One of the odder moments in Obama’s speech in Cairo came when he suggested creating a new tool whereby young people in disparate parts of the world could talk to each other in real time:
Word is that Obama will also create a magical flying machine, which can transport someone from the East Coast to the Middle East in just 15 hours, thereby facilitating cultural exchanges. What Obama didn’t address is the fact that the kid from Kansas better not broach any political subjects with his Cairo counterpart, if that young person happens to attend Cairo University:
Kareem Amer, another Egyptian young person, was expelled from al-Azhar University (the other Egyptian university Obama praised in his speech), for criticizing the university’s more conservative professors and saying the school curtailed free thought. He was later sentenced to four years in prison after a five-minute trial in 2007 for writing about politics and religion on his blog. Some U.S. representatives sent a letter to Obama about Amer prior to his trip to Cairo, asking him to “strongly urge [Mubarak] to release” the “human-rights advocate and blogger.” That particular young person in Cairo will be impossible to “communicate” with over the Internet we already have or the new Internet Obama proposes to create because he remains in jail for “insulting Islam” and refusing to abandon his personal, “irreligious” views. So, why do we need a new way to communicate with Egyptians when we’ve already got IM, Skype, Facebook, Twitter, etc.? Why doesn’t Obama simply encourage such communication on current platforms in one of his blockbuster speeches. I hear all the young people watch those speeches, and are already on the Twitter and such, poised to communicate “instantly” with their Middle-Eastern counterparts without the creation of a “new online network.” Obama is very unclear about what this line means, so we’re left to guess, but his previous web projects offer some clues. An Obama-created network would end up being, at best, a vapid, fluffy photo-op of a venture that doesn’t truly harness the free-wheeling power of the Internet for communication, but instead bottles it to serve Obama’s message of the day. That has been the case so far with the much-hyped WhiteHouse.gov and Recovery.gov unveilings, which are long on pretty and short on useful. To an extent, this is to be expected from an administration managing its image, and is somewhat benign, but it poses more problems when you’re talking about an administration diplomatic effort. At worst, it seems an Obama-created “online network” for Americans to communicate with Muslims in the service of Obama’s “kumbaya” message would be in danger of slipping into the same kind of censorship many Muslim cultures impose on online communications. Any restrictions would be under the guise of “not offending” Muslims, but would be read quite rightly as an endorsement of speech restrictions by the American president himself. Can you imagine, for instance, Obama allowing an “online network” in service of his goals that would let Americans to speak more bluntly about the subjugation of women in Muslim societies than he did in his speech? One wonders if Abe Greenwald could “instantly communicate” these thoughts during a cultural exchange on the “new online network:”
Obama constantly touts his desire to face inconvenient truths, ask tough questions, and say things that are hard to say, but wouldn’t creating a “new online network” run by the U.S. government likely be yet another way to avoid such uncomfortable discussions? On the other hand, this is Obama. The sentence could mean absolutely nothing, and he’ll change his mind about his new Internet in 24 hours, anyway. The proposal struck me as more than a little odd. It’s also worth noting, from this week’s Weekly Standard, another threat of free-speech limitations on the Internet that the Obama administration might embrace in its zeal to mend fences with allies:
