“I’ve been banned by the Chillmark Library, the library that I love, that I speak at every year,” accused sexual assaulter and disgraced lawyer who defended the Chief Insurrectionist Alan Dershowitz whines. “But once I defended President Trump, I couldn’t speak at the Chillmark Library, the Chillmark Community Center, the Martha’s Vineyard Hebrew Center and a range of other places. People wanna hear me speak, but the bureaucrats are, are censoring me, so it can be Big Tech, it can be universities, it can be small libraries but we’re living in an age of censorship. People don’t want to hear opposing points of view.”
Well, no, Dersh, people would want to hear an intelligent opposing point of view, not one from a man who claimed that the sitting President of the United States is above all law and cannot be held responsible for trying to blackmail a foreign government to help him in a domestic election, which is what you did during Trump’s first impeachment. And they definitely don’t want to hear about it from an alleged child sex abuser, which is why a public library likely banned you. (I mean, would you want an alleged child sexual abuser roaming the stacks of your local library?) And censorship isn’t preventing you from speaking at a library or a university; it’s barring you from speaking out at all. Heck, you can host all these people at your home, if you want them to hear what you say. You’re guaranteed your freedom to speak; you’re not guaranteed a soapbox or an arena.