Title: Chapter 3 Political Heresy: Sedition in the U.S.
1Chapter 3 Political HeresySedition in the U.S.
2Whats not in the Book
- What did the Supreme Court do September 8, 2003?
- Why is this so unique?
- When was the last time they did this?
- What Clinton-era figure is a primary player in
this debate? - When will the Supreme Court rule on this issue?
3Chapter 3 in One Sentence
- Throughout the 20th century, Free Speech, most
prominently, Political Free Speech, evolved
through Federal and Supreme Court rulings though
several restrictions still remain.
4 Bad Tendency vs. Clear and Present Danger
- Speech is evaluated by whether it appears to have
the tendency to encourage action that is
dangerous if it is allowed to continue, even if
the action is not until some future, unspecified
date.
- Speech should be controlled only if it proposes
action felt to lead to obvious and immediate
danger to society.
5Court Cases that defined Free Speech in the 20th
Century
6Political Heresy
- Threatening the life of the President
- Revealing, without authorization, the names of
Intelligence agents - Making antiwar statements while an elected
official - Advising youth against the draft
- Compelling public school students to salute the
flag - Preventing political heretics from speaking on
State college campuses - Criticizing public officials
- Incitement to other kinds of violence
7Im Going to Kill BushThreatening the Life of
the President
- Knowingly and willfully threatening the life of
the President - Also includes the VP, Pres.-elect, VP-elect,
Speaker of House, or anyone else in the line of
succession - Punishable by 1000 fine and/or imprisonment for
up to 5 years. - The guys who fired weapons at the White House a
few years back fall in this category.
8I Pledge of AllegianceCompelling Public School
Students to Salute the Flag
- First addressed in 1943, that the children in a
WVA family of Jehovahs Witnesses did not have to
pledge loyalty to the flag - To believe that patriotism will not flourish if
patriotic ceremonies are voluntary and
spontaneous instead of a compulsory routine is to
make an unflattering estimate of the appeal of
our institutions to free minds.
9Students, overthrow the government!Preventing
Political Heretics from Speaking on State College
Campuses
- Supreme Court has not defined this issue
- Lower courts have by citing other Supreme Court
cases - Ruled regulations of prior restraint against
political heresy are unconstitutional - Even asserted that university students should
not be insulated from the ideas of extremists
10Psst! I know this guyRevealing, without
Authorization, the Names of Intelligence
Operatives
- Intelligence Identities Protection Act of 1982
- Several agents were killed due to systematic and
deliberate leaking of their identities - To prosecute, must prove intent to subvert US
intelligence activities - Can get 15,000 fine and/or up to 3 years in jail
- Rules eased under Clinton, put burden on
Intelligence to defend why names should not be
made public. Bush ignores this change.
11Hit Man, the BookIncitement to Others Types of
Violence
- Hit Man was a manual for committing a murder for
hire, published by Paladin Press - US Court of Appeals of the 4th Circuit ruled that
due to the specificity of the language in the
book (the killer followed directions very
closely) that it was essentially aiding and
abetting in the act of murder and had no First
Amendment Protection.
12Food for Thought
- What are Masons rules about who can speak on
campus? - What would happen if you circulated anti-war
literature today? - Did the changing cultural climate post-WWII
influence First Amendment changes, or vice versa?
(Civil Rights, Feminism, Vietnam) - What should be the current test for limiting
forms of political heresy? Should the CFRB be
ruled a violation of Free Speech?
13How the First Amendment Evolved from 1919
- Established Clear and Present Danger as guiding
rule, instead of Bad Tendency (Brandenburg v
Ohio, 1969), though CPD was first mentioned in
Schenk v United States, 1919. - Guilt by association carries a heavy burden of
proof...just because you may be a member of an
association does not make you accountable for its
actions. (Brandenburg v Ohio, 1969 overturns
Whitney v California, 1927) - Advocating thoughts and ideas, seen as
fundamentally different than advocating violent
action. (Brandenburg v Ohio, 1969) - State laws regarding Free Speech must meet
Federal standards of the Constitution of the
United States. (Gitlow v New York, 1925)