#1. False. Facebook, Apple, and Twitter all kicked Infowars from their sites at nearly the same time as YouTube. Literally all the major Internet companies kicked him at once. He's essentially gone from the Internet, because no-one will visit his site unless they are specifically looking for it.
So Free Speech now means Free Marketing? I don't think so. You're entitled to say what you want. You're not entitled to have the rest of (the internet, the country, the newspapers) give you time and space to get noticed unless you are running for public office.
And why should the government get involved when capitalism fails to do the thing it says it's good at? If people aren't willing to spend the money to make the money, why should the government step in and spend ALL OUR MONEY to break up a "popopoly"? This isn't water, power, housing, material resources, actual education or food. This is edutainment at best.
As for throttling speeds, I agree with you there. That's my point. Internet companies should no longer be allowed to arbitrarily exert their will over what has become the largest and most essential information distribution network in the history of the world. Not ISPs, not Google or Apple or Facebook.
I can't see a future where both the infrastructure and the content are considered a public utility. There's no incentive to create content under the structure, and I'm guessing if people don't like Google/Apple censorship as it is now, they'd really fucking hate government censorship. Which is essentially what you're angling for, because if it's a public utility then it falls under the governments jurisdiction on how it's used and for what. If the companies themselves are not responsible for policing the content on their platforms in some way, then the government will step in instead. And I don't think any of us want that. I want the infrastructure to be a public utility, and what goes on that infrastructure to remain the purview of the owners/operators. Whether that's one red faced psychopath shouting in to a camera or a board of west coast execs deciding how they do or don't want their brand represented.
Remember, at the end of the day, this entire ecosystem exists because of advertising dollars. As soon as those guys don't feel like their interests are being met, the whole thing starts to fall apart.
Out of those three, two I haven't even heard of, and the other I have but never visited.
Get my point?
I've been aware of all three for years. How now, brown cow?
EDIT: Besides, the point isn't specifically about Alex Jones. The point is that if they are able to do it to one person, they are able to do it to anyone. It is entirely possible that they used this Alex Jones thing as a way to test the waters, see how much they can get away with by removing someone who is widely hated anyway.
I don't doubt they were testing the waters. But I don't necessarily agree that they'll be coming for everyone's little gaming channel or whatever. If they started banning people for criticizing youtube and Google, that's not something that would go unnoticed or would happen without consequences.