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Tonight: One of the very worst escalations of the online censorship regime now sweeping the West took place just three weeks before the 2020 presidential election when the pre-Elon Musk Twitter and Facebook announced that they were banning or suppressing any discussion or any links to The New York Post reporting about the Biden family businesses and their interests in places like Ukraine and China. Among all of the corrupted aspects of those censorship actions, the rationale that those Big Tech platforms used to justify their censorship was simply false: they claimed that any links to such stories violated their policy that banned any linking to hacked documents but the documents from Hunter Biden's laptop on which that reporting was based were never hacked. Remember, that came from a CIA ally. That banning of that story by Twitter and Facebook weeks before the 2020 election was political censorship as brute as you will ever get. Now, many people are comparing that 2020 incident to the decision by X today to temporarily suspend a journalist on the grounds that he did something similar.
Earlier today, the independent journalist Ken Klippenstein, my former colleague at The Intercept, along with his colleague, the national security journalist Bill Arkin, obtained and then published on Klippenstein's Substack a dossier about JD Vance that was compiled by the Trump campaign. Calling it a “dossier” makes it sound very sinister, but it's really just a very common vetting document that presidential campaigns always compile about all of the possible running mates that they might choose to understand the benefits and the downsides of each candidate.
It is long been reported over the last several months – in fact, we covered this fact – that major media outlets like The Washington Post and The New York Times and others had received copies of this “Vance Dossier,” but decided not to publish it, in part because they said the CIA claimed (with no evidence) that the documents were obtained by Iran's hacking of the Trump campaign and they cited their policies against publishing hacked documents, foreign governments, right before an election. Also these media outlets said the dossier contained nothing particularly interesting, no real new revelation, merely just information largely available about JD Vance's prior statements and prior work, mostly things that were already publicly known.
Once this so-called Vance Dossier was published, on Klippenstein's site, the same one that these media outlets had refused to publish. You can see it, there’s almost nothing in that report about Vance that wasn't already previously known and widely reported. The media outlets were truthful in explaining why they didn't publish it.
Despite all of that, X quickly announced what it called a, quote, “temporary suspension” of Ken Klippenstein's account right after he posted a link to his Substack with that Vance report published on it. X also barred the posting of any links by anybody else to that report on Klippenstein's site.
At first glance, this action seemed in a lot of people's eyes to be similar in kind to Twitter's banning a Biden reporting four years ago. Namely, both were barring any discussion of documents hacked by a foreign power. As it turns out, there are several important distinctions between what happened then and what happened now. In this case, X quickly made clear today that it had no objection to the publication of the Vance report itself, that Klippenstein just merely uploaded the Vance report in what they considered a responsible way. That would have been fine. It wouldn't have violated any rules. What they objected to, they said, was the failure to redact certain personal information in the dossier about JD Vance, including his home address in Ohio, which appears on the very first page of the report, along with five of the nine digits of his Social Security number, and X said that violates our policy that bans links to doxing, links to people's home address.
There's a lot more going on in this story beyond the specific question of whether this temporary suspension of Klippenstein is justified and whether it can be compared to the Twitter and Facebook banning of The New York Post reporting in 2020. This entire incident says a great deal about the role that media outlets, the posture that they have assumed and the way in which they have painted them into themselves into a corner in order to justify this new policy they announced in 2020, under a great deal of liberal pressure, that they would no longer publish, but instead would withhold, documents in the public interest if they come from acting by a foreign power. It also has a great deal about the role of Big Tech is and should be and should not be in the policing of content by journalists and others. It says a lot about whether there is any real evidence that Iran did this, as is being widely claimed. It has a lot about what “doxing” really means and does not mean and many more questions like that – which is why we want to delve into it – all of which will likely be increasingly relevant as the 2024 election approaches.
Then: Evan Barker has spent many years as a major fundraiser for the DNC and has been a Democratic Party operative going all the way back to the 2008 Hillary Clinton campaign that she ran against Barack Obama when Barker worked for her campaign as an intern and then she progressively worked her way up the Democratic Party ladder through the Obama and Biden years, finally becoming one of her party's major fundraisers and operatives. But earlier this month, after she attended the Democratic National Convention, in Chicago, Barker published a very thoughtful and compelling article in Newsweek entitled “I raised millions for Democrats, but at the DNC, I realize they're the party of the rich.” She also went on to argue that she realized that this party has become, in terms of foreign policy, the party of neocons and Bush-Cheney foreign policy. We will have her on to talk about her departure from the Democratic Party, what she meant by a lot of what she wrote in that Newsweek article and how she now sees the two parties and the 2024 election as well.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.