Comment by matheusmoreira
1 year ago
How could they possibly know what the work said? They censored it before it was published. No arguments based on its contents could possibly have been made. It was censored a priori. You make it sound like these ministers watched this thing and determined it was out of line. That's not what happened.
I'd me more accepting of your argument if the documentary had been published and censored after the fact. It wasn't. They preemptively censored the work.
Judges were aware of what the producers themselves claimed the content to be and how the content was being promoted. There were clear references to the elections and to people involved in the elections. Moreover, It's not like members of the electoral court decided to bother the producers out the blue. There was a denounce that the producers were abusing their economic power during the election (which is illegal). Evidence and hearings involving their lawyers were conducted, and that's where and how the judges became aware of everything.
What you have, thus, is a scenario in which 1) the producers were already being investigated for electoral misconduct; 2) they were known supporters of B; and 3) they were boosting and promoting B.'s campaign material in social media disguised as "news" and "documentaries" (which is a way of trying to dodge the accusation of economic power abuse). The case in question is just an acute one.
And even in the face of all this, authorities didn't outright ban the release, but delayed it until after the election (about a week), effectively preventing misuse without imposing censorship.
> Judges were aware of what the producers themselves claimed the content to be and how the content was being promoted.
> Evidence and hearings involving their lawyers were conducted, and that's where and how the judges became aware of everything.
Still a priori censorship. Lawyers obviously could not have watched it either. Or are you claiming the promotions and producer claims were themselves outright defamatory?
> There were clear references to the elections and to people involved in the elections.
Not a problem. As far as I'm concerned the political nature of the work should enhance the protections afforded to the work, not justify its censorship.
> abusing their economic power
That's the same arbitrary nonsense they slapped Google with when it added a link about the proposed "fake news" law to their website. Literally guilty because the message was too effective and they didn't like it.
That's a law which was rejected by our elected representatives and which these judges rammed down our throats anyway via monocratic electoral court "resolutions", by the way.
> 1) the producers were already being investigated for electoral misconduct
By an obviously partial judge. I don't accept that for a second.
> 2) they were known supporters of B; and 3) they were boosting and promoting B.'s campaign material in social media disguised as "news" and "documentaries"
Not a problem. Just citizens exercising their right to free expression.
> authorities didn't outright ban the release, but delayed it until after the election (about a week), effectively preventing misuse without imposing censorship
They censored the work until it didn't matter anymore. Temporary censorship is still censorship.
Like I've said before, Brazil lives under the rule of a democratic constitution built after much fight against real dictatorship and real censorship, not the rule suggested by you here (which, again, absolutely no country in the world lives by). You're free to disagree with the basic liberal and democratic principles grounding the Brazilian constitution, but whenever you and the constitution disagree, bear in mind that it is the constitution's point of view that's going to prevail.
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