Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) may have been a social studies teacher, but he would have failed Constitutional Law 101, especially the part about the First Amendment.
“There’s no guarantee to free speech on misinformation or hate speech
and especially around our democracy,” Walz said on MSNBC in December
2022, which would be news to the Supreme Court, which unanimously held as recently as 2017
that “speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender,
religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground” is still
protected by the First Amendment.
Walz’s impulse to censor speech he does not like is most definitely
shared by his running mate, Vice President Kamala Harris, who pushed for
Twitter and Facebook to censor then-President Donald Trump even before
the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. In Iowa, on Oct. 19, 2019, Harris told
Facebook’s Mark Zuckerberg, “This is not a matter of free speech. … This
is a matter of holding corporate America and these Big Tech companies
responsible and accountable for what they are facilitating.”
Harris’s anti-free speech position was so extreme that even Sen.
Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) pushed back, saying she wanted to kick Trump
only out of the White House, not off social media. But politburo
secretariat officer Kamala did not back down. “I’m calling on everyone
to join me,” she said.
By 2019, Harris already had a well-established history of using government power to silence voices she does not like.
Read how she, oopsie, published the private data she collected as Attorney General of California online here.
She's a doxxer.