Tag Archives: Sandy Hook massacre

Alex Jones: no free-speech martyr

Alex Jones has been kicked off some social media platforms.

I have to offer a huge round of applause for those platforms that have seen fit to abide by the standards they set for those who use them. Jones didn’t do that. He’s gone at least from those particular venues.

Who is this clown? He’s a talk-show blowhard and noted conspiracy theorist. His infamy grew exponentially when he alleged that the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Newtown, Conn. — where 20 first- and second-graders and six teachers were gunned down in 2012 — was a “hoax.” He said the grieving parents were actors brought in by anti-gun activists to carry the cudgel for disarming the American public.

He is a monstrous purveyor of hate speech.

Facebook, Apple, Spotify and YouTube all have banned Jones from using their platforms to spew his garbage.

Jones’s response has been predictable. He says the First Amendment guarantees him the right to speak his mind. No matter how vile his thoughts might be.

Hold on, buster.

This argument reminds me of discussions I had throughout my journalism career with individuals who would submit letters or other commentary that I found unsuitable for publication on the opinion pages I edited.

They would say, “But what about free speech?” My response was the same. “You are free to purchase and run your own newspaper and then you are free to publish whatever you want. We have rules and standards and your submission falls short of them.”

So it is with Alex Jones’s hate speech. The social media platforms are within their own constitutional rights to set standards that those who use them must follow. Jones crossed many lines with his hideous pronouncements.

He’s still able to spew his filth. The U.S. Constitution allows it. He simply is no longer able to do so using the venues whose owners and managers have done what they should have done long ago.

They cut him off.

Radio jock: D’oh! It happened after all!

It took the parents of two slain boys to extract a long-awaited — albeit partial — admission from a notorious radio talk-show host and conspiracy theorist.

Alex Jones has been yapping and yammering since 2012 that the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre of 20 children and six teachers didn’t happen. It was a hoax, he said, and the parents of the children have been portrayed by “actors.”

He’s now been sued for at least $1 million by the parents of Jesse Heslin and Noah Pozner, two of the children slaughtered. They are suing for defamation relating to Jones’s continual idiocy. According to WHSU Public Radio: The lawsuit alleges Jones’s misinformation led conspiracy theorists to make death threats against the families of shooting victims.

Now we hear that Jones has gone on YouTube to say the shooting did occur. But here’s another kicker: Jones contends the plaintiffs are being used by the Democratic Party and the news media and he has invited them to appear on his show to discuss guns.

Sure thing, Goofball. That’ll happen.

I cannot know how this lawsuit will play out. Jones might settle for a lot of money before it ever goes to court. That would be OK with me.

The parents of those precious children and the loved ones of the heroes who died trying to protect them from the madman who opened fire in Newtown, Conn., deserve significant remuneration from the source of those moronic rants.

To my way of thinking, Jones had better get ready to dig deeply into his pockets. He is going to owe those parents a lot of money.

Why give Alex Jones a platform?

People such as Alex Jones give me heartburn.

I happen to be a First Amendment purist. I believe in the amendment’s guarantee of free speech and I do not want it watered down.

Then along comes people like Jones, the radio talk show blowhard who’s been thrust into the news yet again. Broadcast journalist Megyn Kelly has booked him on her NBC News show and snippets of her interview with Jones have enraged some survivors of one of the nation’s worst tragedies.

Jones has spoken infamously about how the 9/11 attacks against the United States were an “inside job” and then — and this goes way beyond anything resembling human decency — he has alleged that the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in Connecticut was staged; he says the children who were slain were “actors.”

Kelly is giving this guy’s moronic views a platform.

Should he be allowed to spout that trash? Should he be given air time on a major broadcast network? That pesky First Amendment says “yes.” Tenets of good judgment and basic humanity suggest that this guy shouldn’t be given a platform to spout the filth that pours out of his pie hole.

Kelly deserves the criticism she is getting from at least one of the Sandy Hook parents who lost a child in that hideous act of cruelty.

And that damn heartburn continues to churn in my gut.