Free-Market Censorship

In the US, the airwaves and the internet often include offensive, racist, unhinged, and violent rhetoric. Given the very limited degree to which the US government can intervene in the content of speech, underpinned by the First Amendment, there is virtually no way to ban destructive rhetoric through...

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Main Author: Mark McNaught
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2013-05-01
Series:Revue LISA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5246
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author Mark McNaught
author_facet Mark McNaught
author_sort Mark McNaught
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description In the US, the airwaves and the internet often include offensive, racist, unhinged, and violent rhetoric. Given the very limited degree to which the US government can intervene in the content of speech, underpinned by the First Amendment, there is virtually no way to ban destructive rhetoric through the legal and regulatory system. US society thereby depends on “free-market censorship” to sanction hate speech. This paradigm holds that offensive speech can be “defeated” in the marketplace of ideas through a variety of mechanisms. This presumes that the truth is more commercially profitable than lies, which is not always the case. Offensive shows attract an audience drawn to deranged rhetoric. If the show becomes commercially successful, the audience is unlikely to boycott the show in opposition. To get a better idea on the notion of free-market censorship, this paper first explores the jurisprudence of censorship as it exists in the US, followed by the construction of a working definition. Finally, the case of Glenn Beck’s tenure at Fox News will be explored. Ultimately, we will observe that free-market censorship remains a blunt and largely ineffectual tool for driving offensive speech from the marketplace of ideas.
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spelling doaj-art-4c506866182d4c88b4b10d8513e5365c2025-01-06T09:03:13ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532013-05-0111110.4000/lisa.5246Free-Market CensorshipMark McNaughtIn the US, the airwaves and the internet often include offensive, racist, unhinged, and violent rhetoric. Given the very limited degree to which the US government can intervene in the content of speech, underpinned by the First Amendment, there is virtually no way to ban destructive rhetoric through the legal and regulatory system. US society thereby depends on “free-market censorship” to sanction hate speech. This paradigm holds that offensive speech can be “defeated” in the marketplace of ideas through a variety of mechanisms. This presumes that the truth is more commercially profitable than lies, which is not always the case. Offensive shows attract an audience drawn to deranged rhetoric. If the show becomes commercially successful, the audience is unlikely to boycott the show in opposition. To get a better idea on the notion of free-market censorship, this paper first explores the jurisprudence of censorship as it exists in the US, followed by the construction of a working definition. Finally, the case of Glenn Beck’s tenure at Fox News will be explored. Ultimately, we will observe that free-market censorship remains a blunt and largely ineffectual tool for driving offensive speech from the marketplace of ideas.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5246censorshipfree marketBeck Glennfree-speech
spellingShingle Mark McNaught
Free-Market Censorship
Revue LISA
censorship
free market
Beck Glenn
free-speech
title Free-Market Censorship
title_full Free-Market Censorship
title_fullStr Free-Market Censorship
title_full_unstemmed Free-Market Censorship
title_short Free-Market Censorship
title_sort free market censorship
topic censorship
free market
Beck Glenn
free-speech
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/5246
work_keys_str_mv AT markmcnaught freemarketcensorship