Stop Internet Censorship
by
Ron Paul
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Although Congress
was back in session for scarcely more than a day last week, private
citizens across the country managed to cause an uproar felt across
Capitol Hill. The uproar took the form of hundreds of thousands
of phone calls to both Senators and Representatives, urging them
to oppose two draconian new bills that threaten the free and unbridled
flow of information on the internet.
On Wednesday
last week, dozens of prominent websites like Wikipedia, Reddit,
and Craigslist, were blacked out in protest of two bills known in
DC jargon as SOPA and PIPA. SOPA is the House bill; PIPA is its
Senate companion. These bills ostensibly will combat internet piracy,
and of course we also are told they will help us wage the never
ending "war on terror."
What these
bills actually do is force website owners to police the internet;
create entry barriers to the only relatively free and open medium
of communication; and threaten to break the technological structure
of the internet itself. They also violate our 1st Amendment right
to freedom of speech and our 4th Amendment freedom from unreasonable
searches and seizures.
SOPA and PIPA
have been drafted not only without respect for the Constitution,
but also without an understanding of the how the internet works.
These bills attack the very system upon which the entire orderly
organization of the web depends. Search engines, internet service
providers, advertising sites, and sites with user-generated content
such as Facebook, YouTube, and Twitter all magnificent creations
of the market are directly threatened by these bills. They will
be held responsible if even a single of their millions of users
posts even one link to a website that a copyright holder claims
is violating a copyright.
Note
that under the bills as written, the Department of Justice or a
copyright holder do not have to prove that their copyright was violated
they simply have to claim copyright infringement and an entire
site is shut down. The burden of these regulations on the internet
will be enormous, shifting resources away from productivity and
innovation and into monitoring and censoring. It turns internet
companies into involuntary tools for Big Brother government, further
eroding our Constitutional rights.
As is typical
of so many bills in Congress, SOPA and PIPA were not crafted to
make life better for the American people, but rather were written
at the behest of big business trying to enlist the federal government
as its strong-arm. For example, the Motion Picture Association of
America spent more than $1.2 million so far lobbying for their passage.
But the internet
community is fighting back effectively, not just with websites that
went black but with millions of users who expressed their solidarity.
Congressional sponsors of both bills have been jumping ship in response
to the outrage. The House Judiciary Committee canceled the SOPA
hearing they were planning to hold last Wednesday; the House leadership
announced they have no intention of considering this bill; and at
the end of the week Senator Reid announced he was postponing the
vote until a "compromise" could be reached. The American
people are speaking, and with their continued grassroots efforts
the marketplace for free ideas and communication will prevail over
government controls and censorship.
See
the Ron Paul File

January
24, 2012
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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