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Free speech on the internet endangers democracy, Barack Obama told Stanford University.

Let me translate that for you. Our NWO fascism plans are in jeopardy if we allow free speech to exist. In fact we all might get the death penalty for usurping so many western democracy's through election fraud.

The widely hailed speech at Big Tech’s favorite university claimed that autocrats are "subverting democracy" and that democracies have "grown dangerously complacent". In the slow parade of teleprompter cliches he even warned that "too often we've taken freedom for granted."

To Obama, the threat to democracy doesn’t come from government power, but the lack of it.

“You just have to flood a country’s public square with enough raw sewage. You just have to raise enough questions, spread enough dirt, plant enough conspiracy theorizing that citizens no longer know what to believe. Once they lose trust in their leaders, in mainstream media, in political institutions, in each other, in the possibility of truth, the game’s won,” he summed up.

Like every Obama speech, “Challenges to Democracy in the Digital Information Realm” didn’t offer anything new, just a distillation of familiar talking points and misplaced assumptions.

Free speech on the internet endangers democracy, Barack Obama told Stanford University. >Let me translate that for you. Our NWO fascism plans are in jeopardy if we allow free speech to exist. In fact we all might get the death penalty for usurping so many western democracy's through election fraud. The widely hailed speech at Big Tech’s favorite university claimed that autocrats are "subverting democracy" and that democracies have "grown dangerously complacent". In the slow parade of teleprompter cliches he even warned that "too often we've taken freedom for granted." To Obama, the threat to democracy doesn’t come from government power, but the lack of it. “You just have to flood a country’s public square with enough raw sewage. You just have to raise enough questions, spread enough dirt, plant enough conspiracy theorizing that citizens no longer know what to believe. Once they lose trust in their leaders, in mainstream media, in political institutions, in each other, in the possibility of truth, the game’s won,” he summed up. Like every Obama speech, “Challenges to Democracy in the Digital Information Realm” didn’t offer anything new, just a distillation of familiar talking points and misplaced assumptions.

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[–] 1 pt

We are a constitutional republic not a democracy.

You are correct.