In a direct assault on First Amendment freedoms, California’s Democratic legislature has advanced Senate Bill 771, a measure that would effectively criminalize traditional religious and conservative speech on social media platforms. The legislation, which now awaits Governor Gavin Newsom’s signature, represents the latest attempt by progressive lawmakers to weaponize government power against dissenting viewpoints.
Under the guise of preventing “harassment” and “intimidation,” SB-771 would impose severe financial penalties on social media companies that allow content challenging progressive orthodoxy on issues of race, gender identity, and sexual orientation. The practical effect would be to force tech companies into becoming active censors of constitutionally protected speech.
Let’s examine the facts: The bill would make social media platforms legally liable for user content that supposedly violates California’s existing civil rights framework. This means any discussion of traditional family values, biological sex differences, or religious teachings on marriage could trigger lawsuits against tech companies. The financial exposure would inevitably lead these platforms to aggressively suppress conservative and faith-based perspectives.
This isn’t speculation – it’s simple economics. When faced with potentially unlimited liability, tech companies will err on the side of censorship. The bill’s vague language about “intimidation” and “harassment” provides no clear standards, leaving platforms to guess what content might trigger legal action. The obvious solution for them will be to silence any viewpoint that progressive activists might find objectionable.
The implications for religious liberty are particularly concerning. Churches discussing biblical teachings on marriage and sexuality could find their social media presence eliminated. Religious schools sharing faith-based perspectives on gender could be deplatformed. Even private citizens expressing mainstream conservative views could face digital exile.
Most troubling is how the bill weaponizes California’s massive market influence to impose progressive speech codes nationwide. Tech companies are unlikely to maintain separate content policies for different states, meaning California’s restrictions would effectively become national policy.
The left’s strategy here is transparent: Unable to win the battle of ideas through open debate, they seek to silence opposition through government coercion. By deputizing tech companies as speech police, they can achieve through private action what the First Amendment forbids government from doing directly.
As this bill moves to Governor Newsom’s desk, conservatives must recognize it for what it is – not a good-faith effort to combat hatred, but a calculated attempt to enforce progressive orthodoxy through corporate proxies. The fundamental right to express religious and traditional viewpoints hangs in the balance.
Should this law take effect, it will mark a dangerous precedent in the ongoing progressive assault on constitutional liberties. The time for pushback is now, before this California model of speech suppression spreads to other states.