While Democracy Burns, Democrats Prioritize… Demolishing Section 230?

from the that's-not-how-any-of-this-works dept

While an unelected tech billionaire is effectively orchestrating a coup of the US government, violating federal law with apparent impunity, and disclaiming all responsibility for the chaos he’s causing, the Democrats have identified their top priority: repealing Section 230.

You might think — in a moment when democracy itself seems to be unraveling and the American experiment teetering on the brink — that Democratic leadership would focus on, oh I don’t know, preserving the basic functions of government. But no, they’ve decided that what we really need right now is to demolish the legal framework that makes online discourse possible.

Senate Dems tweet: Enough is enough. We're introducing a bill to remove Big Tech's legal immunity this week.

(Forgive the lack of a profile image on that screenshot — at the time I made the screenshot literally every profile image on ExTwitter is just a gray circle, because things are operating greeeeeaaaat over there while the boss is away destroying the country).

Senator Dick Durbin, ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, has emerged with what can only be described as a masterclass in missing the point. In a press release that reads like it was written in an alternate universe where the biggest threat to democracy is… checks notes… website comment sections, Durbin announced his excitement about taking away Section 230.

This week, Durbin will join U.S. Senators Lindsey Graham (R-SC), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Josh Hawley (R-MO), Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) to introduce a bill that would sunset Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act in two years.  Section 230—and the legal immunity it provides to Big Tech—has been on the books since 1996—long before social media became a part of our daily lives. To the extent this protection was ever needed, its usefulness has long since passed.

Let’s unpack this for a moment. At a time when an unelected billionaire is effectively running the government via his own social media platform, Democrats have decided to partner with… squints harder… the very Republicans who’ve been helping enable this takeover, to eliminate the law that makes alternative social media platforms possible in the first place.

The thing is, this isn’t just regular old political malpractice — this is advanced political malpractice. We’ve known for years that these same Republican senators have been quite open about their plans to use Section 230’s removal as a weapon against speech they don’t like. It’s right there in their public statements! This isn’t some clever political chess move — it’s handing matches to an arsonist who has loudly declared his intention to burn your house down, while insisting it’s necessary to improve fire safety.

But Durbin’s fundamental mischaracterization of Section 230 as mere “legal immunity for big tech” betrays either willful ignorance or calculated misdirection. Section 230 is, at its core, a shield for speech – your speech, my speech, everyone’s speech. It protects individuals and small websites far more than it protects Silicon Valley giants. It’s what keeps you safe when you forward an email or share a post. It’s what enables sites for people to review doctors or mechanics or employers. It’s what makes it possible for Wikipedia to exist. It’s what enables the very digital discourse we need to maintain democracy.

The dumbest part: removing Section 230 would actually entrench Big Tech’s power, not diminish it. The giants would survive just fine — most cases against them would still fail on First Amendment grounds. But defending speech under the First Amendment is far more complex and expensive than Section 230’s straightforward protections. Meta, Google, and their ilk have armies of lawyers to handle this. Everyone else? Not so much.

This explains why Mark Zuckerberg has been practically begging Congress to eliminate Section 230. It’s not because he suddenly developed a burning passion for content moderation reform. It’s because he’s looked at the math and realized: “Hey, we can afford buildings full of lawyers. Our competitors can’t.” When Zuckerberg advocates for eliminating Section 230, he’s not confessing his sins — he’s pitching his business plan.

Without Section 230 “Big Tech” would be fine. First of all, in nearly all cases that are filed against websites would still lose, because almost all of these decisions are protected by the First Amendment. But — and this is the important part — having to defend it under the First Amendment is way more expensive. And takes way longer. Which means that smaller defendants, especially, will likely cave in to threats.

The end result? Big Tech gets bigger, smaller platforms disappear, and the “monopolies” that Durbin claims to be fighting become actual monopolies — now with congressional approval! It’s like trying to punish Standard Oil by making it illegal for anyone except Standard Oil to sell kerosene.

Durbin’s claim that Section 230’s “usefulness has long since passed” isn’t just wrong — it’s dangerous. The law is more vital now than ever, as demonstrated by countless cases where it’s protected essential online discourse. At a moment when we desperately need more venues for protected speech and democratic dialogue, Durbin is proposing to demolish the very framework that makes such dialogue possible.

The consequences would be predictable and devastating: a cascade of frivolous lawsuits designed to silence critics and suppress inconvenient truths. Without Section 230’s efficient dismissal process, even completely baseless legal threats become effective censorship tools. Think about it: if you’re running a small community forum and someone threatens to sue you because they don’t like a user’s post about their business, what are you going to do? Spend hundreds of thousands of dollars defending your First Amendment rights, or just take down the post? This isn’t theoretical — it’s basic economics.

The end result is that it becomes that much easier to suppress dissent.

The timing of this crusade against Section 230 is particularly revealing. While democracy itself is under assault, while an unelected billionaire consolidates unprecedented power over government systems, Durbin has chosen to champion a proposal that would:

  1. Make Big Tech even more powerful
  2. Hand MAGA forces a powerful weapon for silencing opposition through legal harassment
  3. Cripple the digital infrastructure needed for organizing democratic resistance

This isn’t just Durbin being out of touch — though at 80 years old, that’s certainly part of it. This is a catastrophic misreading of both technology and democracy that would be almost comical if it weren’t so dangerous. Here we have a Democratic leader eagerly collaborating with the very senators actively undermining democracy, on legislation that would further enable their authoritarian aims, while apparently convinced he’s doing something about “Big Tech.”

The Democrats desperately need new leadership, and not just because Durbin doesn’t understand how the internet works. They need leaders who understand that defending democracy requires actually defending the tools that make democratic discourse possible. Instead, we have Durbin, essentially proposing to solve the problem of book-burning by making it illegal to publish books. His Section 230 crusade makes it painfully clear: he’s not just the wrong leader for this moment — he’s actively making things worse.

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Comments on “While Democracy Burns, Democrats Prioritize… Demolishing Section 230?”

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67 Comments

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benjamin klein says:

Do we know if chuck grassley supports the demolishing of section 230 ?

Mike Yesterday chuck grassley the senate judiciary leader

has said i have been quoted over a periode of two and three years about voting for repeal. Or voting for some modification of it and i want to get a large share of this commitee behind one bill if we can does that means that grassley supports section 230 demolishing bill ?
And if that section 230 demolishing bill gets off the judiciary commitee do you think that the house or the full senate will take it ?

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Anonymous Coward says:

Yes. Because 90% of democrats are right of the middle. We are here now because democrats gave up ground one right, one law, one political norm at a time in concession after concession.

Most are just writing angry letters. Some are doing nothing more than tweeting. Their opposition is just pr bs and isn’t real.

If you are relying on the same democrats who can’t even vote against trump’s shit nominees and who haven’t said no to the same money that supported all this then you will be very disappointed.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Never underestimate an enemy

Ah if only…

There are certainly plenty of dumb and/or deranged republicans out there but thinking that none of them are intelligent and know what they’re doing is just begging them to outplay you with the sort of planning and thinking that would be beyond ‘just’ a dumb and/or deranged politician.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

at this point with the constant attacks with people who either hate the idea of free speech of the internet or are so ignorant of how the internet works they think they are doing good i think we are just exhausted and gettig worn down theres still always hope it wont get through or will get lawsuited into oblivion but its a constant struggle now

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Bobson Dugnutt (profile) says:

I would add Number 4

To the other three, I would add a more ominous:

  1. Social media serve as kind of a full scale FBI dossier on everyone on their platforms. We’ve freely expressed ourselves in more innocent times, but our innocent past in the current context becomes a guilty future. Social media have our thoughts, memes, IP addresses, phone numbers, addresses …

The Trump White House has a nonzero amount of aspirational genociders, and there has been or will be a Trump operative who contacts Mark Zuckerberg and says, “You know how Facebook was the official genocide platform of Myanmar? We’re going to need your people to scale that shit.”

Tdestroyer209 says:

I honestly think Durbin is repealing Section 230 because his CSAM bill didn’t pass last year (which only had six cosponsors) and he’s pissed to where he wants to nuke the internet in retaliation.

I mean for fuck’s sake Durbin is 80 years old and he needs to retire plus wouldn’t surprise me if he is nuking 230 also as his “fuck you” to the internet and his legacy.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Yes it will. We’re at the start of the year, republicans have the majority in both houses of congress, they want to kill CDA 230 too and there aren’t enough democrats opposed to this, all we have is Wyden and maybe rand paul. I don’t care if the “don’t speak doomer” posters don’t want to hear this, start preparing for the worst.

Cat_Daddy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

So keep fighting then. Keep calling them, keep holding their feet to the fire, make them listen. Even if you think that this feels impossible and pointless. Giving in to fear helps no one and it certainly doesn’t help you. I understand this feels insurmountable, but it’s not impossible. I’m frustrated with democrats too, so you’re not alone.

Arianity says:

Without Section 230 “Big Tech” would be fine. First of all, in nearly all cases that are filed against websites would still lose, because almost all of these decisions are protected by the First Amendment.

Without 230, they’re opened up for publisher liability. While the First Amendment covers most cases, it won’t cover those. It’s an extremely stupid gamble to take for a platform like Facebook.

Anyway, this doubly sucks. I’ll be calling my Congressperson on Monday. I hope all the people who said it’s impossible to make Congress suck a bit less do the same.

Spend hundreds of thousands of dollars defending your First Amendment rights,

If you have to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars defending a right, it’s not really a right.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Oh hey, it’s almost as if the people telling you the DNC was always rooting for the same thing as the outspoken fascists since 2009 were right all along.

Imagine if you had actually listened to them instead of just screaming, “No you’re wrong! The DNC is good! Shut up!”

Well you got the government you wanted, just not with the head of state you wanted. Too bad.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Re:

Yes yes, the party that is in agreement with the republicans that 230 needs to go(for diametrically opposing reasons at that) is just as bad as the party currently burning the country to the ground the first month their guy got in office.

Spare me the ‘they’re both the same bullshit’.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Right now my sight is red like a bull’s. The republicans are killing america, I see a grand total of absolutely nothing being done by the democrats to stop it (yes I know there’s little they can do legally) yet the first thing I wake up to on a friday is “senate democrats have decided to make everything worse instead”, no shit I’m going to say same thing both sides, I’m tired of useless and intentionally antagonistic politicians.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Oh by all means be pissed at both parties for burning the country to the ground, standing back and watching it happen, or in this case deciding that now’s the perfect time to throw a few buckets of gasoline on the fire, they both more than deserve the vitriol, but the ‘both sides are just as bad’ shit is almost certainly a large part of why we’re in this mess to begin with, because come election day a whole bunch of people figured that since both parties were bad there wasn’t any point in voting for either, and everyone knows how that worked out.

Both parties are terrible.
Both parties are more than deserving of being verbally ripped into on a regular basis, albeit for different reasons generally.

But for the sake of the next elections it’s more vital than ever for people to kill and bury the idea of ‘both parties are equally bad’ because we’re already facing at least two years of hell at least in part thanks to that idea, and if people don’t ditch it come the midterms and especially the next presidential election I strongly suspect that people will look back to this first month as ‘the good old days, before things got really bad’.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

…It’s not even the same party, it’s several senators who have historically always been Reps in all but name in all but name banding together. When has Graham ever been particularly democratic? When has Klobuchar? Have you Seen Blackburn’s track record on commenting things like trans people? This aren’t party mainstays, these are glorified Reps just angry they had to get a seat with the other team.

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That One Guy (profile) says:

Priorities: GET THEM

Congressional democrats: Sure we could try to stand up to and fight back against the republicans currently burning the system to the ground as we watch, but that might get the republicans mad at us and saying mean things about us so let’s go with something that will help the very companies we’re using as an excuse with a bill that republicans support for what I’m sure are good and honest reasons.

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Anonymous Coward says:

Enough is enough. We’re introducing a bill to remove Big Tech’s legal immunity this week.

Three points:

  1. One of those Big Tech sites is owned by Elon Musk, Trump’s current favorite business owner. Sure you wanna piss off the Orange Kahuna by targeting ExTwitter?
  2. That immunity is not against all acts, only those that aren’t provably the site’s own.
  3. That immunity against acts of third parties using the website’s services don’t protect just Big Tech, but also small sites and non-social media sites, including Amazon, owned by Jeff Bezos, another individual it might not be wise to piss off due to the depths of his pockets.

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