Was Censorship the Greatest COVID Threat to Freedom?
Reason magazine|June 2022
WE’RE NOT JUST fighting an epidemic,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, director-general of the World Health Organization, declared at the Munich Security Conference on February 15, 2020. “We’re fighting an infodemic. Fake news spreads faster and more easily than this virus and is just as dangerous.”
By Jacob Sullum
Was Censorship the Greatest COVID Threat to Freedom?

Joel Simon and Robert Mahoney expand on that concept in The Infodemic: How Censorship and Lies Made the World Sicker and Less Free. Since Simon is a former executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists, where Mahoney currently serves as executive director, it is not surprising that they see state efforts to suppress inconvenient information as part of the problem that Tedros described.

That makes sense, since authoritarian governments in countries such as China and Russia contributed to the “infodemic” by censoring, discrediting, and intimidating journalists and other observers who tried to tell the truth about COVID-19. Meanwhile, these governments promoted their own version of reality, in which the pandemic’s impact was less serious and the political response to it was more effective.

But folding censorship into the “infodemic” creates an inescapable tension, since democrats, as well as autocrats, were frequently tempted to address “fake news” about the pandemic through state pressure, if not outright coercion. The Biden administration, for instance, demanded that social media platforms suppress COVID-19 “misinformation,” which it defined to include statements that it deemed “misleading” even if they were arguably or verifiably true.

This story is from the June 2022 edition of Reason magazine.

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This story is from the June 2022 edition of Reason magazine.

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