Stop Me If I Say Something Crazy
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About This Book
What do you do with disinformation when it' s an emergency, but you live in a democracy that supposedly values debate and dissent? More to the point, without dissent and debate, how do you know what' s disinformation and what isn' t? Complex issues that should invite thoughtful, vigorous debate are instead instantly triaged into required and forbidden views. Dissenting voices get deplatformed, demonetized, and decertified. Even Senate hearings have been taken off YouTube. Goodbye hypotheses, dat
Our Review
This timely examination of disinformation in democratic societies tackles the fundamental tension between free expression and the urgent need for accurate information during crises. Schoneboom explores how complex issues that should invite thoughtful debate instead become instantly polarized into required versus forbidden views, leaving little room for genuine inquiry. The book documents how dissenting voices face deplatforming and demonetization, while even official proceedings like Senate hearings get removed from major platforms, creating an information environment where hypotheses and data struggle to survive.
What makes this work particularly compelling is its refusal to offer simplistic solutions, instead wrestling honestly with the democratic dilemma of how to distinguish misinformation from legitimate dissent without authoritarian overreach. Readers concerned about censorship, free speech debates, and the health of public discourse will find this a thought-provoking analysis of our current information crisis. The book's greatest strength lies in its nuanced approach to these polarized topics, offering no easy answers but plenty of necessary questions about how we navigate truth and disagreement in turbulent times.
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