in certain types of political activity, in or out of uniform, lest their "political activities imply or appear to imply official sponsorship, approval, or endorsement." Do these letters, sent on official congressional letterhead, not imply that the sense of Congress is that these outlets should be forced off the air?
Perhaps these representatives didn't violate the First Amendment – but it's fair to say it sure looks like they tried.
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The Conservative Dispatch with content syndicated from TheLibertyLoft.com with permission.
Tags: The Consevative Dispatch, First Amendment Farce, Dems Defend A Demand, For Media CensorshipTo share or post to your site, click on "Post Link". Please mention / link to the ARRA News Service and "Like" Facebook Page - Thanks!
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