Friday, September 25, 2020

Friday, September 25: reevaluting your First Amendment thoughts

In class: Yesterday, we reviewed the article on the First Amendment. I asked you to be prepared to orally or in the chat repond to the questions below.  We will begin with reviewing those questions. Seveal folks sent me their ideas. Thank you.  Today everyone else may express them orally or on the chat, where Ms. Sweet will share them out.  This is a class participation grade.

 

Having completed the reading (another copy below) that gives a succinct interpretation of the First Amendment, we are going to apply your understanding to contempory issue of Black Lives Matter.

Assignment based upon the hypothetical situations from the Monday / Tuesday. Another copy below. Choose two of the responses from Monday's blog and write a minimum of 75 word response for each, explaining how what you now understand about the First Amendment has changed your initial response.   Due to me by no later than midnight on Saturday, with the exception of those who are designated to receive extended time. (I need time to read these on Sunday!)

Rochester June 5, 2020

For each of the following questions, refer specifically to the text you read.

1. Why are Black Lives Matter allowed to protest?   
2. Under the First Amendment, what rules must the protesters follow?


3. After watching this clip, in what ways do you observe the First Amendment being applied?
4. What actions might occur that would require police interference?

  

A Common Interpretation: Freedom of Speech and the Press

As part of the National Constitution Center’s Interactive Constitution project, leading scholars across the legal and philosophical spectrum find common ground on the Constitution’s articles, amendments, and provisions. In this essay from September 2015, Geoffrey R. Stone from the University of Chicago Law School and Eugene Volokh from the UCLA School of Law say the legal protection today offered by the First Amendment is stronger than ever before in our history.
stonevolokh
Geoffrey R. Stone and Eugene Volokh

“Congress shall make no law . . .  abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.” What does this mean today? Generally speaking, it means that the government may not jail, fine, or impose civil liability on people or organizations based on what they say or write, except in exceptional circumstances.


Although the First Amendment says “Congress,” the Supreme Court has held that speakers are protected against all government agencies and officials: federal, state, and local, and legislative, executive, or judicial. The First Amendment does not protect speakers, however, against private individuals or organizations, such as private employers, private colleges, or private landowners. The First Amendment restrains only the government.

The Supreme Court has interpreted “speech” and “press” broadly as covering not only talking, writing, and printing, but also broadcasting, using the Internet, and other forms of expression. The freedom of speech also applies to symbolic expression, such as displaying flags, burning flags, wearing armbands, burning crosses, and the like.

The Supreme Court has held that restrictions on speech because of its content—that is, when the government targets the speaker’s message—generally violate the First Amendment. Laws that prohibit people from criticizing a war, opposing abortion, or advocating high taxes are examples of unconstitutional content-based restrictions. Such laws are thought to be especially problematic because they distort public debate and contradict a basic principle of self-governance: that the government cannot be trusted to decide what ideas or information “the people” should be allowed to hear.

There are generally three situations in which the government can constitutionally restrict speech under a less demanding standard.

1. In some circumstances, the Supreme Court has held that certain types of speech are of only “low” First Amendment value, such as:

a. Defamation: False statements that damage a person’s reputations can lead to civil liability (and even to criminal punishment), especially when the speaker deliberately lied or said things they knew were likely false. New York Times v. Sullivan(1964).

b. True threats: Threats to commit a crime (for example, “I’ll kill you if you don’t give me your money”) can be punished. Watts v. United States(1969).

c. “Fighting words”: Face-to-face personal insults that are likely to lead to an immediate fight are punishable. Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire (1942). But this does not include political statements that offend others and provoke them to violence.  For example, civil rights or anti-abortion protesters cannot be silenced merely because passersby respond violently to their speech. Cox v. Louisiana (1965).

d. Obscenity: Hard-core, highly sexually explicit pornography is not protected by the First Amendment. Miller v. California (1973). In practice, however, the government rarely prosecutes online distributors of such material.

e. Child pornography: Photographs or videos involving actual children engaging in sexual conduct are punishable, because allowing such materials would create an incentive to sexually abuse children in order to produce such material. New York v. Ferber (1982).

f. Commercial advertising: Speech advertising a product or service is constitutionally protected, but not as much as other speech. For instance, the government may ban misleading commercial advertising, but it generally can’t ban misleading political speech. Virginia Pharmacy v. Virginia Citizens Council(1976).

Outside these narrow categories of “low” value speech, most other content-based restrictions on speech are presumptively unconstitutional. Even entertainment, vulgarity, “hate speech” (bigoted speech about particular races, religions, sexual orientations, and the like), blasphemy (speech that offends people’s religious sensibilities), and violent video games are protected by the First Amendment. The Supreme Court has generally been very reluctant to expand the list of “low” value categories of speech.

2. The government can restrict speech under a less demanding standard when the speaker is in a special relationship to the government. For example, the speech of government employees and of students in public schools can be restricted, even based on content, when their speech is incompatible with their status as public officials or students. A teacher in a public school, for example, can be punished for encouraging students to experiment with illegal drugs, and a government employee who has access to classified information generally can be prohibited from disclosing that information.Pickering v. Board of Education (1968).

3. The government can also restrict speech under a less demanding standard when it does so without regard to the content or message of the speech. Content-neutral restrictions, such as restrictions on noise, blocking traffic, and large signs (which can distract drivers and clutter the landscape), are generally constitutional as long as they are “reasonable.” Because such laws apply neutrally to all speakers without regard to their message, they are less threatening to the core First Amendment concern that government should not be permitted to favor some ideas over others. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. FCC(1994). But not all content-neutral restrictions are viewed as reasonable; for example, a law prohibiting all demonstrations in public parks or all leafleting on public streets would violate the First Amendment. Schneider v. State (1939).

Courts have not always been this protective of free expression. In the nineteenth century, for example, courts allowed punishment of blasphemy, and during and shortly after World War I the Supreme Court held that speech tending to promote crime—such as speech condemning the military draft or praising anarchism—could be punished. Schenck v. United States (1919). Moreover, it was not until 1925 that the Supreme Court held that the First Amendment limited state and local governments, as well as the federal government. Gitlow v. New York (1925).

But starting in the 1920s, the Supreme Court began to read the First Amendment more broadly, and this trend accelerated in the 1960s. Today, the legal protection offered by the First Amendment is stronger than ever before in our history.

Geoffrey R. Stone is Edward H. Levi Distinguished Service Professor of Law, University of Chicago Law School. Eugene Volokh is Gary T. Schwartz Professor of Law, UCLA School of Law.

You can read more from each author on our Interactive Constitution project on this topic, as they offer viewpoints beyond this common interpretation: Fixing Free Speech By Geoffrey R. Stone | Frontiers For Free Speech By Eugene Volokh

Stone, Geoffrey, and Eugene Volkh. “A Common Interpretation: Freedom of Speech and the Press.” National Constitution Center – Constitutioncenter.org, constitutioncenter.org/blog/a-common-interpretation-freedom-of-speech-and-the-press.



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Freedom of Speech Essay Analysis Questions Instructions: Answer the following questions. Feel free to use the sentence starters in italics, but make sure to use your own words in your answers. If you want to use exact language from the essay, use quotation marks – but only quote short phrases, not whole sentences. 

1. According to the essay, why is it important to protect speech, even if that speech is unpopular? Provide evidence. Laws that restrict speech are “thought to be especially problematic because” ... 

2. According to the essay, what kinds of actions are included in the term “speech” as it is found in the First Amendment? Provide evidence. “The Supreme Court has interpreted ‘speech’ and ‘press’ broadly as covering” ... 

3. How has the understanding of what is protected speech changed as technology has changed? Provide evidence.

4. According to the essay, when is it acceptable under the First Amendment to limit or punish speech? Provide evidence. “There are generally three situations in which the government can constitutionally restrict speech” …

 1.

 2

 3. 

5. According to the essay, how has the Supreme Court addressed the freedom of speech during the 100 years since the end of World War I, and what is the status of free speech protections today? Provide evidence. 

In 1925, the Supreme Court held that…



 “Starting in the 1920s” …




 “Today, the legal protections offered” ...

You have class time today. I am here for any questions / conversations.


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