Politics & Ethics: Freedom of Speech
Limitations, Regulations, &
Censorship
• Traditionally rooted in rigid systems of religious and
governmental control over speech and print.
• The term derives from the office of the census in
early Rome, where the censor served as both
census taker and as supervisor of public conduct
and morals.
• Before the advent of the printing press in the 15th
century, most manuscripts in Europe were produced
in monasteries, which controlled their production.
• After the invention of the printing press both church
and state controlled content perceived as threats to
their authority.
• The English monarchy had published lists of
prohibited books starting in 1529 and exercised
its control through a contract with the Stationers'
Company, which, in 1557, was granted a
monopoly
• This contract remained in effect until 1694.
• It was then replaced with less systematic
methods, such as laws against seditious libel,
through which speech that merely criticized
government policies could be punished.
• Although systems similar to these continue to exist in
modern-day authoritarian regimes, they are consensually
viewed as incompatible with democracy.
• The history of free speech principles in the West
coincides with the rise of democratic thought, as
expressed by 18th century Enlightenment philosophers in
France and in the influential political philosophies of John
Locke, John Milton, and John Stuart Mill in England.
• For instance, Locke explained that governments are the
servants of the people, not the reverse, thus speech
could no be dependent of a people’s rulers
• The right, guaranteed by the First Amendment to
the U.S. Constitution to express beliefs and
ideas without unwarranted government
restriction.
• However, democracies have long grappled with
the issue of the limits, if any, to place on the
expression of ideas and beliefs.
• Some, like Justice Hugo L. Black, have believed
that freedom of speech is ABSOLUTE.
• But many agree with Justice Oliver Wendell
Holmes Jr., who felt that the Constitution allows
some restrictions on speech under certain
circumstances.
• Holmes famously made the example a someone
yelling fire in a crowded theater as proof that
there must be some regulations in place
• In this 2002 case, a federal appeals court ruled that an anti-abortion website was not protected by the First Amendment.
• The website posted photos, names, addresses, and other information pertaining to abortion providers, their family members, and supporters.
• Although no explicit threats were posted, violence at clinics that provided abortions had followed poster distribution in the past.
• Planned Parenthood sued the group and the court sided with Planned Parenthood stating the content was threatening and thus life-endangering.
• The legal principles governing freedom of expression are
based largely on interpretations of the First Amendment
whose "speech" and "press" clauses are combined in the
statement that "Congress shall make no law ... abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the press."
• This places a burden on governments to justify any and
all regulatory action.
• On the other hand, this framing excludes from discussion
the positive role that governments can (and do) play in
supporting these needs.
• Pretty much protected in public forums, such as
parks and sidewalks, as far as content is
concerned
• Though regulations may be put in place in terms
of time, manner, and location
• The government may also impose more
restrictions in limited public forums such as state
fair grounds or nontraditional public forums such
as jails
• Regulations may be put in place for obtaining
permits for large rallies
• The First Amendment itself has little to say about the
control that private organizations exert over the
expressive rights of individuals, or the control that private
media companies exert over the communication of public
issues.
• A strict reading that the government has no right to
intercede to regulate communication between a
corporation and its employees (harassment rules provide
an exception) or to intervene when privately owned
media fail to meet the needs of a community.
• Many argue that this is as it should be:
employees can always seek employment
elsewhere and those whose speech is barred in
one forum can always seek another.
• Others insist that differences between the
conditions of modern society and those at the
time the Constitution was drafted warrant the
extension of communicative rights beyond those
provided in the First Amendment.
• 1. The prior restraint of information by
government.
• This meaning the FCC can enact regulations that
impose post hoc penalties for some forms of
speech while declaring it is not censorship.
• 2. Any form of government regulations that
restrict or disable speech.
• Fines imposed by the FCC for "indecent" speech
on radio fit this use.
• 3. Though less conventional, the term is modified
to refer to nongovernmental restrictions on
speech.
• For ex, in one of the few instances in which the
Supreme Court has applied the term to private
concerns (Red Lion v. FCC, 1969), the Court
stated that "The First Amendment does not
protect private censorship by broadcasters who
are licensed by the Government to use a scarce
resource which is denied to others."
• Fighting Words
• Hate Speech
• Obscene Materials
• Prior Restraint
• Expressive Conduct
• Commercial Speech
• Defamation & Privacy
• Media Differences
• News-print
• Broadcast tv
• Cable tv
• Telephone
• The Internet
• Laws that limit inciting or provocative speech, often called fighting words, or offensive expressions such as pornography are subject to strict scrutiny.
• The government may establish some regulations.
• Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 1942 deemed that, “There are certain well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech, the prevention and punishment of which have never been thought to raise constitutional problems.”
• Often viewed as a subcategory of “fighting words”
• The Supreme Court has generally invalidated laws that ban hate speech unless threat is established
• Virginia v. Black (2003) involved a cross burning aimed at terrorizing an African American family.
• A Virginia criminal statute had outlawed cross burning “on the property of another, or other public place ... with the intent of intimidating any person or group.”
• The Court upheld the statute.
• It emphasized that the First Amendment would protect some types of cross burnings, such as one held at a political rally, but not when it was a from of criminal intimidation.
• This is also subject to regulation
• The three-part Miller test stands as the measure for materially that is legally obscene and thus subject to restriction (Miller v. California, 1973).
• Material is obscene if:
• (1) the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that it appeals to shameful or morbid sexual interests;
• (2) it depicts or describes patently offensive sexual conduct;
• and (3) it lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
• The Seventh circuit court of Appeals ruled in Kendrick v.
American Amusement Machine Association, 2001, that a
city ordinance that prohibited minors from playing violent
or sexually explicit video arcade games was
unconstitutional.
• The appeals court found no real difference between the
content of the allegedly “violent” video games and
generally available, unrestricted literature that depicted
the same level of violence.
• The court, therefore, found that the ordinance
impermissibly restricted minors’ freedom of expression
• Some regulation allowed, though a strident
standard must be evaluated
• The main question is if the material poses a CLEAR
AND PRESENT DANGER resulting in damage to
national security.
• This was first expressed by Justice Holmes in the
Schenck case.
• Charles T. Schenck had been charged with violating
the Espionage Act by distributing pamphlets that
urged insubordination among members of the
military.
• The Court held that his activities created “a clear and
present danger that they will bring about the
• Extended during the 1950s, when widespread fear of communism led to the passage of the Smith Act, which prohibited advocating the overthrow of the government.
• The act was challenged as a prior restraint on speech, but it was upheld.
• The Supreme Court argued that government did not need to prove that a threat is imminent
• Thus, clear and present danger can lead to a slippery slope of regulations
• Refers to non-speech freedom of speech, such as symbols
• Some expressive conduct is the equivalent of speech and is protected by the First Amendment.
• In Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School (1969), the Supreme Court held that it was unconstitutional to suspend high-school students for wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War, because their conduct was “akin to pure speech”
• Thus, the Court ruled that student expression may not be suppressed unless school officials reasonably conclude that it will “materially and substantially disrupt the work and discipline of
• In Morse v. Frederick, (2007), the Supreme Court found that the Tinker precedent did not protect student expression that was perceived as promoting illegal drug use, even though the expression took place off school property.
• In 2002, the Olympic Torch Relay passed in front of Juneau-Douglas High School, Alaska, en route to the winter games in Salt Lake City
• Students at JDHS were permitted to leave classes and watch the relay from outside the school.
• Joseph Frederick was one such student. Just as the relay runner and television cameras passed by Frederick, he and his friends held up a large banner containing the phrase “BONG HITS 4 JESUS.”
• Principal Morse crossed the street, demanded that Frederick take down the banner, and then confiscated it when he refused to take it down.
• Frederick was suspended for ten days, which was later reduced to two days.
• The Supreme Court first rejected Frederick’s argument that Morse had no authority over him because he was off school property.
• The event occurred during normal school hours, and it was sanctioned by the principal an approved event for which teachers were chaperones, under which school and district rules apply.
• Thus, Morse had an obligation to oversee Frederick’s activities just as if they had taken place inside the school.
• The court lastly stated that the Frederick’s banner’s message was dangerous and “The 1st Amendment does not require schools to tolerate student expression that contributes to those dangers”
• Usually in the form of advertising, enjoys some
First Amendment protection, but not to the same
degree as that which is given to noncommercial
forms of expression.
• Generally, the First Amendment protects
commercial speech that is not false or
misleading and that does not advertise illegal or
harmful activity.
• The First Amendment protects language even when the language may become “vehement, caustic…”
• In New York Times v. Sullivan, (1964), a public official claimed that allegations about him that had appeared in the New York Times were false, and he sued the newspaper for libel.
• The Court balanced the plaintiff’s interest in preserving his reputation against the public’s interest in freedom of expression.
• It decided that, in order to recover damages, a public official must prove actual malice, which is knowledge that the statements were false or that they were made with reckless disregard of whether they were false.
• Except through the sporadic use of antitrust laws, the Court has been unlikely to permit regulations of print-based news.
• But it will allow regulations of broadcast media due to public ownership of the airwaves, scarcity of the broadcast spectrum, and "pervasiveness" of the broadcast signal.
• Cable television has fallen somewhere in between, with regulations reflecting the monopolistic control that companies exert over cable access to individual households and the fact that municipalities own the property through which television cables are distributed.
• Telephone companies are classified as
"common carriers," which interdicts their
editorial control over the information that
passes through their wires.
• The Internet, has so far been granted the
highest rung of protection from government
regulation.
• In 1996 Congress responded to concerns that indecent and obscene materials were freely distributed on the Internet by passing the Communications Decency Act.
• This law forbade the knowing dissemination of obscene material to persons under the age of
• The American Civil Liberties Union and online Internet services challenged the CDA.
• A special three-judge federal panel in Pennsylvania agreed with these groups, concluding that the law was overbroad because it could limit the speech of adults in its attempt to protect children
• The Supreme Court affirmed the panel
• Though the Court recognized the “legitimacy and importance of the congressional goal of protecting children from the harmful materials” on the Internet, it ruled that the CDA abridged freedom of speech and that it, therefore, was unconstitutional.
• In United States v. American Library Ass’n, 2003 the
plaintiffs alleged that it improperly required the restriction
of the First Amendment rights of library patrons due to
the Internet filter put in place in the public library.
• The Supreme Court held that the use of filtering software
at public libraries does not violate First Amendment rights
• In doing so, the Court upheld the CIPA requirement that
applicable institutions install filtering devices to prevent
access to pornography and other content deemed
inappropriate for children.
• Levels of protection for different forms of speech have
changed over time and there is no reason to think that
they will not continue to do so.
• Movies were long considered a form of crass
entertainment, outside of First Amendment protections,
and birth control information was once classified as
obscene.
• In the not-distant future, the plethora of programming
opportunities on the Internet is likely to result in Supreme
Court challenges of the scarcity principle upon which
public-interest broadcast regulations are based.
• The right is preserved in the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights and is granted formal recognition by the laws of most nations.
• Nonetheless the degree to which the right is upheld varies greatly from one nation to another.
• In many nations, particularly those with authoritarian forms of government, overt government censorship is enforced.
• Eritrea, North Korea, Cuba, and Iran are ranked as the worst offenders when it comes to media restrictions, where journalists are often imprisoned without trial
• In many religiously conservative countries, blasphemy (religious libel) is banned
• "Freedom of Speech." Gale Encyclopedia of American
Law. Ed. Donna Batten. 3rd ed. Vol. 4. Detroit: Gale,
2010. 543-550. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context.
Web. 31 Dec. 2012.
• "Internet." Gale Encyclopedia of American Law. Ed.
Donna Batten. 3rd ed. Vol. 5. Detroit: Gale, 2010. 489-
495. Gale Opposing Viewpoints In Context. Web. 2 Jan.
2013.