Over the past few weeks, the occupation of the capitol building by pro-Trump 
demonstrators has legitimated a raft of security measures. The War on Terror is 
now the War on the Internet. In the wake of Brexit and the election of Donald 
Trump, liberalism has become aware of the danger posed to it by the internet. 
On the internet, discourse proliferates rapidly, in an uncontrolled and 
unmediated way. Many web users begin to develop positions which are 
incompatible with liberal pluralism, which paint their political opponents as 
enemies who must be comprehensively destroyed. During the 90s, 00s, and early 
10s, the internet was not treated seriously by liberal theory. The triumph of 
the populists in the mid-10s forced liberalism to reckon with it. Now 
liberalism is trying to change the internet into something compatible with 
liberalism.

Liberalism is grounded on the idea that instead of having a state which is 
committed to one particular moral theory, religion, or worldview, the state 
will be committed to the “freedom” or “liberty” to create and choose one’s own 
values. These values are constructed through civil society organizations. There 
is a plurality of these organizations, offering a menu of different values. 
Traditionally, they include churches, universities, unions, social clubs, and 
so on.

The more intelligent liberal theorists recognize that it is possible for these 
civil society organizations to promote values which are hostile to pluralism, 
and therefore hostile to freedom as liberalism understands it. Max Weber 
condemned these organizations and their followers as “immature”, because in his 
view, they fail to recognize that their freedom to choose their illiberal 
values itself depends on the freedom which the liberal state secures. Much 
later, John Rawls called these same people and organizations “unreasonable”.

To deal with this, clever liberal theorists encourage the state to regulate 
civil society. By policing out organizations which are “immature” or 
“unreasonable”, liberalism offers a curated discourse, in which citizens are 
free to choose from among values which all happen to be compatible with the 
liberal state. The freedom, then, is a freedom to be liberal, to submit to the 
liberal state, because the liberal state has a monopoly on what counts as 
“mature” or “reasonable”.

Of course, if we become widely conscious of this, liberalism begins to look 
totalitarian, and the freedom it promises begins to look illusory. To make 
curated pluralism credible as genuine pluralism, the state must not be seen to 
enforce the curation. The curation must appear to be the natural consequence of 
reasonable, mature arguments winning out over unreasonable, immature arguments.

This is easily achieved during periods of liberal consensus, when liberalism 
has managed to create sufficient social stability that there are very few 
people who attempt to advance illiberal ideas. But when this consensus begins 
to break down, liberalism must find a way to regain control over civil society. 
This typically begins in finding a way to purge civil society without being 
seen to purge it.

The Red Scare is the classic example of this. It was not illegal, per se, to be 
a communist in the United States in the post-war era. But being seen to be a 
communist was toxic to advancement within most private organizations. Remaining 
inside communist organizations resulted in being blacklisted from other 
desirable organizations, and this caused those communist organizations to 
decline. In this way, the communist organizations were dramatically weakened 
without the need for formal state censorship.

Beginning in the 70s, there was another set of assaults on illiberal 
organizations which were deemed to be incubation spots for illiberal views. The 
state began gradually undermining the unions through clever “right-to-work” 
laws, which appeared to expand individual rights while in practice greatly 
diminishing the presence of the unions in society and consequently the 
contribution to value pluralism which the unions had made.

After 9/11, we went on a crusade against illiberal Islamic organizations. This 
crusade mostly took place outside the borders of the country, but it also 
directed a great deal of negative attention toward Islamic organizations 
operating within the borders of liberal states. Germany and France have begun 
an overt effort to bring Islam within the state’s religious regulatory system, 
in an effort to domesticate and liberalize Islam. If this effort is successful, 
Islam will become broadly indistinguishable from Christianity in these 
countries. It will not be banned, but the choice to be a Muslim or a Christian 
will become largely aesthetic and nonsubstantive.

Post-2016, the internet is the new threat to liberal reason. The internet began 
not as part of civil society, but as a rogue reincarnation of the public realm. 
In a public realm, private organizations do not exist side by side, giving 
people a choice about values. Instead, value disagreement plays out in a shared 
space. This public disagreement is much harder to contain within the silos of 
the many distinct civil society organizations which make up liberal pluralism. 
Over time, it grows more and more antagonistic, as different ideas compete for 
supremacy within the public realm.

This online public realm is principally responsible for our ability to 
articulate opposition to neoliberalism. This opposition manifests in both 
left-wing and right-wing varieties, but both varieties are incompatible with 
the liberal project because they suggest that a series of aesthetic choices, a 
“marketplace of aesthetics”, is insufficient to protect morally important 
values, like justice, truth, community, God, and so on. These left and right 
wing thinkers do not identify freedom in having a choice among superficially 
different but substantively identical values. They identify freedom with 
discrete things, like “ending exploitation and wage slavery” or “submitting to 
God”.

This is why, historically, old fashioned republics with public realms 
experience much more intense internal conflict. Liberalism seeks to avoid that 
internal conflict by replacing public realms with civil society. In the case of 
the internet, this means that the internet must be regulated without being seen 
to be regulated. This means the state cannot straightforwardly dictate what 
kind of speech is acceptable online. But it can partition the internet among a 
series of tech companies, and those tech companies can do that work for them. 
The tech companies are forced to do this work because their autonomy from the 
state depends on their willingness to do it. If they refuse to domesticate the 
internet, the media will be intensely hostile to them, and the state will 
regulate them and trust bust them. Over the last five years, this situation 
became increasingly clear to the tech companies. They have no choice but to 
play this role.

As the tech companies comply, we will be told that the internet is still free 
because we have a choice of which social media outlets to use. But all of these 
social media outlets will prohibit illiberal content. The choice will be 
aesthetic, and the tech companies will become new civil society organizations. 
These civil society organizations will be managed top-down by extraordinarily 
wealthy oligarchs, with ordinary members having no say in what kind of speech 
is permitted or banned. These oligarchs will, however, frequently ban content 
that high-profile influencers dislike, because this will enlist those users to 
support the private censorship regime. In this way, the influencers will 
mediate between the users and the tech oligarchs, and the tech companies will 
mediate between the citizenry and the state.

In this way, liberalism will reshape the internet into something compatible 
with it. It will make the internet intensely boring, and it will destroy this 
round of attempts to resist neoliberalism, in both its left-wing and right-wing 
forms.

It will be aided in this by influencers who have credibility with radicals. 
Currently there is immense pressure on right-wing influencers to break with 
Trumpism and aid this domestication. The left-wing influencers have, by and 
large, already complied.

It will work by labelling everything that is illiberal “fascism”. This process 
is already in motion and it is unlikely to be reversed.


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