host: belleville, new jersey, harry, republican. good morning. caller: good morning -- hi, i don't know if i am mixing up apples and oranges, but i used to work for at&t. i remember when the government broke up at&t as a monopoly. facebook and twitter through trump off the air, and it is a private company, so i guess they have the right to do whatever they want, but at what point does facebook have this much power as far as if you're go into a restaurant, and you are an annoyance, they the right to throw you out. it is a private restaurant. but my point is can facebook ever be broken up, like at&t did, with a monopoly on speech, in other words? host: harry, things for the question. guest: there are a couple of different questions and there, so at what point is facebook not acting like a typical private entity anymore? that is at the root of this state action problem, and a case has been laid out where they talk about section 230 immunity, which is in our view, overbroad, and in connection with it, we have this pressure coming from government bure