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It's Wednesday, October 2.
Tonight: Democrats have been increasingly embracing a regime of censorship for years now, ever since the emergence of Donald Trump. And that's not news. We've covered that at least as much as any other topic. In last night's vice presidential debate, Kamala Harris’ running mate, Democratic Governor Tim Walz, of Minnesota, offered a spirited and vibrant defense of the virtues and the constitutionality of state-run censorship. It was far from the first time he had done that. In this case, Governor Walz invoked one of the worst and most deceitful cliches used by censorship advocates throughout the democratic world. Quote, “One can't yell ‘fire’ in a crowded movie theater.” That's the same as the censorship we're doing. This is the moronic battle cry of wannabe tyrants around the world.
Meanwhile, to ensure that conservatives don't become high and mighty upon hearing all this, the post-October 7 censorship orgy that has also emerged in the United States, all to protect the foreign country of Israel continues apace. The University of Maryland, a state school under the direction of the state's Democratic governor, Wes Moore, banned a group of students from holding an interfaith vigil on October 7 to commemorate those killed in Gaza. The school reasoned that it was too insensitive to allow a pro-Palestinian protest on October 7, even though the students chose that date because that was when the bombing of Gaza began. Thankfully, a federal court today rejected the university's attempt to ban this student group's event, holding something that once barely needed to be explained: that the First Amendment's free speech clause is violated when the state attempts to ban protests based on viewpoints. Governor Moore decried this ruling because the once-bedrock and virtually instinctive defense of free speech in the United States continues to crumble.
Then: One of the most inspiring moments in some time took place as the now-free Julian Assange traveled with his wife and their two young children from Australia, where they live, to Strasbourg, France for Assange to address the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe about the ordeal he suffered and the issues that emerged from it. We'll show you key excerpts of Assange's remarks, as well as report on the vote of that body to declare Assange to have been a prisoner of conscience or a political prisoner at the hands of the U.S. and the UK.
And then finally: For the vice presidential debate, we sent our now familiar dynamic duo, the intrepid independent reporter Michael Tracey, as well as a producer on our show, Megan O'Rourke, to the after-debate “spin room.” There they were able to interview a wide range of surrogates, including members of Congress from both parties, a leading fundraiser of the Trump campaign, as well as the chairman of the DNC, Jamie Harrison. As always, when we send those two to such events, the resulting interviews are equally entertaining and revealing, and we will show you some of the key highlights.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.