Pundits routinely conflate clapback with censorship, claiming persecution when private companies like Facebook, Apple and Twitter police their platforms by ousting racists and conspiracy-mongering trolls. But one Silicon Valley giant came under fire in recent days for ceding to actual civil rights-violating suppression of free speech.
Last week, Netflix bowed to an autocratic government’s order to silence a critic.
According to a Jan. 1 Financial Times report, the Los Gatos-based streaming service yanked an episode in Saudi Arabia of “The Patriot Act” over host Hasan Minhaj’s condemnation of the kingdom’s murderous monarchy.
In the show’s second installment, which first aired Oct. 28, the California-bred Muslim-American comedian rebuked Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman over the slaying of renowned columnist Jamal Khashoggi and the U.S.-backed, Saudi-led war in Yemen.
“It blows my mind that it took the killing of a Washington Post journalist for everyone to go, ‘Oh, I guess he’s not really a reformer,” Minhaj observed of 33-year-old bin Salman, who’s accused by the U.S. Senate and the CIA of orchestrating the gruesome killing.
Minhaj also slammed Silicon Valley for choosing money over morals.
The crown prince has famously cozied up to tech industry elites as oil-fueled Saudi wealth became the biggest funding source for U.S. companies, including Uber, Twitter, Tesla, DoorDash, Slack and Nvidia, among others. Last year, bin Salman touched down in East Palo Alto to hobnob with bigwigs from Palantir, Clarium Capital, Valar Ventures, Andreessen Horowitz and Y-Combinator.
“WeWork won’t let you expense meat,” Minhaj remarked about the startup going vegetarian over environmental concerns, “but you take money from Saudi Arabia? So you’re against slaughterhouses unless they’re in Yemen?”
The show’s commentary—which should resonate with the South Bay politicos and business boosters who joined a delegation to Riyadh last spring—prompted a legal warning from Saudi officials who claimed it violated the kingdom’s cybercrime statutes.
Samah Hadid, the Middle East director of Human rights group Amnesty International, called Saudi Arabia’s censorship further proof of a relentless crackdown on dissent and an assault on international norms.
“Netflix is in danger of facilitating the kingdom’s zero-tolerance policy on freedom of expression and assisting the authorities in denying people’s right to freely access information,” he said in a statement to reporters.
Netflix downplayed its decision as banal and benign.
“We strongly support artistic freedom worldwide and removed this episode only in Saudi Arabia after we had received a valid legal demand from the government—and to comply with local law,” the company insisted.
That same broadly worded local law has been used by Saudi prosecutors to justify the jailing, torture and death of people who dare to speak out against the royal regime.
In a tweet, Minhaj scoffed at the futility of the attempt to silence him considering that Saudis can still find the offending episode free of charge on another popular platform.
“Clearly,” he wrote, “the best way to stop people from watching something is to ban it, make it a trend online and then leave it up on YouTube.”
> Pundits routinely conflate clapback with censorship, claiming persecution when private companies like Facebook, Apple and Twitter police their platforms by ousting racists and conspiracy-mongering trolls.
“Clapback”?
What the hell’s a “clapback”?
https://www.dictionary.com/misspelling?term=clapback
“No results found for clapback”
Behold: https://www.merriam-webster.com/words-at-play/clapback-meaning-origin
Does Queen Elizabeth II know what is being done to the Queen’s English?
““Clap Back” is aimed at rappers 50 Cent and Eminem, and is just one of many diss tracks released in the beef between Murder Inc.”
. . .
You may think the clap in question is the well-known clap that means “a sudden blow.” It’s not. In this context, clap refers to shooting someone; the word refers to the sound of a handgun shot. It shows up in rap lyrics back to the early 1990s:
Liggedy let the nines clap, cause I’m back …
— EPMD (feat. Das EFX), “Cummin’ At Cha” on Business Never Personal, 1992
My lyrical format sounds off like gun claps…
— Redman, “Da Journee” on Dare Iz A Darkside, 1994
By 2000, clap wasn’t just referring to the sound of a gun, but to the act of shooting someone:
Clap whoever stand between Shawn and figures…
— Jay-Z, “Intro” on The Dynasty: Roc La Familia, 2000
– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Didn’t Sarah Palin get in trouble with the Progressive intelligentsia for using an image of a crosshair gunsight in a political ad?
As far as I know, she didn’t “clap” anyone.
Is “clapping” at a Trump rally now a “dog whistle” for violence against 50 Cent, Eminem, or black people in general?
> The crown prince has famously cozied up to tech industry elites as oil-fueled Saudi wealth became the biggest funding source for U.S. companies, including Uber, Twitter, Tesla, DoorDash, Slack and Nvidia, among others.
Twitter?
> Netflix Bows to Saudi Censors, Pulls Episode of ‘The Patriot Act’
https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/charliewarzel/twitter-just-permanently-suspended-conservative-writer-milo
“Twitter Permanently Suspends Conservative Writer Milo Yiannopoulos”
AHA!!! It WASN’T PC LEFTISTS AT BERKELEY. The SAUDIS CENSORED MILO!!!
Are the Saudis pulling strings at Berkeley, too?
Easy, bubble boy
Money trumps corporate moral rectitutde almost every time! Follow the money! Or in the case of Netflix let Saudi money pull you by the nose! Saudi’s created the culture where the majority of 9/11 terrorists could ply their wretched trade. No matter though in thee US, Saudis can call the shots. (Pun intended)
The suppression of freedom of speech did not become an obstacle to the further display of the program. This is necessary to spread the ideas of the censor.
Hundreds of dead journalist in Mexico and the rest of Central America would be wondering, why didn’t anyone raise this kind of stink about how corrupt these governments run by drug cartels in hell hole countries could be.
Where is the outcry? Wait was that a clapback on another journalist?
Hate to break it to you but technology has made it impossible to keep people from watching what they want to watch. Anyone with a just a little bit of knowledge can get around Netflix geographic restrictions.
Wow!!! More Islamic censorship to cover up their crimes. The Saudi’s are the world’s biggest sponsor of Islamic terror networks and this MUST BE STOPPED!!
But we should let unlimited numbers of them stroll into the country unvetted?