A clip going viral on X right now has people asking a terrifying question:
Why is a foreign tech billionaire talking about restricting American free speech?
Israeli cybersecurity billionaire Shlomo Kramer, a key figure behind the global surveillance and cyber-intelligence industry, is on record saying “it’s time to limit the First Amendment.”
Not regulate platforms.
Not tweak policies.
Limit the Constitution itself.
Kramer isn’t some random voice. His companies help governments and corporations monitor networks, analyze behavior, and control digital spaces. This is the same industry deeply tied to content moderation, online surveillance, and speech enforcement.
So when that guy says free speech has gone too far, people hear a warning — not an opinion.
Online, critics are connecting dots fast. Israel is a world leader in cyber-intelligence exports. Western governments are demanding more censorship. Social media platforms are already silencing accounts, demonetizing creators, and burying politically inconvenient narratives.
Now the conversation has shifted from moderation to something darker:
Was free speech a mistake?
Users say the timing isn’t random. As criticism of Israel, U.S. foreign policy, and war narratives spreads online, elite tech voices are suddenly arguing that speech itself is a “security threat.”
If the First Amendment is “the problem,” who decides what gets erased?
And who gets protected?
To many watching this unfold, Kramer didn’t say anything new — he just said the quiet part out loud.
And once you hear it, it’s impossible to scroll past.
A clip going viral on X right now has people asking a terrifying question:
Why is a foreign tech billionaire talking about restricting American free speech?
Israeli cybersecurity billionaire Shlomo Kramer, a key figure behind the global surveillance and cyber-intelligence industry, is on record saying “it’s time to limit the First Amendment.”
Not regulate platforms.
Not tweak policies.
Limit the Constitution itself.
Kramer isn’t some random voice. His companies help governments and corporations monitor networks, analyze behavior, and control digital spaces. This is the same industry deeply tied to content moderation, online surveillance, and speech enforcement.
So when that guy says free speech has gone too far, people hear a warning — not an opinion.
Online, critics are connecting dots fast. Israel is a world leader in cyber-intelligence exports. Western governments are demanding more censorship. Social media platforms are already silencing accounts, demonetizing creators, and burying politically inconvenient narratives.
Now the conversation has shifted from moderation to something darker:
Was free speech a mistake?
Users say the timing isn’t random. As criticism of Israel, U.S. foreign policy, and war narratives spreads online, elite tech voices are suddenly arguing that speech itself is a “security threat.”
If the First Amendment is “the problem,” who decides what gets erased?
And who gets protected?
To many watching this unfold, Kramer didn’t say anything new — he just said the quiet part out loud.
And once you hear it, it’s impossible to scroll past.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Unregulated right now.
we respect freedom of speech