Mexico’s President’s Int’l Campaign Against Corrupt Big Tech Monopolies

Mexico’s Left-Wing President Mounts International Campaign Taking On Tech Companies After Trump Bans

ByRyan Saavedra•Jan 14, 2021   DailyWire.com•FacebookTwitterMail

Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, speaks during a meeting with relatives of the 43 students of the teaching training school in Ayotzinapa who went missing on September 26, 2014, at the National Palace in Mexico City on September 26, 2020 on the sixth anniversary of their disappearance. - The students had commandeered five buses to travel to a protest on the night of September 26, 2014, but were stopped by municipal police in the city of Iguala, Guerrero. Prosecutors initially said the officers delivered the 43 teacher trainees to drug cartel hitmen, who killed them, incinerated their bodies and dumped the remains in a river. However, independent experts from the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights have rejected the government's conclusion, and the unsolved case remains a stain on Mexico's reputation.
RODRIGO ARANGUA/AFP via Getty Images

Left-wing Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador reportedly vowed to take on tech companies on Thursday in response to the bans that President Donald Trump has faced on social media.

“I can tell you that at the first G20 meeting we have, I am going to make a proposal on this issue,” López Obrador said. “Yes, social media should not be used to incite violence and all that, but this cannot be used as a pretext to suspend freedom of expression.”

“How can a company act as if it was all powerful, omnipotent, as a sort of Spanish Inquisition on what is expressed?” López Obrador asked.

López Obrador’s Foreign Relations Secretary Marcelo Ebrard said that Mexico has already started the work of getting other nations involved in the effort, including “officials in France, Germany, the European Union, Africa, Latin America and Southeast Asia,” The Associated Press reported.

“Given that Mexico, through our president, has spoken out, we immediately made contact with others who think the same,” Ebrard said. “The president’s orders are to make contact with all of them, share this concern and work on coming up with a joint proposal. We will see what is proposed.”https://0def92ce962345f32294c86f6e8c4efd.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

López Obrador condemned the social media companies at the start of the week following their decision to suspend or outright ban the president from using their platforms.

“I don’t like anybody being censored or taking away from the right to post a message on Twitter or Face(book). I don’t agree with that, I don’t accept that,” López Obrador said. “How can you censor someone: ‘Let’s see, I, as the judge of the Holy Inquisition, will punish you because I think what you’re saying is harmful.’ Where is the law, where is the regulation, what are the norms? This is an issue of government, this is not an issue for private companies.”

Other international figures have spoken out against the censorship, including officials in Australia, France, Germany, Russia, and Poland.https://0def92ce962345f32294c86f6e8c4efd.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Bloomberg News reported:

Junior Minister for European Union Affairs Clement Beaune said he was “shocked” to see a private company make such an important decision. “This should be decided by citizens, not by a CEO,” he told Bloomberg TV on Monday. “There needs to be public regulation of big online platforms.” Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire earlier said that the state should be responsible for regulations, rather than “the digital oligarchy,” and called big tech “one of the threats” to democracy.

A spokesperson for German Chancellor Angela Merkel said, “The right to freedom of opinion is of fundamental importance. Given that, the chancellor considers it problematic that the president’s accounts have been permanently suspended.”https://0def92ce962345f32294c86f6e8c4efd.safeframe.googlesyndication.com/safeframe/1-0-37/html/container.html

Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny, a fierce critic of Russian President Vladimir Putin, also slammed the censoring of Trump, calling it an “unacceptable act.”

“In my opinion, the decision to ban Trump was based on emotions and personal political preferences. Don’t tell me he was banned for violating Twitter rules. I get death threats here every day for many years, and Twitter doesn’t ban anyone,” Navalny said. “Among the people who have Twitter accounts are cold-blooded murderers (Putin or Maduro) and liars and thieves (Medvedev). For many years, Twitter, Facebook and Instagram have been used as a base for Putin’s ‘troll factory’ and similar groups from other authoritarian countries.”

“Of course, Twitter is a private company, but we have seen many examples in Russian and China of such private companies becoming the state’s best friends and the enablers when it comes to censorship,” Navalny continued. “If you replace ‘Trump’ with ‘Navalny’ in today’s discussion, you will get an 80% accurate Kremlin’s answer as to why my name can’t be mentioned on Russian TV and I shouldn’t be allowed to participate in any elections.”

“This precedent will be exploited by the enemies of freedom of speech around the world. In Russia as well. Every time when they need to silence someone, they will say: ‘this is just common practice, even Trump got blocked on Twitter,’” Navalny concluded. “If @twitter and @jack want to do things right, they need to create some sort of a committee that can make such decisions. We need to know the names of the members of this committee, understand how it works, how its members vote and how we can appeal against their decisions.”

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Ron Wieczorek

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Mexican Government Organizes Internationally Against Big Tech CensorshipJan. 15 (EIRNS)—Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador reported that he has instructed his Foreign Minister to contact other governments, especially those that have spoken out similarly, to propose they join forces against the giant private social media companies’ brazen moves to suppress freedom of speech, as well as their invasion of everyone’s privacy.This was at least the third time since Facebook and Twitter shut down President Donald Trump’s social media accounts that López Obrador has warned that these companies must not be allowed to set themselves up as a supranational force, more powerful than governments. And when a nasty journalist attempted to force him to go on the record, for or against, President Trump’s alleged “inciting insurrection” and “violence” on Jan. 6, he refused to take the bait, and reiterated that freedom of speech is the principle at stake here.“Look, what I think is that a private body cannot decide to take away the right we have to the free expression of ideas. You cannot have a private body, I believe, in any nation, in any nation-state, which becomes a censorship board. Freedom should be guaranteed. If there is to be any regulation, that is up to the nation-state; it cannot be left in the hands of individuals,” the Mexican President stated.He continued: “In the first meeting that we have of the G20, I am going to make à proposal on this subject. Yes, social networks should not be used to incite violence … but that cannot be grounds for suspending freedom of expression; it must not be used as an excuse. Freedom must be guaranteed. No to censorship….”Regulation is the job of “legally and legitimately established governments,” he declared. “How can a company set itself up a total absolute power, as a kind of Holy Inquisition regarding statements, declarations, the right to exercise freedom?…”And then, he said, you get people saying: “Let’s see, I don’t like the word ‘fraud’ being mentioned and so everyone who uses the word ‘fraud’ is censored.”“What is that?” López Obrador exclaimed.Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard then reported to the journalists that Mexico has been in touch with other governments that have expressed similar sentiments: Germany’s Angela Merkel, the French government, the head of the European Union, and various countries of the world in Africa, Ibero-America, and Southeast Asia. The President has instructed us to get in touch with everyone, share our concerns, and work to be able to make a joint proposal, he said. “There is worldwide disagreement over this matter…. Freedoms should be protected.”

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