This post, authored by Andrew Doyle, is republished with permission from The Daily Sceptic
The baton has passed. On Friday, the previous Conservative government’s Online Safety Bill, newly refined by Labour, came into full force. This collaboration between Left and Right is all the evidence we need that one of the core aspects of woke ideology has prevailed. Specifically, the unevidenced belief that words cause real-world harm and therefore censorship is essential for the sake of social cohesion.
This has been a long time coming. Opposition from MPs has been lacklustre; most of our political class simply does not understand why the principle of free speech should take priority in a civilised society. This was evident from Keir Starmer’s comments this week during his joint interview with Donald Trump at the Trump-Turnberry golf course in Scotland. With nuclear-strength audacity, Starmer claimed that he was “not censoring anyone”. Rather, his Government was simply putting measures in place “to protect children, in particular from sites like suicide sites”.
It all sounds noble enough, until one realises that the impact of the Online Safety Act will not simply stop at child protection. Social media platforms are now liable for “false communications” that may cause “non-trivial psychological harm”, a crime that can result in a jail term of up to 51 weeks. Here is the specific section of the Act:
A person commits an offence if –
(a) the person sends a message,
(b) the message conveys information that the person knows to be false,
(c) at the time of sending it, the person intended the message, or the information in it, to cause non-trivial psychological or physical harm to a likely audience, and
(d) the person has no reasonable excuse for sending the message.
As with all ‘hate speech’ legislation, one suspects that the ambiguity is the point. If the standard is psychological harm, then almost anyone who speaks in public is vulnerable. I certainly receive abuse regularly that would qualify, but I would much sooner block these angry trolls than see them arrested. Moreover, we have already seen the claim of psychological harm weaponised against perfectly legitimate and sensible points of view. In other words, this nebulous legislation is wide open to exploitation by activists looking to silence their critics.
This act will limit the parameters of discussion because no social media platform is going to risk falling foul of the legislation. The fines for non-compliance can be up to £18 million, or 10% of global turnover (whichever is higher). Overzealous censorship is inevitable. Where content is controversial, it will be far easier for social media companies to err on the side of deletion rather than risk such stringent financial penalties.
The UK is now essentially in ‘pre-bunking’ mode, the term used by the president of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, to describe her intention to roll out censorship online. At last year’s Copenhagen Democracy Summit, she argued that when it comes to misinformation, “prevention is preferable to cure”. She continued: “Perhaps if you think of information manipulation as a virus. Instead of treating an infection, once it has taken hold, that is debunking. It is much better to vaccinate so that the body is inoculated. Pre-bunking is the same approach.”
This is sinister stuff. It also makes me wonder why those calling for censorship are invariably too timid to utter the word? Why must they insist that they support free speech and resort to these endless euphemisms? I would have far more respect for a technocrat who came out and said it: “I do not trust the masses to speak freely, and that is why they must be censored.” It would be terrifying, but at least the honesty would be refreshing.
And so now in the UK, social media users are experiencing a curated version of the internet. Many examples have already been posted online. A thread on X by Benjamin Jones of the Free Speech Union includes a number of screenshots of posts that have been quietly ‘disappeared’. For instance, a post about the grooming gangs scandal by Conservative MP Katie Lam has been replaced with a message explaining that the content has been restricted:
This post calling for single-sex spaces has been censored:

Footage of arrests in Leeds suggestive of two-tier policing have been blocked:

And even Jones’s thread itself has been hidden due to the Online Safety Act:

All of which makes it clear that the scope of censorship under the new act will far exceed the remit of protecting children from inappropriate material. Few will have failed to notice that censored posts seem to be those that the government might be glad to see suppressed.
Whether this is coincidence or not, the vagueness of the legislation will make it far easier for the government to crack down on its detractors. Worse still, it will establish a precedent whose end point will be impossible to predict. Those who are happy to cheer on online censorship now may not be so buoyant once they realise that these restrictions could also apply to them.
A combination of complacency and ignorance has led our political class to all but abandon the principles of free speech upon which our democracy was founded. While the list of citizens arrested or jailed for wrongspeak continues to grow, our Government has now exacerbated the problem by insisting that social media platforms censor on its behalf.
This will not end well. Don’t believe me? Read a few history books.
Andrew Doyle is a writer, comedian and broadcaster. His latest book is The End of Woke: How the Culture War Went Too Far and What to Expect from the Counter-Revolution. This article was first published on his Substack. You can subscribe here.
Your support is crucial in helping us defeat mass censorship. Please consider donating via Locals or check out our unique merch. Follow us on X @ModernityNews.
The post The Online Safety Act Is A Censor’s Charter first appeared on modernity.
Click this link for the original source of this article.
Author: The Daily Sceptic
This content is courtesy of, and owned and copyrighted by, https://modernity.news and its author. This content is made available by use of the public RSS feed offered by the host site and is used for educational purposes only. If you are the author or represent the host site and would like this content removed now and in the future, please contact USSANews.com using the email address in the Contact page found in the website menu.