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Published byBetty Howard Modified over 8 years ago
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Freedom of Speech Seems like a dumb question, but why is it so important to a democratic government? Ability to debate actions and policies of elected officials Ability to be informed about current issues Soooo…..generally, democratic nations allow free speech that promotes even offensive ideas because suppressing speech is more dangerous to society. Seems simple, right? But what IS speech?
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Principles of Free Speech: Types of Speech 1. Pure Speech Only spoken words (debates, public meetings) Greatest protection under the Bill of Rights 2. Speech Plus Speech combined with actions (demonstrations / picketing) Speech portion is generally protected but actions may be regulated 3. Symbolic Speech Conduct that conveys a message in itself without spoken words Some forms are protected, some not…
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Principles of Speech: Types of Speech 3. Symbolic Speech, cont… Burning Draft cards – not symbolic speech Necessary to government purpose of having an army Flag Burning – is symbolic speech Bedrock Principle: the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.
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Principles of Free Speech: Public Forums Government cannot deny free speech rights in a public form (park / street) but can regulate the time, manner, and place (where, how, when). Has to be content neutral in its regulation of speech Can restrict freedom of speech, if content neutral, if the action interferes with another constitutional right (like abortion clinics).
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Principles of Free Speech: Over breadth and Vagueness Restriction can’t be too vague If so, it has a tendency to stifle free expression Example: case concerning limiting free speech in an airport terminal but was struck down b/c it did not specify an area and could prohibit talking in general.
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Principles of Free Speech: Right Not to Speak Can force you to be silent but can’t force you to speak Pledge of allegiance, for example
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Principles of Free Speech Speech in Campaigns Supreme Court has ruled that “money is speech.” Campaign laws that restrict donations are legal Campaign laws that restrict spending are NOT legal
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Principles of Speech: Least Restrictive Means No law may restrict / limit freedom of speech if there is some other way to handle the problem.
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Limits on Free Speech: Obscenity Not protected – anything that depicts sex or nudity in a way that violates society’s standards of decency. Something is obscene if is has 3 characteristics: An average person, applying community standards, finds that it has an obscene interest in sex. The work depicts /describes, in a patently offensive way, types of sexual conduct prohibited by law. The work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. Notes: It’s OK to possess obscene materials for private use. Government can forbid sending obscene materials via interstate commerce. Most strict with child pornography.
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Limits on Free Speech: Defamation Damaging another person’s reputation through false information (slander = spoken; libel = written) The truth is always a complete defense against defamation Accidental speech with no malice intended is OK Privileged speakers protected – members of Congress and parents
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Limits on Free Speech: Fighting Words 1 st Amendment does not protect abusive or insulting language Has a direct tendency to cause acts of violence More like a verbal assault than an exchange of information or ideas Hate Speech – the argument protecting this is that it would violate freedom of speech by deterring what is not politically correct. You can’t punish speech that could be regulated purely on the basis of content.
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Limits on Free Speech: Commercial Speech Government can regulate false advertising. Government can restrict advertising on products it has the power to outlaw Alcohol Tobacco
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Limits on Free Speech: Speech in Special Places Restrict it in military bases, prisons, schools Schools: Free speech can be limited if student actions materially disrupt the school’s educational purpose (We’ll look at Tinker v. Des Moines ) The rights of students aren’t the same as adults (We’ll look at Bethel School District case) Can censor school sponsored expression activities (newspaper) if it relates to a legitimate educational concern.
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Limits on Free Speech: Unlawful Action When does speech advocating unlawful action become more than free speech? Speech must directly incite specific and immediate unlawful acts in order to be prohibited. 1. Clear and Present Danger – can punish when it creates an immediate threat of criminal action or danger. Crowded movie theater scenario 2. Advocacy of Abstract Doctrine – forbidden to advocate the actual violent overthrow of the government (rather than the concept of advocacy of government overthrow). 3. Imminent Action – Speech cannot be punished even when it advocates illegal action unless it is “directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action.” “Let’s overthrow the government” – OK “Let’s blow up the courthouse tonight at 9 pm” – not OK
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