A Toronto Star Opinion Piece by Martin Reg Conn desperately tries to justify the Ontario election result in “Get Over It: Doug Ford’s Victory was an example of how democracy is supposed to work.”
But is it really?
The purpose of Democracy is to give people a say in our own governance. In a Direct Democracy that would mean citizens themselves directly make laws and government policies. As in a referendum.
But ours is a Representative Democracy, which means citizens choose representatives to represent us when making laws and policies in Parliament.
Look, I’m as delighted as you are to see Alex Jones’ ability to spread
hatred curtailed – because in a world where all the important speech
takes place online, and where online speech is owned by four or five
companies, being kicked off of Big Tech’s services is likely to be an
extinction-level event.
And yeah, it’s cute to see him wander from platform to platform, looking for a home, while “Conservatives” wake up and discover
that 40 years of Ronald Reagan antitrust-lite policies have given a
handful of shareholder-driven tech companies control over public
discourse (I call it “reaganfreude”).
But as David Greene – civil liberties director at the Electronic
Frontier Foundation – writes in the Washington Post, the big picture
here is terrible.
The platforms’ version of policing bad speech is sloppy, capricious and
arbitrary. People get censored for discussing terrorist atrocities,
while actual videos of terrorist atrocities stay up. Millions of
accounts are disconnected for being bots, with no recourse for actual
activists who are caught like dolphins in that big ole tuna net. Real
protests are delisted for being “inauthentic,” while Nazis organize in
the open.
Greene has a very, very modest proposal for how the platforms should conduct censorship, based on the widely accepted “Santa Clara Principles” on Transparency and Accountability in Content Moderation:
1. The companies should publish up-to-date stats on which posts and accounts they’ve shut down;
2. The companies should notify you when your post or account is flagged or removed;
3. You should have a right to appeal takedowns, and the rules should be evenhandedly enforced.
These are, as I say, modest goals. They’re a lot more likely to produce
good takedowns and healthy online forums that disconnecting people by
the millions using algorithms, or picking them off one by one only when
the public outcry gets loud enough.
The problem is we’ve given these companies this power by allowing them to build monopolies. And companies are less likely to allow us rights than our pale excuse for democratic goverments are.
What we need is the good representative democracy that can be achieved with Proportional Representation.
“The case for [Proportional Representation] is fundamentally the same as that for Representative Democracy. Only if an assembly represents the full diversity of opinion within a nation can its decisions be regarded as the decisions of the nation itself.” — Encyclopedia Britannica