Why have President Donald Trump’s public displays of contempt for free speech and a free press sparked relatively few protests? Perhaps because many of those liberal voices now shouting against his immigration order sort-of share Trump’s underlying illiberal attitude to free speech. These anti-Trump protesters simply want to suppress or sanitise different sorts of speech – starting with that of the president himself.

Contrary to historically ignorant claims, Trump is no throwback to 1930s-style book-burning fascism. Far from it — his disdainful attitude towards free speech marks out Trump as a man of his times. spiked readers will be aware of the 21st-century problem of ‘generation snowflake’ – the hyper-sensitive millennials who want protection from speech they deem too offensive or hateful. Student activists in the US or UK once fought for more free speech on campus. Now they are now more likely to campaign for bans on anything from ‘transphobic’ feminist speakers to right-wing tabloid newspapers, and to demand political Safe Spaces where opinions that might make them ‘uncomfortable’ are barred. Just this week protesters at the University of California at Berkeley stopped the right-wing writer Milo Yiannopoulos of Breitbart News addressing students, an attack on free speech (in the birthplace of the campus Free Speech Movement) that they justified on the ground that he backs ‘Trump’s possessive fascist government’. One of the forms of speech barred from their Safe Space is apparently irony.

The ‘snowflake’ phenomenon is sometimes talked about in ‘What’s-wrong-with-young-people-today?’ terms, as if it was an incomprehensible characteristic of modern youth, like the latest trends in tattoos or piercing. It should be clear by now that this threat to free speech has much deeper roots, reaching into the heart of contemporary Western culture. The election of President Trump means that there is a 70-year old snowflake in the White House. The ‘leader of the free world’ is as intolerant of speech he finds offensive as any ban-happy college radical. And this presidential snowflake is empowered, not just to protest against a speaker on campus, but to attack the First Amendment to the US Constitution and try to limit the freedom of the press.

Despite their mutual animosity, Trump displays key characteristics of an anti-free speech snowflake activist. He is a thin-skinned, self-obsessed screecher who interprets any political or intellectual disagreement as a personal assault. His response to ideas he finds offensive is not to challenge them, but to try to silence them. His is a fearful, subjective view of the world in which his feelings count more than facts or fundamental principles. That’s why his administration is effectively running an official Twittermob against Trump’s critics. None of this has anything to do with fascism. It is ‘snowflakeism’, endorsed with the seal of the President of the United States.

Of course many previous US presidents, like people in power everywhere, had mixed feelings about freedom of speech, especially when applied to their opponents. The pattern was set by the Founding Fathers of the American republic, most of whom, in the words of one historian, displayed an ‘unbridled passion for a bridled liberty of speech’. However, few have been as willing as the new president to display their contempt for the First Amendment in public. The First Amendment, passed in December 1791 as part of the Bill of Rights, enshrines the freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion and the freedom to petition government for the redress of grievances. The amendment’s central point on freedom of expression states baldly that ‘Congress shall make no law…abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press’. Some 225 years later, those 14 words still set the global standard for the legal protection of free speech.

Over the past half-century, the US Supreme Court has often interpreted the First Amendment relatively liberally, to give protection to forms of speech that would once have been deemed beyond the pale, from anti-war protesters to the Ku Klux Klan. American libel law has also been liberalised: it is virtually impossible for a political or public figure to sue for defamation, unless they can prove that their critics acted out of malice and knowingly lied. However, such liberal interpretations of the First Amendment appear increasingly out of step with the times, when speech in the US and across the West is dominated by a creeping culture of conformism and the slogan of the age is ‘You Can’t Say That!’. This is what emboldens the student ‘snowflakes’ to attack free speech on campus. And it has encouraged the new snowflake in the White House to make public his own low opinion of freedom of expression and seek to impose his personal version of political correctness.

During the 2016 presidential campaign, candidate Trump made no secret of his dislike of press freedom and his wish to revise American libel laws to curb the media’s ability to attack him. Trump expressed admiration of English libel law – long seen as the most restrictive in the civilised world. He would happily amend US law along similar lines to enable him to sue his critics into silence. As Trump announced from a campaign platform in Texas last February: ‘I’m going to open up our libel laws so when they write purposely negative and horrible and false articles, we can sue them and win lots of money.’ He warned the liberal New York Times and Washington Post in particular that his planned legal changes would mean whenever they attacked him in ‘a hit piece which is a total disgrace we can sue them and win money instead of having no chance of winning because they’re totally protected. We’re going to open up libel laws, and we’re going to have people sue you like you’ve never got sued before.’ No doubt many other rich and powerful people in America, some of whom are currently using privacy suits to try to gag media critics through the back door, would like to see libel law amended along Trump’s lines. But substitute, say, Fox News for the New York Times, and his assault on the ‘negative, horrible and false’ media also chimes with radical criticisms of ‘too much’ media freedom.

Then when Trump was elected in November, almost the first thing the new president-elect did was to throw a Twitter tantrum attacking the First Amendment on a sensitive issue – flag-burning. In response to reports that the US flag had been burnt during the anti-Trump protests that followed the election, notably at Hampshire College in Massachusetts, the president-elect tweeted that ‘Nobody should be allowed to burn the American flag — if they do, there must be consequences — perhaps loss of citizenship or year in jail!’. The Supreme Court has previously acknowledged flag-burning as a form of free expression protected by the First Amendment, in a judgment backed even by conservative justices. Very few Americans might want to burn the flag, or would support actual flag-burning in practice. But upholding the principle of the right to burn has been viewed as an example of the acid test for free speech, as set by one Supreme Court justice more than 85 years ago: the need to defend ‘freedom for the thought that we hate’.

Thus liberal critics and lawyers quickly and rightly condemned Trump’s tweet as ‘an attack on our freedom to dissent’, and there was muttering about this as further proof of The Donald’s ‘fascist’ leanings. Yet was the notion of banning that which you cannot comprehend and punishing those who offend your sense of decency so out of step? After all, the last prominent US politician to propose making it a crime to burn the US flag in 2005, with punishment of up to a $100,000 fine, was… then senator Hillary Clinton, Democratic Party candidate of the liberal establishment whom Trump beat to the White House. And suppose the symbol being burned was not the Stars-and-Stripes, but a cross KKK-style, or a Koran — how many college snowflakes would go to bat for the freedom of those offensive arsonists ‘to dissent’ from the mainstream? In the weeks since his inauguration, President Trump’s thin-skinned intolerance has been most evident in his self-proclaimed ‘running war’ with the press. The president and his spokesmen have clashed with the media over reports of everything from the unsubstantiated allegations about Trump’s past sexual antics in Russia, to the size of the crowd attending the inauguration ceremony in Washington DC.

Things came to head a week ago when chief White House strategist Stephen Bannon, late of the right-wing website Breitbart News, declared in an interview that ‘the media here is the opposition party. They don’t understand this country. They still do not understand why Donald Trump is the president of the United States. The media should be embarrassed and humiliated and keep its mouth shut and just listen for a while.’ Journalists and media bosses reacted to Bannon’s fighting talk with understandable alarm. ‘What country are we living in?’ tweeted Christiane Amanpour, the veteran CNN correspondent.