Wow. People are whining about 1984 because the Carrot Caligula got kicked off twitter.
Here's something I learned both 1) in high school civics, 2) college constitutional law class, 3) lifetime of being on the internet since before social media:
READ THE TERMS OF SERVICE.
1/
You will see two things:
1) that your social medium of choice is A BUSINESS, OWNED PRIVATELY. No, public trading doesn't make it publicly owned.
2) that said business has the right to DENY SERVICE TO ANYONE.
Which is legalese for "play nicely and we won't boot your ass"
2/
The First Amendment only protects you from the government censorship.
NOWHERE DOES IT PROTECT YOU FROM CONSEQUENCES ON A PRIVATELY OWNED PLATFORM.
Moreover, incitement of violence has never been protected speech.
3/
The "fire in a crowded theater" is court precedent.
So your so-called "rights" have never been absolute.
The other thing that everyone seems to forget:
NOBODY IS REQUIRED TO LISTEN TO YOUR SHIT.
You can't force people to be your audience.
4/
They can deplatform you. Fire you. Walk out on you. Cancel your contract.
This is protected in the 9th Amendment, which states that no one person's rights shall be used to infringe upon another person's rights.
So when you lose your account, your contract, etc...
5/