And so it begins…

Disgrace: Any citizens caught accessing X with a VPN will be fined $10,000 per DAY.

Censorship expert Mike Benz reacts, imploring Americans to immediately apply pressure to the US State Department and the US Embassy in Brazil.

Partial transcript:

The Brazilian government just banned X, which means that the handle for the U.S. embassy in Brazil @USAMBR is now banned in Brazil. Brazilians can’t even see the X account of the embassy, and the embassy has not issued a statement condemning what’s happened, has not threatened sanctions, has not threatened the retrenchment of U.S. business interests, has not threatened getting rid of the $200 million in foreign government assistance to Brazil. Nothing.

Just today, earlier, the U.S. embassy finally, finally, after, I don’t know, almost a year of total silence, just hours before the Brazil bandit said, finally made a public statement about everything that’s happened and said, we are monitoring the situation. They are monitoring it. They’ve been monitoring it. They have been behind it. They have been funding it. They have been funding it. They have been funding it. They have been funding it. They have been coordinating it. Earlier today, I saw a picture of a Brazilian member of Congress in the United States saying he’s a censored man in Congress. Well, do you know that the U.S. government actually funded the Brazilian NGOs, the Brazilian think tanks, who are part of the legislative development of these censorship edicts and who pressured Brazil’s government not to create a carve-out for congressional parliamentarians because it would give a free pass for Brazilian members of Congress? To spread misinformation online?

So the U.S. government funded the pressure for the ability to arrest that politician. This is not a case of Brazilian government gone rogue. The U.S. government sponsored it through the State Department, through USAID, through the National Endowment for Democracy, and about a hundred different NGOs, university centers, legal scholars, and activists within Brazil, starting in 2018, starting in about October 2018, and first they came for the social media companies, then they came for WhatsApp and Telegram, and now finally they’re coming for X.

Now, they are between a rock and a hard place, which is why I believe the U.S. Embassy finally issued this pittance of a public statement hours ago before the ban that they’re monitoring the situation, and this is because now there’s a fire lit under their ass, and I’m sorry, but part of that may have been because I generated over a hundred million impressions in the past 48 hours specifically naming the U.S. Embassy, and I just went on Tucker Carlson specifically naming the U.S. Embassy.

That interview with Tucker Carlson can be seen here:

Or on YouTube:

More background from Benz:

Greenwald is defiant.

Additional background via KanekoaTheGreat:

Glenn Greenwald On Brazil’s Alexandre De Moraes’ Authoritarian Censorship Regime Targeting Elon Musk, Starlink, and 𝕏

Context and Situation:
In Brazil, Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes has initiated aggressive actions against X, compelling the platform to comply with censorship orders targeting political figures. The orders demand the removal of elected senators and congress members from the platform, actions which X has resisted due to their political motivation and lack of due process. In response, de Morais has threatened to arrest X executives in Brazil and demanded that X appoint a legal representative in the country to enforce these orders.

X’s Response:
Elon Musk, owner of X, announced the closure of all X offices in Brazil and the relocation of its executives outside the country, citing safety concerns. Despite this, de Morais issued a 24-hour ultimatum for X to comply with the censorship orders or face being blocked in Brazil entirely, leaving the platform inaccessible to all Brazilians except those using VPNs.

Legal and Political Maneuvers:
De Moraes’ demands are part of a broader trend in which authoritarian regimes exert control over online platforms to suppress dissent. This has extended beyond X, with the blocking of financial assets of Starlink, another Musk-owned company, despite no wrongdoing on its part. De Moraes’ actions align with increasing censorship efforts seen in Brazil and other nations, where governments seek to maintain control over public discourse by stifling opposition voices online.

Global Context and Implications:
This situation is part of a global pattern where governments, both in democratic and authoritarian states, are increasingly imposing stringent controls over internet platforms. These controls are often justified by claims of national security or the need to prevent misinformation, yet they effectively limit free speech and the exchange of ideas. The trend began intensifying around 2016, following political events like Brexit and the election of Donald Trump, which demonstrated the power of the internet in shaping public opinion independent of traditional media gatekeepers.

Conclusion:
The actions by Brazil’s Supreme Court, particularly those of Justice De Moraes, represent a significant threat to internet freedom. They illustrate how governments can leverage legal and economic pressures to force compliance with censorship demands, thus curtailing the ability of platforms like X to serve as open forums for public debate. This reflects a broader, concerning trend of increasing censorship and control over online spaces by governments worldwide, undermining democratic principles and the free exchange of ideas.

@ggreenwald Quotes:

“The indescribably authoritarian judge on the Brazil Supreme Court, Alessandra de Morais, who essentially runs the country, threatened X’s Brazilian executives that they would immediately be arrested if X did not instantly comply with censorship orders to censor elected members of the Senate and the Congress.

“There’s no due process provided, and these people have not been convicted of crimes. It’s just this politically motivated judge ordering these people banned from the internet. X did not want to cooperate with that, so this threat was issued. We’re going to arrest X executives inside Brazil unless you comply.”

“It’s expected, especially for Western companies, that they’re not going to comply with authoritarian regimes and shut down all opposition. That is considered immoral. All of the authoritarian countries that we are taught to hate have had a constant conflict with big tech over its refusal to censor dissidents or opponents of the government, and now this is contaminating the Western world.”

“In 2022, Elon Musk was awarded official commendations from Brazil’s authorities for his benevolent act of providing free internet connections to many of the poorest areas in Brazil that the government hadn’t been able to provide on their own. And yet, somehow, this judge, even though there’s no finding that Starlink itself did anything wrong, has blocked Starlink’s bank accounts in Brazil to punish X.”

“It is genuinely remarkable the lengths to which not just Brazil but countries throughout the democratic world are now willing to go to prevent the internet from being a free exchange of ideas where human beings can organize freely and privately because they recognize that is the one threat to establishment power and the status quo ruling class prerogatives.”

“This is happening in the ostensibly Western democratic world. I cannot do anything more in terms of words to express how extreme, how severe, and how dangerous this trend is.”

Watch:

Elon Musk and others reacted.

Earlier from Elon Musk:

Wild times…