NRB Shines Light on Online Censorship of Christian, Conservative Speech

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National Religious Broadcasters is drawing attention to the censorship of Christian and conservative speech online by tech companies such as Facebook, Twitter, Google and Apple by launching a new initiative, Internet Freedom Watch, the association of Christian communicators announced Thursday.

In a move applauded by Sen. Ted Cruz, R- Texas, and a former Federal Communications Commission commissioner, NRB announced a new website—InternetFreedomWatch.org—to document cases of internet censorship, including Twitter’s takedown of an ad by Rep. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., in October and Facebook removing Gov. Mike Huckabee’s post supporting Chick-fil-A in 2012. NRB has published a chart with more than 30 instances of internet censorship to illustrate the problem.

NRB also sent letters to the tech giants, urging constructive conversation and a resolution to the threats against religious freedom, and is calling on Congress to hold hearings on the “severe problem of viewpoint censorship on the internet.”

Dr. Jerry A. Johnson, NRB’s president and CEO, said the vast association of Christian communicators is not yet calling for new laws or regulations but does want the growing problem to receive appropriate scrutiny.

“It is unacceptable for these titans to discriminate against users just because their viewpoints are not congruent with ideas popular in Silicon Valley,” Johnson said Thursday at an NRB press conference at the National Press Club in Washington.

Johnson led a panel discussion with addresses by Cruz; former FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell; Craig Strazzeri, chief marketing officer for PragerU, a victim of internet censorship; and evangelical leader Ralph Reed, chairman and CEO of Century Strategies.

NRB was founded in 1944, Johnson noted, in response to corporate censorship of evangelical radio ministries, and the group is rising now to address “those who desire to expunge opposing viewpoints from the marketplace of ideas by recklessly using nebulous terms like ‘hate speech.'”

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai recently acknowledged edge providers “routinely block or discriminate against content they don’t like,” Johnson said.

“We call on these platforms to afford their users nothing less than the free speech and free exercise of religion rights embodied in the First Amendment as interpreted by the U.S. Supreme Court,” Johnson said.

Congress must address the issue with hearings, Johnson said, because many Americans now view tech platforms “to be nearly as vital to their communications as the telephone was in the 20th century.”

Cruz said every day more Americans are “getting their political news not from pieces of paper, not from their televisions, but online from social media.”

“One of the biggest shifts that has occurred in recent years is the locus of power in media is no longer New York City. It’s Silicon Valley,” Cruz said. “And Silicon Valley has the ability to put a thumb on the scale in a far more subtle and insidious way.”

The New York Times can write stories that are liberally biased, but they don’t hide who they are, Cruz said. “But on the Internet and social media it’s far simpler because views that are unfavored simply disappear. They simply don’t exist.”

In a Google search, for instance, Cruz said conservative views can be suppressed while views the tech companies like “magically bubble to the top.”

Though the companies are private, Cruz said because they’re the new media powerhouses they have a moral obligation to defend free and open communication, “and I think we have a right to call them out for that moral obligation.”

Reed, Founder of the Faith & Freedom Coalition, cited the printing press, television and the internet as the three most important technological developments for advancing the gospel worldwide—but the internet is set to eclipse the first two.

If that is true, Reed said, “it is critical for Christians and others of faith to be able to share their faith in an unfettered way without fear of persecution, harassment, blocking or discrimination.”

PragerU’s mission is to explain what makes America great in five-minute videos, “conservative sound bites that clarify profoundly significant and uniquely American concepts,” according to its website. Strazzeri said at the NRB press conference that one in four Americans have viewed a PragerU video, and the organization is in a legal battle with YouTube for censoring about 40 of their 250 videos.

YouTube, which is owned by Google, deemed the videos inappropriate for young audiences and restricted access using a method meant for violent, sexual or pornographic content, Strazzeri said, adding that millions of similar left-leaning videos are not restricted.

“We are fighting this for all Americans and for freedom of speech. Fighting back against Google was not an easy decision for PragerU, but someone has to take on Goliath,” Strazzeri said.

McDowell, who served with the FCC from 2006 to 2013, said he is delighted NRB is launching the initiative.

“I think there needs to be more attention brought to it, and I think at the end of the day merely the fact you’re shining a spotlight here has a curative effect. This is good for freedom. This is good to get some of these companies to think more about it,” McDowell said.

Cruz also commended NRB for the initiative, and urged the association to continue defending free speech.

For more information, including video of the event and a timeline of viewpoint discrimination on the internet over the past seven years, visit InternetFreedomWatch.org.

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