MC3080 Chapter 3 Speech Distinctions
Imminent harm or play "no essential part of any exposition of ideas, and are of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality"
Speech and press content are not protected if they would cause...
True Threat
Speech directed toward one or more specific individuals with the intent of causing listeners to fear for their safety
Brandenburg/Hess Incitement Test
Test to determine when speech is sufficiently likely to prompt illegal action that it no longer warrants First Amendment protection
Not Absolute
The First Amendment says Congress may not abridge free speech, but the prohibition is...
Incorporation Doctrine
The Fourteenth Amendment concept that most of the Bill of Rights applies equally to the states; prevents the states, as well as the federal government, from abridging protected First Amendment rights
True
The Supreme Court has established that universities have a greater obligation to create and maintain forums for broad public discussion than do the public schools
Limited Public Forums
The Supreme Court has viewed public schools and universities- including school-sponsored events, publications, funding and physical spaces
Hazelwood v. Kuhmeier
The Supreme Court said school administrators, not student reporters and editors, have authority to determine the appropriate content of a school-sponsored student newspaper. In a footnote, however, the Court made clear that the decision did not apply to the university student press
Papish v. Board of Curators of the University of Missouri
The U.S. Supreme Court established that "the mere dissemination of ideas- no matter how offensive to good taste- on a state university campus may not be shut off in the name alone of 'conventions of decency'
USA Patriot Act
The Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001. The act gave law enforcement agencies greater authority to combat terrorism; Places a range of political organizing, activism and speech within the category of support for terrorism and expanded the power of law enforcement and investigative authorities
Morse v. Federick
The case began when high school senior Joseph Frederick and others displayed a banner reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" during a school field trip. Frederick said he did it for a laugh and to get himself on TV. The school's principal, Deborah Morse, told him to remove the banner. When he refused, she tore down the sign and suspended him for 10 days for violating the school policy that banned the advocacy of illegal drug use. Frederick sued.
Chilling Effect
The discouragement of a constitutional right, especially free speech, by any government practice that creates uncertainty about the proper exercise of that right
(1) Directed toward inciting immediate violence or illegal action and (2) likely to produce that action
The incitement test allows punishment of "advocacy of illegal action" if the speech is...
Proximate Cause
The most difficult element to prove
A direct relationship between the defendant's action and the plaintiff's injury
To determine proximate cause, courts decide whether there is...
A duty of care that was breached and that the breach was the proximate cause of the injury
To establish liability, the plaintiff must prove the media had...
(1) Reasonable foreseeability of harm or (2) proximate (directly related) cause of the harm
To win a lawsuit for injury caused by media negligence, the plaintiff must prove breach of media's duty of care because the content posed a...
(1) Are directed at an individual and (2) automatically inflict emotional harm or trigger violence
Under the Supreme Court's fighting words doctrine, the First Amendment does not protect words that...
Protected by the Constitution
Unlike obscene speech, speech about violence is...
Blackmail; perjury; false advertising; obscenity
What categories of speech are unprotected by the First Amendment?
(1) A plaintiff to show that media content would result in violent or unlawful activity immediately after media exposure, which is nearly impossible to prove (2) Proof media content is likely to cause a reasonable person to act illegally
What does the incitement test require?
Difficult to generalize from the resulting fact specific decisions; Does not craft clear rules for the courts and society to apply in similar situations
What is a drawback to ad hoc balancing?
The Supreme Court upheld the school's decision to suspend Fraser for three days and prohibit his selection as graduation speaker. The Court said that when student speech occurs during a school-sponsored event , the student's liberty of speech may be curtailed to protect the school's educational purpose, especially when young students are in the audience; the Fraser Approach
What was the outcome of the Bethel School District v. Fraser case?
Fighting Words
Words not protected by the First Amendment because they cause immediate or illegal acts
Underinclusive
A First Amendment doctrine that disfavors narrow laws that target a subset of a recognized category for discriminatory treatment
Hate Speech
A category of speech that includes name-calling and pointed criticism that demeans others on the basis of race, color, gender, ethnicity, religion, national origin, disability, intellect or the like
Categorical Balancing
A judge weighs a broad category of speech against competing social interests, such as political speech against privacy
As Applied
A phrase referring to interpretation of a statute on the basis of actual effects on the parties in the present case
Tort
A private, or civil, wrong for which a court can provide remedy in the form of damages
Protecting the national security
A sufficiently important concern to outweigh speech protection under certain conditions
Ad Hoc Balancing
Balances the benefits of the expression against any harm it poses to competing values; weighing competing values case by case
Duty of Care
Determined by whether the media's actions were the proximate cause of a harm that a reasonable person would have foreseen
Proximate Cause
Determining whether it is reasonable to conclude the defendant's actions led to the plaintiff's injury
Viewpoint-Based Discrimination
Government censorship or punishment of expression based on the ideas or attitudes expressed. Courts will apply a strict scrutiny test to determine whether the government acted constitutionally
It helps maintain social stability because it provides catharsis to discontent individuals and allows them to blow off steam
How does free speech serve as a societal safety valve?
Rarely wins; plaintiffs generally fail to convince courts that media intentionally encourage people to harm themselves or others
If a court uses the incitement test when a mass medium is sued for causing physical harm, the plaintiff...
It upheld the siblings' rights to wear black armbands around their arms to protest the Vietnam War.
In the case of Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, what did the court do?
Symbolic Speech
Nonverbal expression, in the form of burning flags, wearing armbands or marching through the public streets
Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)
Ruled that the First Amendment protects the right to advocate but not to incite violence; The First Amendment does not protect speech that incites, prompts or provokes immediate violence
(1) Limit excessive content that is compatible with the school's educational priorities nor (2) target specific content without a strong educational justification
Rules affecting expression in public schools likely are constitutional if the policies neither
Prevent speech that would directly undermine the school's educational mission
School officials generally may not dictate the content of student speech except to...
Fearful
Courts tend to restrict speech more readily when the public is...
Clear and Present Danger
Doctrine establishing that restrictions on First Amendment rights will be upheld if they are necessary to prevent an extremely serious or imminent harm
The Brandenburg Decision
Established that government may punish criticism of government may punish criticism of government or advocacy of radical ideas only when speakers intentionally incite immediate illegal activity
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District
Established the school classroom as a location that is "peculiarly the marketplace of ideas" where speech may be regulated only to prevent a "substantial disruption" to school activities
(1) Direct the threat toward one or more individuals (2) with the intent of causing the listener(s) to fear bodily harm or death
For speech to become punishable as a true threat, a speaker must...
Negligence
Generally, the failure to exercise reasonable or ordinary care
Rarely win
Individuals suing the media for inciting harm...