The significance of Elon Musk’s Twitter purchase

Free speech as protected by government is a relic of the past. Today, massive corporations exercise total control over the First Amendment. This means that these tech corps control the news, the various, ever-changing narratives, and even the outcomes of elections. Enter Elon. It is not hyperbole to state that his purchase of Twitter has altered the course of US history, and if he remains committed to relatively absolute free speech, this course correction will bring profoundly positive change. Twitter is the de facto public square of the United States. It is public speech incarnate. But the path that Twitter was previously on was one of censorship and control. It appears that Musk is making good on his commitment to free speech, returning the First Amendment to the American people. He has become the steward of the First Amendment itself. I’m reminded of a much-maligned quote from a 1981 interview with Friedrich Hayek:

“it is possible for a dictator to govern in a liberal way. And it is also possible for a democracy to govern with a total lack of liberalism. Personally I prefer a liberal dictator to democratic government lacking liberalism.”

What we’re seeing is the rule of a liberal “dictator” in the domain of free speech. For better or worse, this development appears to have been necessary to wrest control of speech from the censorious mega corps that had previously exercised total control over the First Amendment in practice.

Med students take woke oath before graduating

There is something primitive and unsettling about all chants, a quadrupedal mindlessness that is ugly and out of place in a world of rationality. But this one takes the cake. This appears to be the same prehistoric religion of totalitarianism pushing its way out of the submerged recesses of our hunter-gatherer minds and onto our plane of existence.

May 2020: Mark Cuban hired secret shoppers to snitch on businesses flouting COVID restrictions

Never forget how these people behaved:

“Cuban hired a firm to send 300 “secret shoppers” to retail stores and restaurants throughout Dallas to gauge how well businesses are following safety protocols. The result? “Not good,” he writes.

“Overall – 96% of businesses were non-compliant across all mandatory protocols and all locations,” Cuban writes. “The extent of non-compliance is dramatic with ~1/3 of all locations being <50% compliant across mandatory protocols as established by the Governor’s office.””

Half of murders in the United States go unsolved every year

When we think of the crime of murder in the US, we have an image in our mind of CSI crime labs, autistic geniuses recreating the crime to the smallest detail, psychics communing with the victim or receiving visions, and essentially a non-stop effort that ends with the dirtbag in cuffs. This is not the case for around half of murders in the US. I find it disturbing that in our age of endless digital surveillance, murder and violent crimes go unsolved at increasing rates each year. Think back on a time you knew someone who filed a police report regarding a crime. Was it solved? Did the police even get back to them? The portrayal of the justice system on the silver screen and the justice system as it exists do not match up. This wasn’t always the case. In the 60’s, 90% of murders were “cleared”, meaning the police found the perpetrator. Would 60’s cops have had success with the JonBenet Ramsey murder where 90’s cops failed? Would they have had her then-9 year old brother, who more than likely killed his sister, institutionalized within a few months? Instead, he has walked free ever since.

The recent Moscow, Idaho quadruple murder looks to be quickly turning into a cold case that will never be solved. Did incompetent investigators bungle the crime scene, and squander the vital first few days? It is appearing to be the case. This points to a dramatic rise in the incompetence of government and law enforcement at every level. A cultural shift has taken place slowly, over a period of several decades, and the public suffers for it.