A concerning pattern emerges from recent congressional testimony: prosecutors have weaponized vague standards to criminalize political speech. The argument went like this—if you questioned mail-in voting practices, you were automatically guilty of knowingly spreading falsehoods, regardless of actual intent or evidence. The DOJ's position essentially assumed they could determine what citizens reasonably believed about election security, then prosecuted dissent as fraud. This precedent cuts to the heart of First Amendment protection. When prosecutors get to decide which political narratives cross the line into criminality, the entire foundation of protected speech collapses. It's a blueprint for weaponizing the justice system against inconvenient political positions.
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liquiditea_sipper
· 12h ago
No, the logic is reversed... How did questioning the voting process directly become a crime?
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LightningLady
· 12h ago
NGL, isn't this just treating freedom of speech as a multiple-choice question, with the prosecutor having a veto?
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StakeHouseDirector
· 12h ago
NGL, this is a living example of the judiciary becoming a political tool... Questioning mail-in voting and you're immediately labeled as spreading false information? That's hilarious.
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ChainMelonWatcher
· 12h ago
Nah, this is just ridiculous. What does the prosecutor's say determine what's true and what's false? Isn't the First Amendment of the Constitution just a blank sheet of paper?
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DeFi_Dad_Jokes
· 12h ago
NGL, this is a typical abuse of judicial power. Prosecutors have become speech police?
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GasOptimizer
· 12h ago
This is outrageous. Using the charge of "spreading false information" to target dissidents? Then who decides what is "false"? Does the prosecutor get to decide?
A concerning pattern emerges from recent congressional testimony: prosecutors have weaponized vague standards to criminalize political speech. The argument went like this—if you questioned mail-in voting practices, you were automatically guilty of knowingly spreading falsehoods, regardless of actual intent or evidence. The DOJ's position essentially assumed they could determine what citizens reasonably believed about election security, then prosecuted dissent as fraud. This precedent cuts to the heart of First Amendment protection. When prosecutors get to decide which political narratives cross the line into criminality, the entire foundation of protected speech collapses. It's a blueprint for weaponizing the justice system against inconvenient political positions.