Censorship Is Quality Control
Scumbags Do Not Have a Right to Free Speech
I used to assume that giving everyone an open mic was the ultimate proof of fairness. I remember the day I logged onto a local news forum where people discussed whether a new street sign should go up near a busy intersection. At first, I felt excited to join the conversation. After all, more voices could mean more angles on the same topic, right? Then I noticed how some nasty trolls kept posting nonsense, drowning out the well-reasoned comments from locals who lived on that street. Those trolls shifted the dialogue from a practical question about safety into a mud-slinging contest. I watched a calm proposal about traffic signals get lost under insults and memes unrelated to the original topic.
I started thinking, “Why do these loudmouths get to set the tone?” They seemed to roam from thread to thread, tossing out cheap shots at everyone who tried to speak with sincerity. It reminded me of a rowdy sports fan who won’t stop hollering during a baseball game, ruining the experience for everyone else. I asked whether there should be some kind of gatekeeper who could flick a switch and remove the disrupters. But then another thought crept in: who would get to hold that switch? I worried it might become a dangerous tool in the wrong hands, used not to preserve clarity but to silence opinions that somebody in charge didn’t like.
I recall a friend telling me about a small online community she ran for collecting rare books. At first, it was a cordial place where bibliophiles shared a sense of wonder about obscure editions. Then, new members arrived who had zero interest in literature. They posted crude jokes and off-topic rants until genuine discussions became almost impossible. So, my friend added new rules that blocked offenders. The noise level dropped almost overnight, and serious collectors returned to talk about the hidden gems they cherished. Nobody missed the trolls, and the group flourished in that calmer space. Watching her experience made me wonder if censorship might do some good when handled carefully.
I realize it’s tricky because one person’s fool might be another person’s genius. Sometimes, an offbeat comment can spark new thoughts. But in many cases, the chaos buries the voices that carry real insight. I still feel uneasy about any authority deciding who deserves a chance to speak. But I’ve also seen how refusing to draw lines can lead to a free-for-all where the shrillest participants overshadow those who might amaze me with their ideas. Part of me wants to preserve everyone’s chance to contribute, but another part hopes for a filter that lets brilliance shine without being drowned by endless taunting. I keep asking myself if censorship, used sparingly, might be a path toward clarity rather than oppression.
Would you trust me—or anyone—to decide whose voice belongs and whose voice should be cut off?
THE OVERFLOW OF SHOUTING VOICES
I remember stumbling into a crowded online chat where folks traded perspectives on everything from local sports teams to scientific breakthroughs. I was eager to share my thoughts, but a few users typed so furiously that my words got lost in the scroll. It felt like standing on a sidewalk when a parade passes, and I’m trying to talk to a friend while trumpets blare and drummers crash their cymbals. I’d peek into that chat occasionally, hoping to slip in a clever remark or a question that might inspire fresh ideas, but I was drowned out by a stampede of rants and raves that never quieted down.
I noticed the same pattern in comment sections for popular podcasts. I’d watch a knowledgeable guest offer a viewpoint that might amaze me if I could hear it properly. But the moment the host opened the phone lines, the conversation spiraled into a tirade of random allegations and bizarre claims. By the time the show ended, it was anyone’s guess which thoughts were worth remembering. I felt frustrated. Why did we even bother inviting expertise if we let every wild rumor and wild attitude hog the microphone?
I wished for a moderator who could press a magic button whenever a caller drifted into nonsense. But that craving for silence worried me, too. Sometimes, the oddest remark leads me down a new path of wonder, even if it’s delivered in a shrieking voice. I think back to when I overheard a stranger in a café talk about the shapes of clouds. It sounded half-baked at first, but it nudged me to read a few articles on weather systems that expanded my worldview. That memory complicates my stance on shutting people down. I don’t want to discard raw ideas that might carry a flicker of genius.
The trouble is, the internet has multiplied that stranger in the café a thousandfold, and not all are harmless daydreamers. Too many thrive on shock value. I see them weaving personal insults into every statement, turning the conversation into a sport of who can sting the hardest. I’ve watched an otherwise calm discussion about local art funding descend into name-calling so ferocious that the original topic vaporized. I’m left staring at the screen, half-annoyed, half-dejected, uncertain why I joined the thread. It’s like turning on a garden hose and expecting a gentle spray, then getting blasted by a pressure washer that ruins the flowers.
Some days, I think we should filter these voices, maybe ban them altogether, so the rest of us can appreciate moments of majesty without being pummeled by insults. Then I worry about the power involved in deciding whose comments deserve the axe. I’m caught between craving order and fearing tyranny. If I could find a way to keep the chat lively while protecting genuine voices from being trampled, I’d jump on it in a heartbeat. Should I settle for the chaos, or do I dare hope there’s a method to hush the endless clamor?
REMOVING THE INCOMPETENT AND THE UNPRINCIPLED
I used to balk at cutting anyone off from a conversation. It felt wrong on a gut level, as though I’d be snuffing out a voice that might hold a hidden treasure of knowledge. Then, I started noticing how often sheer nonsense overpowers thoughtful remarks. I’ve been in Facebook groups where a small handful of users spread wild rumors about everything under the sun. They post every hour on the hour, jamming the feed with insults or meaningless tangents. Meanwhile, genuine thinkers struggle to elicit a single response before the thread scrolls off the page. I try to follow the conversation, but I find myself wading through an endless swamp of rudeness. At some point, I have to ask whether there’s any benefit to this unbridled chatter.
I recall a neighborhood board meeting that I attended a while back. One guy consistently turned every topic into a debate about how the government was out to steal his garden tools. You could be talking about street repair, and he’d derail it with rants about conspiracies. At first, people tried to be polite. They gave him time to share. They even asked questions, hoping to steer him toward something constructive. No luck. He never answered directly. He just wanted
more. By the end of the meeting, nobody remembered the original focus. We left in frustration. I thought, “Why do we give this person so much airtime?” If the purpose of that board is to sort out local issues, then maybe that guy’s constant ramblings don’t deserve a spotlight.
I know there’s a risk in labeling someone as incompetent or unprincipled. Maybe I see someone as incompetent simply because their style rubs me incorrectly. Maybe there’s a shred of brilliance underneath that abrasive tone. I hate missing a sudden flash of insight because I lumped it in with the dull, but I also hate seeing absolute clarity drowned out by nonsense. I see that tension all over social media, where blocking or muting others has become a regular strategy. Part of me worries we’ve grown trigger-happy with that block button. Another part of me sighs with relief when a messy voice finally falls silent. It’s like hearing the music after the loud party crasher goes home.
I ask myself whether certain minds enjoy stirring up trouble. These folks rarely contribute anything that inspires or reflects genuine curiosity. They seem to get a kick out of taunting or spamming the group. I wonder if I should even call that “speech.” It feels more like a form of vandalism. I respect a provocative idea if it leads me somewhere that expands my thinking. But cheap shock tactics leave me cold, and they hog space that someone else could fill with a spark of wonder. I want to make room for greatness. But if I do that by banning voices, even the ones that grate on my nerves, do I risk becoming the very thing I despise?
Should I accept these nuisances as part of the messy human chorus, or do I start drawing lines and pushing them out so the rest of us can breathe?
MORAL AND PRACTICAL OBSTACLES
I wrestle with who decides when a speaker has gone too far. I’ve seen moderators misuse their power and silence people who posed no threat. Some censors allow personal grudges to guide their decisions, creating new forms of injustice. I worry that if I set up strict rules, those rules can turn into a net that catches a harmless critic or a person with an unpopular but fascinating perspective. That thought keeps me up at night because I don’t want to strangle the chance for wonder.
I once joined a university discussion group that specialized in exploring old philosophical texts. The group’s leader thought it was wise to weed out people who offered “unhelpful” commentary. At first, we appreciated the structure. We felt protected. Then, one day, a newcomer asked a question that challenged the group’s assumptions about ancient writing. The leader found the question “useless” and booted the newcomer without hesitation. I remember thinking, “What did this person do wrong?” I realized the leader disliked questions that rocked our comfortable beliefs. I left soon afterward because I saw how easily moral authority could tilt toward tyranny when placed in one person’s hands.
That experience opened my eyes to the fragile nature of judgment. I don’t trust anyone to hold the final say on who belongs in a conversation. I’ve seen committees, too, where people band together and build biased policies that shut out voices that don’t fit the majority’s taste. They justify it by saying they’re keeping the environment “clean.” Then I watch them remove folks who color outside the lines. It’s eerie to see a group’s gatekeepers decide that specific ideas must be silenced, even when those ideas could spark curiosity or lead to unexpected discoveries.
My other concern is practical: I recognize that we can’t realistically let every voice roar. I’ve walked through busy streets where I hear car horns, street vendors, and random shouting. That’s what an unfiltered forum sounds like to me. I’d like a calmer space where the wise can share interesting viewpoints without being crowded out by insults and rants. But how do I make that space without becoming the dictator I fear? If I let one or two folks hold that power, I risk a scenario in which free thought dies under the weight of personal biases.
I also realize there’s a slippery slope when labeling anyone “incompetent” or “unprincipled.” Maybe I’m biased against certain personalities or have blind spots. Sometimes, the people I label “clueless” need a chance to clarify their ideas. Other times, they might be trolls who never plan to offer anything of value. Distinguishing the troll from the eccentric can be trickier than I’d like to admit. I keep wondering if some clever approach exists that balances the need for open dialogue with the need for clear signals in the noise.
Should I trust my judgment to sort this out, or do I stand back and hope the best voices find their way to greatness under the roar?
A NARROW PATH TO REGAIN CLARITY
I yearn for a place to hear fresh ideas without wading through a sea of shrill voices. I see these forums and discussion boards that begin with good intentions and then devolve into a shouting match almost overnight. I’ve been part of groups that started with a sense of wonder, where folks swapped insights about everything from local volunteer projects to new scientific discoveries. Then, little by little, disrupters crept in. They weren’t trying to inspire; they were hurling verbal rocks. I sometimes think that if we could prune those voices, we could share genuine thoughts in peace.
I hesitate because I don’t want to become a gatekeeper who decides which opinions are worthy of survival. That feels like a slippery slope. One day I might remove a user for screaming insults, and the next day I might be tempted to remove someone who offends me in more minor ways. That’s how a tight circle of like-minded people is born, and I fear that path because I’ve seen the damage it creates. Our conversations grow stale, and the spark of majesty from varied perspectives flickers and dies.
Still, whenever I observe a promising thread hijacked by insults, I feel my patience snap. I remember a discussion about local architecture where we shared stories of old buildings, trying to preserve a sense of history in our changing town. One loud voice barged in and ranted about unrelated topics, making it impossible to continue. After a while, the people who truly cared about the subject disappeared. That single toxic presence scattered them like pigeons spooked by a sudden noise. I wanted to press a button and banish that disruptor on the spot. Yet I held my breath, hoping some hidden moderation feature might magically save the day.
I’ve started to dream about a narrow path that might preserve robust dialogue without letting chaos take over. Maybe it involves specific guidelines that discourage pure trolling. Maybe it’s a layered system where repeated violators lose the privilege to post for a bit. I’m not aiming for universal silence. I want enough calm so voices of substance can rise above the racket. I think about small gatherings I’ve attended in person, where a gentle host reminded the group to keep on track. Sometimes, a swift “Hold on, let’s give others a turn” changed the mood instantly. People genuinely there to share knowledge or a sense of wonder relaxed and spoke up. That is the vibe I want online: a space where folks feel safe enough to offer interesting tidbits or challenge each other in ways that spark greatness.
But I realize any policy has cracks, and gatekeepers can become overzealous. I don’t want to lock out new forms of brilliance or watch trolls smother every rare bit of insight. Is there a way to keep the door open for honest voices while closing it on those who only want to burn the house down?
The Enduring Chaos… Dieth?
I sometimes wonder if I’m chasing an impossible dream by hoping for a world without shrill interruptions, where thoughtful remarks shine like stars in a clear night sky. I’ve seen both sides of the debate. I’ve watched unfiltered chatter drive off curious minds who wanted to share something extraordinary. I’ve also seen moderation as a weapon to stamp out perspectives others found “unpleasant.” That tension puts a knot in my stomach.
I don’t want a monopoly on deciding what’s worth hearing. I don’t trust any single person with that power. Yet my frustration grows every time I see a promising thread get hijacked by cheap insults. I feel tempted to pull the plug on whoever lit the match that started the blaze. I know that impulse comes from a desire to protect the spark of true discovery, which brings goosebumps when a new idea lands. I can’t tell you how often I’ve hovered over a “block” button, torn between my longing for order and my fear of silencing a voice that might hold an unexpected gem.
I think back to a late-night conversation with a friend who runs a small blog for fans of historical mysteries. She used to keep her site wide open, hoping fresh faces would bring varied viewpoints. Then, a band of trolls mocked every post with vile taunts. Her regulars left in disgust. She decided enough was enough. She closed comments to new users for a month. When she reopened them, she enforced strict rules. The trolls vanished. The blog still feels tense because people remember how ugly things got. But it recovered its warmth. That outcome makes me ponder whether the cure might be worth the risk.
I also recall an author I met at a book fair who insisted that all discourse, no matter how offensive, should stand. She believed light would always chase away the darkness. Yet I’ve watched some corners of the internet sink into a grim pit because the “darkness” never left; it gathered in greater force. People walked away, leaving the pit to fester. That experience shook my faith in pure, unrestrained openness. I can’t help thinking that maybe some voices belong in quieter corners so the rest of us can hear each other without shouting.
I don’t claim to have a perfect formula. I see hints that limited censorship might protect us from toxic noise, but the moment we pick up that tool, we risk abusing it. I struggle to find a middle ground. I want a haven for sincere conversation, but I don’t want to slam the door on innocent folks whose odd remarks could lead to wonder. This puzzle doesn’t have a neat solution, at least not one I’ve uncovered.
Do I accept the chaos as the price of free expression, or do I let someone with a heavy hand sweep away troublemakers so the rest of us can breathe?
What do you think?


Censorship by silencing is a slippery slope. That said, as far a what someone might do with their own page, I don't have a problem with it. It's their page. A page is not a platform, or an app, or a social media feed. Your page is your page. You don't even need to give a reason. I mean, really, right now you're talking to someone who doesn't allow comments on their Substack page at all! A policy I intend to change very soon.
When I do change the policy, I'm reserving the right to delete any comment I find intolerable. But as I've mentioned in earlier Substack remarks, I anticipate being able to deal with the liability of particularly idiotic comments by transferring them to a public Firepit page. All of them together, accumulating. So readers can judge for themselves whether I'm being fair. I haven't opened my page yet. But I've been a long-time reader of Substack, and in my time lurking and reading >99% of all of the comments seem fine to me. If someone has an on-topic disagreement with any of my views, I'd rather air it out. I don't expect that to change when I begin allowing page post comments, although as few as one obnoxious pest can really jam the lines. As I found out as a regular on the now-defunct Atlantic story comments, censorship is not the only way to shut down free speech. Monopolizing column inches by swarming the comments with trolling and hobbyhorsing also amounts to a practical suppression of the free and unhindered expression of views, particularly dissenting views. Censorship by Noise.