Today, the Supreme Court protects free speech rights more strongly than at any time in our nation’s history—and American free speech protections are among the strongest in the world. Generally speaking, the government may not jail, fine, or punish people or organizations based on what they say or write, and the Court protects speech unless it is likely to cause immediate lawless action. (A standard rarely met in practice.) At the same time, there are certain contexts when the government has more leeway to regulate speech—for instance, with low-value speech like defamation or when speakers (like public school students) have a special relationship with the government.
First Amendment: Speech and Press Featuring David French All Ages Session Session |
First Amendment: Speech and Press |
First Amendment: Speech and Press |
The 1735 trial of John Peter Zenger later shaped the Founding generation’s commitment to a free press.
One of the Supreme Court’s landmark First Amendment cases could be redefined early this summer as the justices decide a modern issue: Can a public-school student face discipline for remarks made away from school on a social media platform?
David French of National Review and Katie Fallow of the Knight First Amendment Institute join Jeffrey Rosen to discuss First Amendment cases in the courts today.
Can a public-school student face discipline for remarks made away from school on a social media platform? President and CEO Jeffrey Rosen joins MSNBC’s Ali Velshi to discuss how one of the Supreme Court’s landmark First Amendment cases could be redefined as the justices decide a modern issue.
Erwin Chemerinsky of the University of California, Irvine, and Bradley Smith of Capital University explore how Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump may protect or threaten the freedoms of speech and press.
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