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Published byAmie Kelly Modified over 9 years ago
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Our Basic Rights *note: because you have a legal right to do (or not to do) something does not mean it is the right thing to do. I : 1 st Amendment-R.A.P.P.S., Freedom of religion, assembly, press, petition, and Speech a. Freedom of Religion: protected by two clauses in the 1 st amendment. 1. Establishment Clause-govt. not allowed to create state(national) religion, support a particular religion, or prefer one religion over another. *wall of separation of church and state 2. Free Exercise Clause- individuals are allowed to worship or believe whatever they want. *Beliefs v. Actions : okay to believe in sacrifice but not allowed to actually do it.
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b. Freedom of assembly: Guaranteed the right to peaceably assemble in groups that we want to associate with. Limits: Local govts (City and state) can dictate where, when, and cite or fine groups for infractions if they damage public property or incite violence.
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C: Freedom of Press I: Protects from govt. censorship of newspapers, magazines, books, TV, internet, etc. II Protects govt. from telling people what they can and can’t read/listen/ or watch. III: Prior Restraint: (material is censured before it is published) is considered unconstitutional in most case except. ◦ 1. Publication would cause certain, serious, or irreparable harm. Ex: Pentagon Papers were not allowed to be blocked from publication. Courts found they would not cause harm to society. Newspapers can and did publicize them. It embarrassed the Johnson administration but not the public at large.
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D: Freedom of Petition (Expression) 1. Right to express personal views and publicly plead/ask/demand/ (petition) for change. ◦ Public Forum: place where it is generally acceptable to peaceably assemble to petition. 1. Public parks and street corners. II. Some places, such as schools, prisons, and military bases provide only a limited forum as long as “expression does not interfere with the purpose of the facility”
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E: Freedom of Speech I: The right to express information and ideas (symbolic speech) II: Protects all forms of communication: ◦ 1. Speeches, books, arts, newspapers, television, radio, or even ideas that may be unpopular or different. ◦ 2. Also protects person receiving communication- allowed to see, hear, read, etc. what you want. ◦ Why important: Enables people to make their own decisions apart from the government (essential to democracy/ self-governance) ◦ People rather than the govt. establish the truth by being exposed to a diverse (wide range) of views.
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III: Speech not fully protected Obscenity: nudity as offensive or lewd. Defamation: a false expression about someone that damages that persons reputation. A. slander: spoken lies B: libel written lies Commercial Speech: includes advertising Ex: Govt. can regulate so Tylenol can’t promote itself as a “cure-all” drug Fighting Words: words when spoken may insight a emotional or physical fight. Offensive Speaker: when audience does not agree with a speakers message. ◦ Clear and Present Danger test: “Yelling fire in a crowded theatre when there is not fire. ◦ Incitement test: Telling people to rise up and take out the govt.
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III Limits on speech cont. Hate Speech: against a particular gender, race, sexual orientation etc.. Symbolic speech: conduct that expresses an idea: ◦ Ex: In Texas v. Johnson the burning a the American flag was defined as legal because it was “symbolic speech” ◦ Time, place, manner Restrictions: Govt. does have the right to regulate when, where, and how speech is done: Ex: Klu Klux Klan march in Wash., DC is legal however they must follow when and where they can march.
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