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United States Politics

McCarthy's Fast Start: Big Tech is a Top Target (axios.com) 312

House Republicans plan to launch a new investigative panel this week that will demand copies of White House emails, memos and other communications with Big Tech companies, Axios reported Monday, citing sources. From the report: Speaker Kevin McCarthy plans a quick spate of red-meat actions and announcements to reward hardliners who backed him through his harrowing fight for the gavel. The new panel, the Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government, is partly a response to revelations from Elon Musk in the internal documents he branded the "Twitter Files."

The subcommittee will be chaired by House Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan -- a close McCarthy ally, and a favorite of the hard right. The probe into communications between tech giants and President Biden's aides will look for government pressure that could have resulted in censorship or harassment of conservatives -- or squelching of debate on polarizing policies, including the CDC on COVID. The request for documents will be followed by "compulsory processes," including subpoenas if needed, a GOP source tells Axios. In December, Jordan wrote letters to top tech platforms asking for information about "'collusion' with the Biden administration to censor conservatives on their platforms."

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McCarthy's Fast Start: Big Tech is a Top Target

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  • by kmacleod ( 103404 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @09:48AM (#63191774) Homepage

    Oddly enough, they won't be looking into Trump's admin for any occurrences before the Biden admin...

    • by Pascoea ( 968200 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @09:55AM (#63191786)
      Why would they? Prior admin openly admitted it can't be illegal if the president does it. Case closed.
      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        At least Biden is righting the wrongs from the end of the previous administration. Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss just got a medal for helping our side to win the 2020 election. That kind of recognition is the fight for freedom we have not had in a long time, if ever.
        • You mean the cheaters from Georgia?

        • At least Biden is righting the wrongs from the end of the previous administration.

          Like Trump's illegal tax break for the rich? Oh wait, he's ignoring that completely.

        • by Cyberax ( 705495 )

          Ruby Freeman and Shaye Moss just got a medal for helping our side to win the 2020 election

          They got a medal for standing up to bullies. Good for them.

        • Ah, the old myth, beloved by Farkers, that Dems "fix" the wrongs of prior Repub regimes.

          Unfortunately for such a head-in-the-sand position, we still have kids in cages. DeJoy is still ruining the USPS. Assange is still being prosecuted (something Obama wouldn't do, but Trump and Biden have no problems with). Biden is continuing Trump's regressive Cuba policy. Police continue to be militarized. Etc. etc....

          The Dems job is to normalize the atrocities of Repubs. Obama maintained all of Bush's worst polic

        • I have no patience for people who think siding with Team Red or Team Blue is something you'd admit openly.

          For years now, most of what I read in the news is like a WWE wrestling event. Teams Red and Blue are run by people who believe we solve problems by attacking each other. The fact that anyone supports this behavior is reprehensible.

          How dare a single political party garner votes from stockbrokers on Wall Street, pig farmers in Iowa, coal miners in West Virginia, impoverished/homeless in Seattle, cattle fa
    • This is where Biden should release emails from the Trump admin showing this as well. He can as they are asking the white house for possible collusion in emails.

      The Twitter files should nothing of anything more from Biden, Clinton, Obama than Trump. Release them all and make it public in the release.

  • by Ickyban ( 2713241 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @09:52AM (#63191780)
    Performative, made-up drama for Faux News soundbytes... and none of this 2 year trainwreck will convince many moderate or centrists to vote Republican. Fox is really the tail that's wagging the dog that is the GOP.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      You have more faith in the American people than I do. I fully believe we have enough idiots that will be swayed by all the bullshit they'll be spraying the next two years.
    • by dbialac ( 320955 )
      And MSNBC is the same for the DNC. I don't believe half of what's on Fox nor half of what is put on MSNBC. They're both about politics, not news. I read the BBC to get actual news because they typically don't have a dog in the race.
    • by MachineShedFred ( 621896 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @11:56AM (#63192302) Journal

      It's been said before, but I'll say it again: elect clowns, get a circus.

      There are morons on the right that still think Benghazi was some evil Hillary plot to... well nobody ever gets that far because they just heard "Hillary" and therefore logic and reason shut down, leaving only emotion to do the decision making.

      This committee is Benghazi 2.0 - a partisan hack clown show meant to do exactly what you say - allow partisan hacks that have been in congress for a decade or more to continue with their hackery. Jim Jordan, set to receive the chairman's gavel on the powerful Judiciary committee, has never authored a piece of legislation in his time in Congress. Not a single one.

      That's a remarkable record for a 9-term congressman; I'm not sure how you hold a job as a legislator for 18 years and never perform the primary function of that job - writing legislation.

      So glad I don't live in Ohio anymore.

    • by whitroth ( 9367 )

      Two-year trainwreck? Which? Don't you mean the previous four year complete disaster, run by an ignorant racist?

  • *yawn* (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Fuzi719 ( 1107665 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @09:58AM (#63191806)
    More performative drama from the do-nothing-good crowd. And, we already know subpoenas are merely a suggestion and can be safely ignored. The GOP is no more, the imposters are merely actors entertaining their base.
    • Generally true. However, Democrats also have a lot of beefs with social media these days, even moreso since Musk bought Twitter.

      For the most part I would not say that Republicans and Democrats hate social media for the same reasons, but there might be enough overlap for something to happen.

    • by mrex ( 25183 )

      Actually, as of the last Congress, Congressional subpoenas have been leading to (sometimes highly visible raid-style) arrests. So, I would not recommend ignoring these subpoenas, although Merrick Garland may change the DOJ's approach to congressional subpoena enforcement, of course.

    • More performative drama from the do-nothing-good crowd. And, we already know subpoenas are merely a suggestion and can be safely ignored. The GOP is no more, the imposters are merely actors entertaining their base.

      This comment [imgur.com] sums up things quite well.

  • For two years (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @09:58AM (#63191810)

    All I heard from the GOP was Biden inflation, Biden gas prices, Biden Ukraine, Biden student loans, Biden border, Biden socialism.

    Now with a slim majority, the top GOP agenda is Hunter Biden's dick pictures?

    Does the GOP offer solutions on how to fix the many issues they've been complaining about?

    • Inflation (Score:2, Insightful)

      by JBMcB ( 73720 )

      The only two economic levers the government has to tame inflation is to:

      1. Increase interest rates - which everyone is complaining about but should have been done a decade ago
      2. Decrease government spending - which *nobody* in congress wants to do

      • Re:Inflation (Score:4, Insightful)

        by hey! ( 33014 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @11:44AM (#63192254) Homepage Journal

        You missed: increase taxes. That takes money out of the economy too.

        The notion that inflation is exclusively the product of money supply mismanagement comes from studying macroeconomic models, but those models *assume* microeconomic factors away for purposes of study. They don't really justify the assumption that microeconomic factors like supply chain disruptions have no real effect on inflation.

        So there's probably more that government can do about inflation, both in the short and long term, than tweak the money supply, although that is clearly something government *can* do that will do the job (albeit with other consequences).

        • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

          You missed: increase taxes. That takes money out of the economy too.

          Absolutely. I left it out because the amount the government is spending is much, much more than the amount it takes in taxes. Increasing taxes doesn't work when you turn around and dump MORE money into the economy.

          The notion that inflation is exclusively the product of money supply mismanagement comes from studying macroeconomic models, but those models *assume* microeconomic factors away for purposes of study.

          Here's the macroeconomic analysis. Supply chains were absolutely constrained. In the last two years, the US federal reserve, during a slowing economy and with supply chain disruptions, *doubled* the amount of money circulating in the economy. This was to support the federal government's program o

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by GlennC ( 96879 )

      Does the GOP offer solutions on how to fix the many issues they've been complaining about?

      No, but to be fair neither does the "Democratic" wing of the Party.

      It's all pointless partisan bickering designed to keep the citizenry distracted while they sell the nation's future to the highest bidder.

      As always, I welcome any evidence to the contrary.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by sinij ( 911942 )

      Now with a slim majority, the top GOP agenda is Hunter Biden's dick pictures?

      It takes extreme partisanship to attempt to frame government meddling in operation of both free press and social media to benefit specific presidential candidate as "dick picture". This is like saying that Watergate is about trespassing.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by mrex ( 25183 )

      Now with a slim majority, the top GOP agenda is Hunter Biden's dick pictures?

      Two questions for you:

      1) How do you feel about the J6 committee hearings?
      2) Do you consider big tech censorship to be a legitimate concern?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      Does the GOP offer solutions on how to fix the many issues they've been complaining about?

      Yes, let the rich get richer and deregulated, then their money will (somehow) trickle down onto the masses like a burst piniata*.

      * Slashdot doesn't allow tilde n's.

  • Here we go... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by cob666 ( 656740 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @10:00AM (#63191818)
    And now the REAL witch hunts start.
    For a party that purports to have such a love for the Constitution, as a whole they don't seem to understand the 1st Amendment at all. Freedom of speech doesn't apply to private companies; you violate their arbitrary terms of service and they can delete posts or boot you from their eco-system.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by blahabl ( 7651114 )

      And now the REAL witch hunts start. For a party that purports to have such a love for the Constitution, as a whole they don't seem to understand the 1st Amendment at all. Freedom of speech doesn't apply to private companies; you violate their arbitrary terms of service and they can delete posts or boot you from their eco-system.

      OK, so you think that if some act would violate the Constitution if the govt did it, it's perfectly okay if they instead hire/force/influence a private company to do it for them? "We're not torturing people at Gitmo, we're only paying Blackwater to do it on our behalf, so it's perfectly okay"? "We're not censoring speech we don't like, we're only pressuring Facebook to do it for us"? Well, newsflash: no, it's not.

    • Re:Here we go... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by fermion ( 181285 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @10:24AM (#63191908) Homepage Journal
      History tells us this will be purely retribution. There are real issues to explore in social media. Itâ(TM)s influence, the targeting of children, the use by domestic terrorists

      But look at the laws that have been passed in conservative states. They set high thresholds for number of users that exempt conservative sites from oversight. In Florida Disney was explicitly exempted from oversight.

      It is as that this will be a missed opportunity to set a more positive future in our relationship with social media. Real regulation, that is not just simply repealing the protections provided by the DCMA, can happen.

    • you violate their arbitrary terms of service and they can delete posts or boot you from their eco-system.

      Yes [imgur.com], yes [imgur.com] they can [imgur.com].

  • by FictionPimp ( 712802 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @10:06AM (#63191846) Homepage

    If anyone knows how to create a cover up it's Jim Jordan. He's great at it and made a whole career out of it. So he's perfect for figuring out how the white house is covering things up.

  • It's funny how... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @10:27AM (#63191926)

    It's funny how McCarthy's clearly stated agenda isnt to pass legislation that helps America, it's to punish the Democrats https://thehill.com/opinion/ca... [thehill.com] .

    Hopefully that doesnt include cutting off aid to Ukraine as the extremists in his party who he has already ceded so much to want.

    • by mrex ( 25183 )

      Two questions for you (yes I'm asking several people the same questions. I'm curious):

      1) How do you feel about the J6 committee hearings?
      2) Do you consider big tech censorship to be a legitimate concern?

      • by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @11:12AM (#63192114)

        1) How do you feel about the J6 committee hearings?

        Loved it. Members of the "party of law and order" suddenly not liking law and order.

        2) Do you consider big tech censorship to be a legitimate concern?

        Why should the government be getting involved in the affairs of private companies? Don't conservatives have a hands off approach in that area?

        • To help answer your question, which seems a little bit like having evaded my second question (but for which I will assume you meant to answer âoenoâ, you donâ(TM)t consider big tech censorship concerning): the US government has an obligation to foster a legal and regulatory environment that encourages the broadest possible exercise of, and protections for, individual political expression.

          If you disagree, I would ask you to explain how and why specifically!

          • Big tech is a private platform and can choose what content they to host. Some conservative had a problem with this and started a competitor. Which is fine. Other conservatives went crying to the government to force these companies to publish content said companies don’t agree with, effectively violating their right to free speech.

            • I see. That narrative seems to bear little resemblance to the evidence Iâ(TM)ve seen, but I appreciate your response and think Iâ(TM)ve gained insight into your position. Thank you again!

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        The user ArchieBunker more or less stated the answers I would give to those questions already as a reply to your post

        • Could I ask for you to clarify whether you believe big tech censorship is a legitimate (regulatory/legal) problem, at present?

          • by skam240 ( 789197 )

            I think Republican efforts to force big tech to host content on their privately owned servers is a problem both legally (incredibly clear violation of 1st amendment rights of these companies) and morally.

    • Re:It's funny how... (Score:5, Informative)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @10:57AM (#63192056)

      I remember when the GOP thought Russia was an enemy. Now they spend their July 4th vacations there. https://www.npr.org/2018/07/06... [npr.org]

    • This has been explicitly and say-it-out-loud the case for the GOP since at least 2010:

      Here’s John Boehner, the likely speaker if Republicans take the House, offering his plans for Obama’s agenda: “We’re going to do everything — and I mean everything we can do — to kill it, stop it, slow it down, whatever we can.”

      Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell summed up his plan to National Journal: “The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president.”

      Politico, 10/28/2010 [politico.com]

  • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @12:06PM (#63192340)

    "Select Subcommittee on the Weaponization of the Federal Government"

    Is there anything at all good about the American system of government?

    What is the use of two elected houses? All it does is encourage this sort of bullshit.

  • Big Tech is netural towards right wing views. Their actual bias is complete sociopathy in favor of making money. Many of the leaders are fiscal conservatives. They do cool performative talking points about diversity and maybe they believe it to a casual extent, but their goal is to make money and gain market share. They only care about money or power. Do they care about abortion? I'll wager not...at least not enough to harm their bottom line.

    For example, every major tech firm offers reimbursement f
    • Big Tech is netural towards right wing views. Their actual bias is complete sociopathy in favor of making money.

      Complete sociopathy in favor of making is a right wing value. It just so happens that many of our supposed left wing politicians really aren't leftist at all.

      every major tech firm offers reimbursement for travel expenses to employees needing abortions. Some may consider that a liberal pro-choice view...I view it as a means of retaining top talent in established red state offices

      Yeah, that's not right or left wing, as I think you suggested. It's just pragmatism.

      The oil industry, for example, has been heavily into lobbying and crafting policy and ensuring friendly candidates get elected. The tech industry has found that to be gross and tacky and has always learned how to get by with as little political graft as they can.

      I very strongly disagree on every basis I can think of. Microsoft, Oracle, and all the other biggest tech companies [observer.com] (which could afford to do meaningful lobbying) have always done plenty of it. They all wanted those sweet military contracts, and they got them. This really paid off big for Microsoft, which the DoJ unequivocally stated was guilty of basically every kind of anticompetitive act. AG John Ashcroft stated that it would not be in our best interest to prosecute, and they got away without so much as a handslap. Today, Microsoft is selling fragile AR gear to the military, and Windows is a critical part of the panopticon [dhs.gov]. So is Oracle, in more ways than being the vendor behind the Real ID data management. Most major corporations literally operate their own PAC! The whole idea that they don't involve themselves in lobbying is beyond naivete.

      Facebook could move to Ireland tomorrow.

      That's even more ludicrous. Didn't you notice that Ireland is now taxing tech companies? They figured out how to keep the money.

  • by Nothing2Chere ( 1434973 ) on Monday January 09, 2023 @06:44PM (#63193892)
    Why is the name McCarthy always associated with governmental witch hunts?

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