Section 230 is a law of the Congress, not part of the constitution. The protection it grants against being sued can be removed.
Where it can become a constitutional issue is if it remains, whether a litigant who sues can win a case against let's say Twitter if their action violated Section 230 in the process of free speech. So Twitter will argue that they were only exercising the right of free speech and they still should be protected. That could happen. That makes Congress getting rid of the Section more likely.
Frankly, I think what Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg said a few weeks ago, that Facebook doesn't want to decide on posts one way or the other, is the best approach. We want a free internet where everyone can say what they want. No one's objecting to limiting pornography, foul words, and stuff like that. We all know what we're talking about and that's political speech and positions on many of the important issues of the day. Let's not silence one side or the other.
Fine, you are entitled to your opinion.
Let me ask you are question? Do you want to require all TV stations to broadcast whatever and whenever this deity of yours wants to say something. Because quite frankly, sometimes I want to hear what he has to say, but most of the time I don't. If I don't want to listen to him, I want to be able to watch re-runs of
Bewitched or something, and I can't do that if he is required to be on every channel. Next, I suppose you are going to want a law that disables the mute button on my remote whenever he speaks, so that if I am watching the news, and they start doing a new segment where they are rolling some tape of his remarks in the Rose Garden earlier that day, I can't hit the mute button, but instead I have to listen to him or turn off the TV altogether. It is completely absurd, and authoritarian I might aid.