Facebook is too powerful morally bankrupt and in need of government oversight whistleblower Haugen tells Senate
Former Facebook employee Frances Haugen was greeted as a hero by the media and US senators eager to cut Mark Zuckerbergâs behemoth down to size, but all the talk of protecting children seems to be hiding a political agenda.
Fresh off the â60 Minutesâ interview on Sunday and sporting a Twitter verification in record time, Haugen testified on Tuesday before a Senate subcommittee chaired by Richard Blumenthal (D-Connecticut).
âFacebook's products harm children, stoke division, and weaken our democracy,â Haugen told the senators.
.@FrancesHaugen: "I joined Facebook because I think Facebook has the potential to bring out the best in us. But I am here today because I believe Facebook's products harm children, stoke division and weaken our democracy." pic.twitter.com/nPgMQkrwdg
â" CSPAN (@cspan) October 5, 2021Haugen accused Facebook of putting âprofit over safetyâ and compared it to tobacco companies, arguing that âa company with such frightening influence over so many people â" over their deepest thoughts, feelings and behavior â" needs real oversight.â
She also said that âleft alone, Facebook will continue to make choices that go against the common good â" our common good.â
Also on rt.com Back from the dead: Facebook & Instagram online again for some users after massive 6-hour outageThe pretext for the hearing were materials Haugen leaked to The Wall Street Journal over the weekend, outlining Facebookâs own studies that suggest Instagram and social media in general have a negative psychological effect on young girls.
Commenting on Mondayâs technical problem that took Facebook â" as well as Instagram and WhatsApp, which it owns â" offline, Haugen quipped that âfor more than five hours, Facebook wasnât used to deepen divides, destabilize democracies, and make young girls and women feel bad about their bodies.â
Haugenâs testimony hit all the right notes for the corporate media complex and Washington, from accusing Zuckerberg of having too much power and bringing up the January 6 Capitol riot and the 2020 election, to saying more government power is needed to protect children from social media addiction, which both she and the senators likened to tobacco.
She suggested Facebook suffered from âmoral bankruptcyâ for which it has to repent, and that government oversight would make it more profitable in the long run. She also argued against breaking it up, as the components would continue having the same problems but would be more difficult to oversee.
To hear Haugen tell it, she worked for a âcivic integrityâ unit that was disbanded after the 2020 election. She specifically said she worked on âcounter-espionageâ, monitoring Chinese and Iranian activity on the platform â" lining up another hearing about this being a ânational security issue.â Yet she did not bring up Facebookâs censorship of the New York Post story about Hunter Bidenâs laptop, for example.
Facebook spokesman Andy Stone â" who was also involved in the Hunter Biden cover-up affair â" offered a rebuttal on Twitter, noting that Haugen âdid not work on child safety or Instagram or research these issues and has no direct knowledge of the topic from her work at Facebook.â
As she herself just said under oath, "I don't work on it."
â" Andy Stone (@andymstone) October 5, 2021In one exchange Haugen argued â" and Sen. Blumenthal agreed â" that the government and schools need to âmake established informationâ to help parents protect their children if Facebook doesnât want to.
This came just a day after the Justice Department sicced the FBI onto parents criticizing school boards around the country for teaching critical race theory, calling it potential domestic terrorism.
Also on rt.com Republicans blast Garland after DOJ promises to investigate âthreats against teachersâ over mask mandates & critical race theorySkeptical commentators have pointed out that Haugenâs comments lined up with CNN, MSNBC and other corporate media outlets. The conservative-leaning outlets Daily Caller and Washington Free Beacon, meanwhile, found that Haugen has been a prolific donor to Senate Democrats in particular.
Haugen is also represented by the same lawyers â" and former Democrat staffers â" who backed the âwhistleblowerâ in the first impeachment against President Donald Trump, and the PR agency Bryson Gillette, where the current White House press secretary Jen Psaki worked until September 2020.
Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!
0 Response to "Facebook is too powerful morally bankrupt and in need of government oversight whistleblower Haugen tells Senate"
Post a Comment