302 Midterm : ) - Chapter 2
A Public university's Rule of Conduct can reduce or censor First Amendment Rights to protect the health and safety of students on campus?
False
A traditional public forum is closed to nongovernment users to protect the core purpose of the property
False
Ad hoc balancing is used to determine the proper awards or penalties when judges make equity rulings
False
Content-based laws must pass intermediate scrutiny to be constitutional
False
Content-neutral time, place, and manner restrictions must pass strict scrutiny in order to be constitutional
False
Court injunctions that stop publication are always unconstitutional prior restraints
False
Government regulations that target the content of speech because of government disfavor with the ideas expressed are called content-neutral
False
In ad hoc balancing, courts employ strict rules of statutory interpretation
False
John Milton said that the open exchange of ideas in an unfettered marketplace will allow convincing falsehoods to overcome the truth
False
Once a city creates a public square, it can no longer regulate the time, place and manner of the speakers?
False
Originalists believe that interpretation of the Constitution should be guided by the actual text of the document
False
Private Property that is used by the public is called a traditional public forum
False
The First Amendment came first in the Bill of Rights because the framers believed it was the most important and core right of the people
False
The First Amendment does not limit the power of state or local legislatures
False
The First Amendment was created to protect residents of a state from being censored or restrained by state laws?
False
The State of California can prohibit certain types of commercial speech?
False
The U.S. Supreme Court consistently has interpreted the free press clause of the First Amendment to confer special privileged and responsibilities on the press
False
The U.S. Supreme Court has said that prior restraint is sometimes necessary to counterbalance the power of large media corporations to drown out alternate voices and different ideas
False
The social contract is part of the First Amendment that requires the people to act responsibly in exchange for their freedoms
False
Throughout history, the U.S. Supreme Court has relied heavily on natural rights theory to guide its First Amendment interpretations because this theory provides clear boundaries to personal liberties
False
To be constitutional under strict scrutiny review, a law must reasonably advance an important government interest
False
Under the First Amendment, the government is prohibited from restraining any speech?
False
A classical prior restraint imposes broad government power to review and select acceptable content before ideas are published
True
Because content-based laws pose a greater risk to the freedom of speech and of the press that do content-neutral laws, the U.S. Supreme Court uses amore lenient test to determine when content-neutral laws are constitutional
True
Both content-based and viewpoint-based regulations target speech because of government disfavor with the ideas expressed
True
Functionalists, or instrumentalists, believe that the First Amendment protects the freedom of speech and of the press only because these freedoms advance important societal goals, such as democracy
True
Justices who rely on original intent to determine the correct meaning and application of the First Amendment argue that the framers understood and left a clear record of the meaning of the freedom of speech and of the press
True
Textualists believe that interpretation of the Constitution should be guided entirely by its own language without reference to history or contemporary issues
True
The First Amendment is a nearly complete ban to prior restraints
True
The First Amendment protection for freedom of expression means prior restrains by government are constitutional only as a last resort to meet a compelling need
True
The First Amendment stands as a nearly absolute ban to prior restraint
True
The crime of sedition punishes truthful criticism of government
True
The government bears an exceptionally heavy burden of proof to justify any prior restraint because prior restraints are inherently likely to distort the marketplace of ideas and to publish ideas that government disfavors
True
Through its self-delegated power to interpret and apply the U.S. Constitution, the U.S. Supreme Court determined that the First Amendment limits the power of state legislatures as well as Congress
True
Truthful criticism of government was punished under sedition laws
True
In reviewing the constitutionality of laws, the Supreme Court has established than an important government interest is
a significant but not compelling interest
The First Amendment prohibits abridgments of the freedom of speech and the press by
all levels and branches of government
If the First Amendment stands as a nearly complete ban on prior restraints, they nonetheless may be constitutional to prevent
all of these
Laws of general application
apply to the media in the same way as other businesses
The Supreme Court has said that, under the First Amendment, political speech is
at the core of the protected freedom of speech
Laws that indirectly limit the freedom of speech while achieving other substantial government objectives are called
both content-neutral restrictions and time, place, and manner restrictions
The Supreme Court generally interprets freedom of speech and freedom of the press
by combining the two terms into freedom of expression
The legal protection of anonymous speakers online and offline is
determined in the U.S. by balancing the rights of anonymous speakers against other important values
To determine the constitutionality of government actions, the Supreme Court employs
different tests to respond to different impacts of government actions on constitutionally protected rights and freedoms
Prior review
enables government to stop publications before they reach the public
In the are of government speech, the U.S. Supreme Court has
found the First Amendment does not deal expressly with government speech or speaker
In New York Times v. US, the Supreme Court said that
government bears an extremely heavy burden of proof to justify prior restraints
Under strict scrutiny, a law is constitutional only if it
is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest
When government funds activities that involve expression, it
may not discriminate on the basis of the content of expression if it creates a public forum
Instrumentalists argue that the First Amendment advances all of the following goals except
obscenity
To guide its application of the First Amendment, the Supreme Court relies on
original intent, textual interpretation, ad hoc balancing, and categorical balancing
Courts find content-based restrictions of speech constitutional if they
pass strict scrutiny
In First Amendment jurisprudence, original intent means the
perceived purpose of the constitutional framers
Prior restraints on speech are
presumptively unconstitutional and rarely constitutional
In Near v. Minnesota, the Supreme Court ruled that
prior restraints pose a serious threat of censorship as well as that laws that punish past actions by banning future publications are a form of prior restraint
Traditional public forums include
public property designed and historically used for public gathering and association
When the Supreme Court reviews the constitutionality of laws, it applies
rational review, intermediate review, or strict scrutiny
In Reed v. Town of Gilbert, the Supreme Court held that laws
that distinguish treatment based on the message are content-based
Content-neutral regulations are also called
time, place, and manner regulations
In several recent decisions, the U,S, Supreme Court has held that state or federal limits on campaign spending
unconstitutionally restrict the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment