strange headache
Banned
1A is an important protection from the government that I fully support. However, all of the mainstream internet operates within far stricter boundaries than free speech absolutism. And for good reason, since it would not create an environment friendly to advertisers or appealing to most members of society.
The issues many people had with Twitter's content moderation policies are with regards to enforcing questionable ideologies, e.g. banning people for their pronoun use or for stating obvious biological fact, and partisan election interference, e.g. censoring the NY Post story. Those could easily be addressed by a reasonable policy standard without going 1A absolutist.
This^
Free speech, protection rights and fair representation are not mutually exclusive concepts. I don't think anybody is arguing for an absolutist position, as individual protection laws clearly need to be respected still. Much of the criticism aimed at Musk is totally hyperbolic, because they equate free speech with abuse in order to make censorious moderation policies more palatable.
That being said, while monetization is obviously important for private companies, advertisers who are primarily interested in public reach and not truth seeking, hold way too much power over content moderation.