Article 6J5Q3 Fucking Hell: David Mamet Files The Most Pointless, Silly Amicus Brief In Supreme Court Content Moderation Case

Fucking Hell: David Mamet Files The Most Pointless, Silly Amicus Brief In Supreme Court Content Moderation Case

by
Mike Masnick
from Techdirt on (#6J5Q3)
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Okay, look, this post is basically a repost of a post from two years ago. But, because David Mamet has decided to refile the exact same amicus brief he filed for the 5th Circuit again at the Supreme Court, I figured we can repost the same exact post ripping it apart (with a few tiny changes to reference the Supreme Court instead of the 5th Circuit). And yes, the new filing appears exactly the same, including the copyright notice from 2022 (though I can find no evidence that he ever bothered to register the copyright), but signed by a different lawyer who apparently didn't write any of the actual brief.

About the only positive thing you can say about famed play/movie writerDavid Mamet deciding to file an amicus briefin support of Texas's ability to mandate how social media companies moderate content at the Supreme Court... thatit has fewer swear wordsthan your typical Mamet production.

We expected some silly amicus briefs in support of Texas, and there have been many (some of which we'll cover elsewhere), but by far the most bizarre is David Mamet's decision to, um, weigh in, I guess?

Mamet, if you don't know,took a Trumpian turn, and like pretty much anyone supporting this law, seems to think that their support of one dude now, um,trumpsany actual principles. Or rather, they demonstrate impressively demented levels of cognitive dissonance by twisting themselves into knots pretending that commandeering private property, compelling speech, and removing the 1st Amendment rights of association from private companies is somehow... all about freedom?

The filing starts out with Mamet's statement of interest in which he - in a brief supporting the government compelling private parties to host speech - claims he's really concerned about government interference in our freedoms.

Proposed amicus David Mamet aspires to enjoy freedom of speech without government-enabled censorship. Mr. Mamet worries about how Americans can navigate their world when firms that control information conduits, and are privileged and subsidized by the government, serve curated information" to users and the public which no longer maps onto the world that Americans personally observe.

That's silly enough, but the actual amicus brief, well, holy shit. It's... um... a story? It includes no citations. It makes no arguments. It's just some sort of fictional story thatfeelslike something a freshman in high school might write after getting high the first time and thinking they were profound. It starts out thusly:

The pilot wants to orient himself. He knows approximately where he is, for he knows the direction in which he's been flying, the speed of the plane, and the time of flight. And he has a chart. Given a 100 mph airspeed, flying west for one hour, he should be at this point on the chart. He should, thus, see, to his right a camelbacked double hill, and, off to his left, a small lima bean shaped lake.

He now looks out, but he can't find the objects the chart informed him he'd see. He concludes that he is lost.

How can he determine his location? He has a map, but he's just misused it. How?

The Map is not the territory. The territory is the territory

It goes on like that. Mercifully, not for that long.

But I can assure you that this is likely to be the only amicus brief ever to include the line:

I report as an outdoorsman, that Panic is real. It is the loss of the mind and will to Pan, God of the Woods.

Anyway, after two pages of this silly drivel, he concludes:

A pilot in this situation might conclude he'd simply picked up the wrong map.

But what if the government and its privileged conduits prohibited him from choosing another?

copyright (C) 2022 by D. Mamet

Deep man. Pass the bong.

Anyway, where to start? Oh, hell, let's start with the copyright notice. For over a decade, we've written about a few different cases where questions were raised about whether or not youcould even copyright a legal brief.And the courts seem to say that you can in some circumstances, though almost no one bothers to register their briefs because, really, why would you? In a few situations where it was a pure money-grab by lawyers looking to shake down database companies like Westlaw and Lexis/Nexus, the courts havenot looked too kindlyon these arguments. That said, we did cover one case where a copyright claim survived over a legal brief, but it was a pretty unique situation, involving a lawyer who had been working with another lawyer, defending two different defendants in a case, and the one lawyer basically copied a huge section of a draft brief the other lawyer was going to file in the very same case. Under that circumstance, the court found the copyright claimto be more reasonable.

Either way, it should be clear that reposting and commenting on Mamet's brief here, as silly as it is, constitutes clear fair use.

As for the brief itself, even in today's Supreme Court, it seems quite likely that this particular brief will be mostly ignored, other than perhaps to wonder at what inspired Mamet to submit such nonsense.

As for the - and I hesitate to call it this, but whatever - substance" of Mamet's argument, even given the most forgiving read of it, Mamet seems to be claiming that the obviously unconstitutional restriction on private property rights and the 1st Amendment rights of social media companies should be allowed, because... otherwise the government and its privileged conduits prohibited" you from choosing another platform.

Except, that's not at all what any of this is about. First off, social media platforms are not the government's privileged conduits under any conceivable definition. Second, at no point is anyone prohibited from choosing another platform. And these days there are so many platforms for anyone to choose from, including special maps" made specifically for Trumpists like Mamet. No one is trying to stop those from existing. Indeed, this law that Mamet is supporting would make it much harder for such sites to exist, leaving it such that only the largest platforms could exist, if they followed the government's rules.

As someone who has attended apparently a few too many of Mamet's plays and movies, I'll say that in his old age, he seems to have completely lost the plot.

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