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Values Lady: give up your vows! The death of normative theories of free speech ā First Amendment News 408

First Amendment News is a weekly blog and newsletter about free expression issues by Ronald K. L. Collins. It is editorially independent from Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS.
These days itās clear that Thomas Emerson and his ideas of moving toward a āā have gone the way of phone booths. The notion of linking truth to some elevated First Amendment principle is absurd. Does anyone with a realist mind give even fleeting credence to John Miltonās 1644 claim in āAreopagiticaā that truth might ultimately prevail in the marketplace? And if we are to be honest, does the of tolerating all kinds of speech in the service of helping to āshape the intellectual character of . . . societyā not seem wildly bizarre?
The fact is, the āNā word in modern Americaās free speech culture is ānormative.ā
I mean, in a culture where amusement, commerce, and technological advancements in communication the free speech workings of a culture, who can place any cerebral stock in the thinking of Milton and his followers?
Let us not speak falsely: āEqualityā is no longer a āā and the of thinking of free speech in terms of any prescriptive notion of āā is a foreign concept in todayās doctrinal realm.
Goodbye to Dr. Alexander Meiklejohn and his idealistic self-government/civic republican of freedom of expression. So too with Cass Sunsteinās Platonic call for a First Amendment rooted in āā and C. Edwin Bakerās āā theory of the First Amendment that had for realizing the profits of commercial speech. Then there is Robert Borkās constitutionally heretical plea for āā to protect pure political speech to the exclusion of other categories of speech.
Likewise, what are we to make of Vincent Blasiās optimistic about the āinstrumentalā value of protecting āexpressive libertyā in the service of our ācollective well-being, social as well as politicalā? Even theories of definitional or ad-hoc balancing have lost much of their staying power.
As Frederick Schauer some four decades ago: āwhat is analytically necessary for a satisfactory theory of the First Amendment is unattainable given the existing state of the world.ā In that world where free speech is ever more presumptively protected, Holmesā 1919 admonition that the First Amendment was not āintended to give immunity for every possible use of languageā seems rather antiquated. Similarly, Lee Bollingerās that there is a dangerous tendency to āunderstate the risks and harms of speech and to overstate its benefitsā also seems archaic . . . and maybe even smacks of some censorial tendency.

Who can forget Voltaireās bold declaration in favor of free speech? āI disapprove of what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it.ā (Spoiler alert: He never said that! What he was: āWhat a fuss over an omelet.ā invented Voltaireās famous quote.) Then again, when normative principles are cast aside, does it matter whether one of the paters of the Enlightenment actually said that?
To hell with all such high-heaven theories of free speech. Ours, after all, is an uninhibited doctrinal world where false speech flourishes, hate speech thrives, threatening expression surges, the money-is-speech principle proves politically profitable, and near-total toleration is the constitutional measure.
Meanwhile, savors his free speech freedom ā oh, the joys of emancipation from norms!
New censorial vision of free speech takes hold on college campuses
- ā,ā First Amendment Watch (Jan. 16)
On , a newer version of free speech is emerging as young generations redraw the line where expression crosses into harm. Thereās a wave of students who have no tolerance for speech that marginalizes. They draw lines around language that leads to damage, either psychological or physical. Their judgments but also incorporate histories of privilege and oppression.
āWe believe in a diverse set of thoughts,ā says Kaleb Autman, a Black student at the University of Wisconsin whose group is demanding a zero-tolerance policy on hate speech. āBut when your thought is predicated on the subjugation of me or my people, or to a generalized people, then we have problems.ā
NEW GENERATION, EVOLVING IDEAS
A new understanding of free speech has been evolving on college campuses for years, marked by the introduction of safe spaces, trigger warnings and a rise in disruptive protests that silence speakers with offensive views. But the Israel-Hamas war and its rhetoric appear to be widening the fault lines and pushing students to demand that university leaders take a side between clashing versions of free speech.
It came to a head in December when leaders of three elite colleges were called to Congress to testify on campus antisemitism. With , they took a stand for free expression as the Constitution and decades of case law define it, then faced as opponents called them soft on antisemitism.
Forthcoming book condemns hate speech doctrine
- W. Wat Hopkins, āā (Rowman & Littlefield, Feb. 20)

Hate speech has been a societal problem for many years and has seen a resurgence recently alongside political divisiveness and technologies that ease and accelerate the spread of messages. Methods to protect individuals and groups from hate speech have eluded lawmakers as the call for restrictions or bans on such speech are confronted by claims of First Amendment protection. Problematic speech, the argument goes, should be confronted by more speech rather than by restriction.
Debate over the extent of First Amendment protection is based on two bodies of lawāthe practical, precedent determined by the Supreme Court, and the theoretical framework of First Amendment jurisprudence. In Hate Speech is Not Free: The Case Against Constitutional Protection, W. Wat Hopkins argues that the prevailing thought that hate is protected by both case law and theory is incorrect.
Within the Supreme Courtās established hierarchy of speech protection, hate speech falls to the lowest level, deserving no protection as it does not advance ideas containing social value. Ultimately, the Supreme Courtās cases addressing protected and unprotected speech set forth a clear rationale for excommunicating hate speech from First Amendment protection.
Advance Praise
āAn in-depth critique of hate speech and its proper place within First Amendment law and 21st century America is sorely needed. In this book, Wat Hopkins tackles the challenge with intellect and passion, offering compelling arguments and conclusions that significantly contribute to the debate on this vitality important issue.ā
ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;Joseph Russomanno, Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Arizona State University
āGrounding his timely work in judicial opinions, academic scholarship and free-speech theory, Hopkins makes an engaging, well-researched and compelling argument why First Amendment protection for hate speech is wrongheaded. As he crisply encapsulates it, such destructive expression āis harmful, without value, and does not constitute ideas for First Amendment purposes.āā
ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;Clay Calvert, nonresident senior fellow, American Enterprise Institute
āWhat a lucid and compelling clarion call to the US Supreme Court: Unprotect hate speech. Hopkinsā book couldn't be more timely and relevant in the Internet 20th century. It cogently clarifies why and how hate speech has no place in First Amendment law. Hopkinsā incisive analysis of key caselaw and free speech theories is a scholarly tour de force.ā
ā&²Ō²ś²õ±č;Kyo Ho Youm, University of Oregon
Eleventh Circuit rules against DeSantis in suspension of state prosecutor case
- Alexandra Berzon and Ken Bensinger, ā,ā The New York Times (Jan. 10)

Dealing a blow to Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida, a federal court of appeals on Wednesday ruled that he had violated First Amendment protections when he suspended a progressive state prosecutor for political gain.
The ruling, by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit, undercut Mr. DeSantis on an episode he has made a key credential in his presidential campaign. Mr. DeSantis forced Andrew Warren, a Democratic state attorney representing the Tampa area, out of office in August 2022 after he had spoken out against Republican policies on abortion and transgender rights.
On the campaign trail, Mr. DeSantis has used the suspension of Mr. Warren, who had been elected to his post twice, to illustrate his strong-arm approach to progressive public officials who push what he calls a āwokeā agenda.
The court on Wednesday vacated a decision from a federal judge in Tallahassee in January 2023 not to reinstate Mr. Warren, who has fought the suspension in court, arguing that it violated his First Amendment right to free speech. Now, that judge must reconsider his ruling.
Related
- ā,ā PrawfsBlawg (Jan.14)
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS sides with ACLU in support of NRA in āinformal censorshipā First Amendment case
- Joshua House, āĀé¶¹“«Ć½IOS sides with NRA, ACLU in First Amendment Supreme Court case,ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS (Jan. 16)
In a new friend-of-the-court filing, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS asks the Supreme Court to rule that government officials cannot censor protected speech by punishing speakersā associates.
The First Amendment does not let officials punish people merely because they maintain or espouse certain views. Yet government censors are not so easily dissuaded. Officials often try to ban speech indirectly, threatening to impose costly investigations on speakers, punish their business associates, or remove legal protections. Is that constitutional? No, it is not.
This year, the Supreme Court will have a chance to reaffirm that the First Amendment bars informal or indirect censorship just as it does laws that restrict speech.
The National Rifle Association sued New York state officials who, it alleges, threatened financial institutions that continued to do business with it. The officials did so, the NRA argues, because they disapproved of the NRAās political message. After the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit ruled for the government officials, the United States Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. The NRA is represented before the Court by the American Civil Liberties Union.
Today Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS ā joined by the National Coalition Against Censorship, the Rutherford Institute, and the First Amendment Lawyers Association ā filed an amicus curiae (āfriend-of-the-courtā) brief in support of the NRA. Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās brief argues that the First Amendmentās formal legal protections count for little if public officials can evade them by simply couching their censorship demands as veiled threats and vague demands for cooperation. The facts alleged by the NRA demonstrate that New York officials were trying to indirectly censor speech that they could not punish directly.
Related
- (Eugene Volokh, Counsel of Record)
Amicus brief filed in Second Circuit on behalf of Volokh in āvote-by-textā case
- Eugene Volokh, ā,ā The Volokh Conspiracy (Jan. 16)
Russell B. Balikian & Cody M. Poplin (Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP) just filed on my behalf Friday; they drafted it based generally on some thoughts that I'd expressed in . Here's the substance of the brief, in case any of you folks are interested:
INTRODUCTION
The First Amendment likely tolerates narrow and clearly defined bans on disseminating knowing lies regarding election proceduresāthat is, false statements of fact (not opinion, humor, parody, hyperbole, or the like) made with actual malice regarding the time or place of an election, or the procedures one must follow to lawfully cast a valid vote. But Congress has not enacted any federal law that clearly criminalizes such conduct. While some states have passed legislation that comes close to the mark, Congress has debated and repeatedly failed to enact similar statutes. See infra, at 12-13.
Despite the absence of a federal statute specifically on point, the government prosecuted Douglass Mackey for posting messages on Twitter relating to the 2016 presidential election. To achieve that result, the government repurposed 18 U.S.C. §&²Ō²ś²õ±č;241, a statute enacted in 1870 to target violence and intimidation by the Ku Klux Klan during Reconstruction. United States v. Price, 383 U.S. 787, 800-05 (1966). Section 241 does not specifically address false factual statements about the mechanics of voting, or even speech about elections. Instead, it broadly prohibits āconspir[ing] to injure, oppress, threaten, or intimidate any person ⦠in the free exercise or enjoyment of any right or privilege secured to him by the Constitution or laws of the United States.ā The district court nonetheless construed the term āinjureā to encompass any āconduct that makes exercising the right to vote more difficult, or in some way prevents voters from exercising their right to vote.ā United States v. Mackey, 652 F. Supp. 3d 309, 337 (E.D.N.Y. 2023). It held that Mackey had āfair warningā that this 1870 statute prohibited posting tweets suggesting that people could āvote by text.ā
First Amendment Watch launches Tuesdayās weekly Q&A series
- Susanna Granieri, ā,ā First Amendment Watch (Jan. 16)

Since the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war on Oct. 7, colleges and universities across the country , with demonstrations from pro-Palestinian and pro-Israeli groups bringing tensions on campus to new heights. Some school leaders have been accused of failing to adequately protect their students from bigotry, highlighting conflicts between free speech principles and university codes of conduct.
Following a December congressional hearing, the presidents of Harvard University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology over their testimonies, in which they did not unequivocally state whether calls for the genocide of Jews would violate their universitiesā codes of conduct. UPenn President Liz Magill . Harvard President Claudine Gay , after the controversy brought increased scrutiny to her academic record and accusations of plagiarism.
In an interview with First Amendment Watch, First Amendment expert Will Creeley, legal director at the Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS (Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS), discussed the issues of law and ethics behind the controversy, outlined where the lines around protected speech on campus should be drawn, and argued that pushing unpopular or offensive speech underground could cause more harm than good. []
The AI āGeorge Carlinā takes the virtual stage
- Michael Zee, ā,ā Variety (Jan. 10)

More than 15 years after his death, stand-up comedian George Carlin has been brought back to life in an artificial intelligence-generated special called āGeorge Carlin: Iām Glad Iām Dead.ā
The which dropped on Tuesday, comes from Dudesy, a comedy AI that hosts a podcast and YouTube show with āMad TVā alum Will Sasso and podcaster Chad Kultgen.
āI just want to let you know very clearly that what youāre about to hear is not George Carlin. Itās my impersonation of George Carlin that I developed in the exact same way a human impressionist would,ā Dudesy said at the beginning of the special. āI listened to all of George Carlinās material and did my best to imitate his voice, cadence and attitude as well as the subject matter I think would have interested him today. So think of it like Andy Kaufman impersonating Elvis or like Will Ferrell impersonating George W. Bush.ā
[ . . . ]
Kelly Carlin, the late stand-up comedianās daughter, posted a [. . .] regarding the AI-generated special. āMy dad spent a lifetime perfecting his craft from his very human life, brain and imagination. No machine will ever replace his genius. These AI generated products are clever attempts at trying to recreate a mind that will never exist again,ā she wrote. āLetās let the artistās work speak for itself. Humans are so afraid of the void that we canāt let what has fallen into it stay there.ā
Forthcoming book on campaign finance disclosures
- Abby K. Wood, ā,ā Oxford Handbook of American Election (forthcoming)

Political committees must report the sources of their contributions and the recipients of their expenditures. Government agencies then make some of that information publicly available. Through intermediaries, voters can the use the campaign financing information to inform their votes. The Supreme Court has usually upheld campaign finance disclosure laws, but in doing so, it has carved out exceptions for certain groups. The jurisprudence has not evolved since Buckley v. Valeo. The court acknowledges that while disclosure might chill speech, its benefits tend to justify disclosure laws. Those benefits are listed as informational, anti-corruption, and enforcement benefits.
Disclosureās information benefits are well-documented by scholars. Disclosure is politically popular among voters. However, it has opponents who claim it chills their speech because they fear harassment related to their political contributions. For some groups, particularly marginalized people who organize for unpopular policies, the risk of harassment may be serious. However, it has proved difficult for scholars to detect consistent and significant chilling in the campaign finance data or in survey experiments.
In recent years, the opponents of disclosure have tended to come from more powerful groups in society, rather than marginalized groups. Simultaneously, a lower level of threat ā even hypothetical threats ā have satisfied the Supreme Court that a First Amendment problem may exist in various disclosure contexts. The current configuration of ideologies on the court and the votes they cast on cases could threaten campaign finance disclosure laws. The Court should proceed thoughtfully. Social science evidence published to date generally supports the continued use of campaign finance disclosures. Moreover, there remain several under-examined evidentiary issues in the jurisprudence.
More in the news
- ā,ā First Amendment Watch (Jan. 16)
- Tanner Stewart, ā,ā ABC 3 (Jan. 16)
- ā,ā Free Speech Center (Jan. 15)
- Ilya Somin, ā,ā The Volokh Conspiracy (Jan. 15)
- āVICTORY! University of Missouri clarifies policy forcing student journalists to name confidential sources,ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS (Jan. 12)
- Aaron Terr, āReporter fired for moonlighting as a comedian just got his job back ā but his joking days may be numbered,ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS (Jan.11)
- ā,ā Knight Institute (Jan. 10)
2022-2023 SCOTUS term: Free expression and related cases
Review granted
- (argued Nov. 1)
- (argued Oct. 31)
- / / (to be argued Feb. 26)
Pending petitions
State action
- (argued Oct. 31)
Review denied
- (Justice Kavanaugh would grant the petition for a writ of certiorari. Justice Thomas, dissenting from the denial of certiorari. (separate ) Justice Alito, dissenting from the denial of certiorari. (separate ))
Free speech related
- (pending) (statutory interpretation of 18 U.S.C. §&²Ō²ś²õ±č;1512(c) advocacy, lobbying and protest in connection with congressional proceedings) // See also
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This article is part of First Amendment News, an editorially independent publication edited by Ronald K. L. Collins and hosted by Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS as part of our mission to educate the public about First Amendment issues. The opinions expressed are those of the articleās author(s) and may not reflect the opinions of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS or of Mr. Collins.
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