1a. Start by promoting critical thinking in the education system instead of gutting it.
I agree but I don't see how it's relevant, though they already do promote critical thinking, that doesn't mean teachers actually do it and that doesn't mean that people know how to use it. It's like teaching creativity, in that it's incredibly difficult to do unless you are really good at understanding human psychology and applying that to pedagogy.
1b. Oddly enough, 1st amendment does not apply to private entities.
Depends on the circumstances. In Marsh v. Alabama, the Supreme Court ruled that the company town, given it's power and size, that it must protect the rights of its citizens as a government would, and therefore would have to defend the first amendment rights of its citizens, and more recently a federal court ruled that social media counts as a public forum, and therefore Trump can not block people to prevent them from accessing public information, which implies that Twitter should not have the power to wantonly censor or ban people for their views.
Note also that there is a clear difference between a small or private business removing a customer causing issues, or firing an employee for what they said on the job to a customer, and the practice of these social media companies which deliberately target specific individuals to deplatform specifically because of their views, even if they have not violated the terms of service which grow increasingly out of hand. Not to mention that these companies have a large amount of overlap of workers and ideological homogeneity, and so they all tend to remove the same people for the same reasons, which only leads to the net result of censorship across platforms.
Think about it like this: if every business, store, and person targeted a specific individual for their beliefs, and told them that they were not allowed to get service there, then it is oppression as the collective actively discriminates against the minority party in question. It is an injustice, however you slice it.
You may think that this situation is absurd, until you realize that it is very real in certain East and West African countries, in which children are branded as Witches, and so are ostracized from the general community and denied access to food, water, etc. out of fear that the people will be associated with Witchcraft.
In my opinion, under the 14th amendment, you have a right to equal protection, which means that you have a right not to be discriminated against for your beliefs, race, gender, religion, or ideas. When multiple companies collude to deny you of their service because of the beliefs you hold, it is an infringement on the first amendment because it means that you are not allowed to express those ideas without a disproportionate consequence in response to the "thoughtcrime."
I make no qualms in saying I am on the political left, and so I generally find myself against large corporations and big business for a variety of reasons, however, the most important principles I hold is the right to free expression within society. By censoring voices, you not only deprive the person of their right to speak but of their audience the right to hear. It does not change their minds, or change their views to not engage with them, rather, it further isolates them from wider society and radicalizes them as they are not able to engage or participated in the same functions everyone else did.
Tell me, where does this line end? Can your bank account get closed because of your political views, preventing you from accessing your own money? Can your grocery store prevent you from buying food and other necessities out of fear of being associated with you? Can you be refused the right to buy a home for yourself or rent an apartment solely on the grounds you hold an opinion that they do not wish to be associated with? Or, should we have protections in place to stop this injustice at its roots, ensure the right of every American from the increasing tyranny of large, unaccountable businesses? You may say this is a slippery slope, but again, it has happened, as you see above, and it can happen very easily.
Without the ability to express controversial, offensive, or heretical opinions against the status quo, society can never advance, and will only stagnate as it judges itself with increasing purtiainism and the inability to challenge, debate, and propose new ideas that could threaten the orthodoxy. It is the death of democracy, the end of freedom and liberty by removing the primordial, inalienable right intrinsic to all people within this nation.
The more power an entity has, the more we must make it so the social contract applies to its walls. They provide a good or service, and we provide them with our time, attention, or use of their platform. Nothing less, nothing more, and if the person involved has done nothing illegal, I see no reason why they do not have a right not to be denied service in this way.
1c. Obama didn't ask people to march on the capitol.
Trump just said that there would be a protest on the 6th, and he did not incite people to riot nor to storm the building. If you listen to his speech, he never once said for the mob to do anything immoral or illegal. You can not use this point against Trump when he's openly said he does not support what they did, and told them to stand down when things were getting out of hand.
Even then, this does not justify Twitter banning him for doing nothing illegal, as they do not have the right to silence a sitting president from talking to the American people. No matter what justification you have, there is no reason by which this can be allowed to stand, as it is not only blatant power-grab.
If they do not care about the man who is the leader of the free world, on the seat of the world hegemon, and commander and chief of the military, it means they can censor anyone for anyone reason whatsoever with no accountability or means of redress by the public.
Any justification for this is not one that warrants this amount of social power and influence. It is that of an aristocrat or a king.
2a. Believing the election is fraudulent does make it true, acting on unverified information is dumb.
When you have been stonewalled by the vast majority of courts from having a fair trial that is on the merits of the case, prevented from speaking about it online, not given a fair stance by the media, and have been actively discriminated against by every major institution, it is only natural you operate from the information you have and the information you have is sufficient to at least call a non-biased investigation into the claims that is transparent and open to the public.
It was dismissed before it was given legs to stand on as a case, discriminated against by very conceivable metric and never given the time of day, despite large enough inconsistencies and circumstantial evidence to indicate extreme fraud.
And if you'd actually look at the evidence, I'd argue that it is enough in merit that dismissing it out of hand questions your ethos alone unless you have a damn good argument against it. And because we haven't had a proper trail for this and only had to go off of appeals to authority and trust that what the people WHO ARE BEING ACCUSED are saying are true, it's fair to doubt.
Even then, when half then beliefs the results are dubious and properly fraudulent, then even if it's not true, it's your jobs as representatives of the people to investigate their interests and make sure that nothing dubious is actually happening, otherwise you have neglected your duties of office to represent the interests of the American people and their concerns.
Also, who's job is it to "verify" this? Who is the arbiter of truth in society and dictates what is correct and incorrect? Because damn would that person have a lot of unjustified power in and of themselves.
2b. The extension is sanctioned by the Court.
Which it didn't have the power to do constitutionally. In order for those mail in votes to be accepted, it would have to go through the vote in the state legislature before going on the ballot in THIS ELECTION for a referendum with the voters. What happened was not legal and outright violated the rule of law in Pennsylvania.
2c. Still waiting for that 'smoking gun' to show up in some form....
This is the problem with your thinking. You're not going to get one big piece of evidence like with Watergate and Nixton's phone call. It was very clearly a mostly decentralized process, and it was probably by multiple means that voter fraud was committed in various very specific places. It's not one thing that can be called into doubt, but death by a thousand cuts by which you could call the entire thing into question across various locations with overarching trends and patterns that would indicate impropriety. The "smoking gun" strawman is one you applied specifically to me and demanded of me.
Even if I had the smoking gun, there is no way that I know for certain you'd even believe it, or if you would try and justify it or excuse it by some other means without actually weighing the credit on the evidence.
[url-"https://hereistheevidence.com/"]Again I link this site [/url]because it's the best collection of pieces of evidence. It's all of this evidence in totality that definitely indicates the election was fraudulent or at least very, very improperly carried out to such a degree that the entire thing can be called into question.
3a. They want to see it changed into THEY want it, not what WE want.
Who is this "we"? And how do you know that it encapsulates as many people as you think it does?
Also, this is completely irrelevant to my argument, because that portion was meant to be me arguing what was going on from their prospective and how it differs from a hypernationalist one, not whether or not I endorse all of their opinions. The only thing I think that united EVERYONE that group was that they believed the results of the election were dubious or fraudulent, and that they were generally pro-Trump and anti-establishment, though there were overarching trends in the protest and more accurate terms for the people it applied to.
Don't turn this into an "us and them" narrative, when it's not and I was more arguing from my best understanding what their prospective would be.
@EOTFOFYL