this post was submitted on 10 Jan 2026
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A lot of people don't seem to remember Alex Jones getting banned from YouTube in 2018. While rightwing, ultra-MAGA's were already a thing, they were relatively small compared today. Alex Jones was the first high profile ban from social media and it was like tossing gasoline onto a small bush fire.
You have to remember that Trump did not win the first time because he had an army of fanatics. A lot of other factors were at play; from people still upset about the DNC's snubbing of Bernie, to people who weren't fully paying attention (remember, politics used to be boring), to people who voted for Trump simply "for the lols" (don't discount this last group, any historical account that doesn't factor in how important internet memes were to getting that man elected is being willfully ignorant) . Die-hard MAGA's were relatively rare, and usually a source of ridicule.
Until their spokespeople started getting banned from places. It seems so small by today's standards. People get banned and deplatformed all the time. But Alex Jones was the first real incident, and people saw it as a massive attack on free speech. To his relatively small number of followers, the man had his free speech rights violated by the left-wing news cabal for daring to speak the TRUTH™. Suddenly, all their bullshit was justified.
I've always been pretty far-left but I got a deep chill when that happened. I remember remarking to my friends that banning political speech, no matter how full of shit, would only cause problems in the long run, and so it has. Precedent was broken, and the right took it as a declaration of war. I truly believe things would not have gotten nearly as insane as they are had Google not decided to ban him. He deserved it, but they opened a door that couldn't be shut again; and following this was a couple years of high-profile bans of rightwing figureheads and safe-spaces, all cumulating to the shut down of /r/theDonald in 2020. And the infection, which had been contained to a few small corners of the internet, suddenly exploded.
I really cannot follow the argument. In Germany, we have a law making it illegal to deny the holocaust. People will say that seven million jews never died, and the police will investigate them, they are taken to court and put into prison if necessary.
Nothing bad ever came from this. We simply get to put one specific kind of asshole into prison if they spread lies to sow hatred.
My fellow countrymen generally seem to struggle with the concept of narrow and focused laws.
Everything is always all or nothing, and it makes nuance a problem to talk about.