President Donald Trump used part of his speech before the United Nations Tuesday to warn of the growing accumulation of power by big tech companies. In one of the Presidents strongest statements on social media bias yet, Trump argued that social media censorship is incompatible with a free society. He also drew attention to the growing trend of censorship, canceling, and blacklisting in general.
We must always be skeptical of those who want conformity and control, said the President. Even in free nations, we see alarming signs and new challenges to liberty.
A small number of social media platforms are acquiring immense power, over what we can see and over what we are allowed to say, he continued.
A permanent political class is openly disdainful, dismissive and defiant of the will of the people. A faceless bureaucracy operates in secret and weakens democratic rule. Media and academic institutions push flat-out assaults on our histories, traditions and values.
In the United States, my administration has made clear to social media companies that we will uphold the right of free speech.
Trumps statements put him at odds with globalist political leaders, who want social media platforms to engage in more censorship, not less. At a summit dubbed the Christchurch Call for Action earlier this year, the leaders of France, Germany, Britain, and New Zealand demanded social media platforms clamp down on violent extremism.
President Trumps White House publicly refused to co-sign the call for action.
Censorship and discrimination on the basis of political viewpoint have become widespread across big tech platforms. As Breitbart News revealed earlier this year, Facebook maintains a list of political figures and commentators that it considers potential hate agents. And Google-owned YouTube has deliberately reordered its search results in response to ideological complaints from left-wing journalists.