BrianGarst.com

Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem.

free speech Archive

Tuesday

11

January 2011

0

COMMENTS

Next Item on the Crisis Exploitation Agenda: Fairness Doctrine

Written by , Posted in Big Government, Gun Rights

Not satisfied with exploiting a mass murder committed by a nutcase – one too crazy to hold coherent ideological views – by disingenuously trying to shame political opponents into submission to the liberal agenda, the left is now moving on even from the easily predictable push for gun control. Trampling over one Constitutional amendment is not enough, so now they’re also using the event as an excuse to once again call for the return of the loathsome and misnamed ‘Fairness Doctrine’.

Leading the charge is James Clyburn, who tried to tie the shooting to the House reading of the Constitution. We need to “rethink parameters on free speech,” he says. My liberalspeak translator informs me that rethinking the parameters necessarily involves regulations designed to shut down conservative speech, because as the left has so deftly proven, conservatives are the only Hatey McHaters hating the place up.

Imagine how bad it would be if the Democrats still had a majority right now. You might not have any rights left by the time a solid Democratic majority was through not letting this ‘crisis’ go to waste.

Monday

10

January 2011

2

COMMENTS

Giffords Shooting Being Abused to Justify a Frightening Assault on Political Speech

Written by , Posted in Big Government

The lengths to which some have gone to exploit the Giffords shooting have been well-documented elsewhere. Suffice it to say, it is beyond disturbing how quickly the left mobilizes in the face of any national event in an effort to twist the facts, demonize their opponents, and attempt to shut down legitimate political disagreements through disingenuous shame-mongering. This behavior is bad enough, but it’s usually just limited to political speech, which they are free to engage in, even when they do so dishonestly. Some, however, want to elevate the strategy to what amounts to limited more than tyranny.

Democratic Rep. Robert Brady has pledged to introduce legislation to extend the same level of protections the President receives to members of Congress. On its face, this seems reasonable, as political speech as not been systematically squashed in the enforcement of protections against threatening the President. Not if we count the years of death fantasies generate by the left when President Bush was in office, anyway.

But things get scarier, as they often do, when the Congressman opened his mouth:

Asked about the images of crosshairs used by former Alaska governor Sarah Palin’s (R) PAC in a map detailing its 20 targeted members, including Giffords, Brady said that the imagery was an example of how political rhetoric and discourse has taken a turn for the negative.

“I think we should make it that people cant do that,” Brady said. “There was a crosshair on Gabby Giffords, and where’s she at now? … I don’t know if we’re giving people ideas by doing something like that, but we’ve got to do something to make that criminal.”

He wants to make it criminal for crosshairs to be put on a map, even when it quite clearly has nothing to do with violence, and is entirely common from both political parties (like this DCCC map highlighting “targeted” Republicans with bullseyes), the media, and everyone else who uses the easy, albeit cliched, warfare metaphor for politics. Criminalizing metaphors is not smart policy, flirts dangerously close to instituting thought-crime, and will inevitably lead to yet more attempts to criminalize political disagreements.

It’s time to step back and reflect, not pass reactionary, heat-of-the-moment legislation. Tyranny rarely finds better comfort than such times.

Sunday

28

November 2010

0

COMMENTS

Liberal Law Professor Pushes Back Against Citizens United Demagoguery

Written by , Posted in General/Misc.

Liberals responded to the Citizens United decision – which upheld the basic principle of free speech even when it is most needed: during elections – with unhinged rage. As I explained at the time, they reacted so because they believe that people are fundamentally stupid and cannot be allowed to hear multiple points of view, for fear that they may stray from the liberal orthodoxy (naturally, I think the people’s tendency to reject liberalism when presented with the facts proves that the public is largely intelligent).

But there’s at least one liberal who isn’t completely dishonest. Touted as a potential Supreme Court nominee (I guarantee she’s off the list now), Professor Kathleen Sullivan analyzed the decision and its subsequent responses, in a paper published by the Harvard Law Review, in light of two different visions of free speech. One side, she described, is the egalitarian view which allows government subsidies for marginalized speech and restrictions for corporate or well funded speech.  This is the left-wing view. The other perspective is speech as a check on government and a necessary component of political liberty. This is the more conservative (and I’ll say, accurate) view.

She goes on to review the legal history of both views, which is interesting in its own right. But of political interest to the current political debate (I use the term debate very loosely, given the hysterical and overwrought nature of liberal criticisms to Citizens United) is her conclusion:

Citizens United has been unjustly maligned as radically departing from settled free speech tradition. In fact, the clashing opinions in the case simply illustrate that free speech tradition has different strands. The libertarian strand from which the majority draws support empha-sizes that freedom of speech is a negative command that protects a system of speech, not individual speakers, and thus invalidates government interference with the background system of expression no matter whether a speaker is individual or collective, for-profit or nonprofit, powerful or marginal. The egalitarian strand on which the dissent relies, in contrast, views speech rights as belonging to individual speakers and speech restrictions as subject to a one-way ratchet: impermissible when they create or entrench the subordination of political or cultural minorities, but permissible when aimed at redistributing speaking power to reduce some speakers’ disproportionate influence. In many First Amendment challenges, the two traditions converge upon the same outcome. For example, Justices favoring either tradition will typically vote to protect marginal or dissident speakers from regulation at the hands of expressive majorities. The traditions diverge, however, where government seeks to limit speech to reduce the influence of speakers deemed too dominant in public discourse, as in the segregated-fund requirements struck down in Citizens United.

…The Court’s pronounced willingness to uphold compelled disclosure requirements provides the best guide to future policymaking in the area of campaign finance. Coupled with the libertarian approach em-braced by the majority, it also suggests an emerging coherent vision of free speech that may characterize future Roberts Court decisions. In this vision, the more speech the better, with its distribution and assessment nearly always best left to the citizenry rather than the government. For a generation raised on YouTube and other channels of instantaneous access to information made possible by the internet, this may prove to be a congenial vision.

So this was no grand departure from free speech jurisprudence, nor any kind of judicial activism as popularly understood. Now that at least one well respected liberal academic has said so,can the left quit it with the end-of-democracy demagoguery? I’m not getting my hopes up.

Thursday

22

April 2010

0

COMMENTS

Comedy Central Grovels Before Violent Islamists

Written by , Posted in Foreign Affairs & Policy

South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker have consistently produced some of the best social satire in the 14 years that the show has been on the air.  In celebration of their 200th episode, they did a mash-up of many of the story lines they’ve dealt with over the years, including the use of Muhammed.

After the first half of the show aired, a Muslim website threatened the pair with violence for referencing Muhammed.  In response, Comedy Central censored the second half of the show.

It’s rare that I find anything said by Andrew Sullivan to be quotable or worth discussing, but he summed it up well:

…It actually helped illuminate the unique intolerance of Sunni Islam among world religions today. SP has long had Jesus and Satan, they have ridiculed Mormonism, eviscerated Scientology, mocked Catholicism and showed the Buddha actually doing lines of coke. None of the adherents of these other faiths have threatened to kill Matt and Trey, but, of course, some Sunni Islamists did so.

So what does Comedy Central do? They wussed out even further. They bleeped even mentions of the name of Muhammed spoken by characters.

Matt and Trey responded to the censoring with this statement:

In the 14 years we’ve been doing South Park we have never done a show that we couldn’t stand behind. We delivered our version of the show to Comedy Central and they made a determination to alter the episode. It wasn’t some meta-joke on our part. Comedy Central added the bleeps. In fact, Kyle’s customary final speech was about intimidation and fear. It didn’t mention Muhammad at all but it got bleeped too. We’ll be back next week with a whole new show about something completely different and we’ll see what happens to it.

The sadly ironic part has been bolded.  Comedy Central ought to be ashamed for caving to such threats, thereby encouraging continued radical Islamist violence.

Tuesday

2

February 2010

1

COMMENTS

How Not To Deal With Bad Speech

Written by , Posted in Education

This story seems like one of those “teachable moments” I keep hearing so much about:

The University of Oregon student body has been learning some useful lessons in liberty as the campus debates what to do about an extremely controversial group’s presence on campus. Last week, the student government narrowly voted to defend free expression when it voted down a resolution designed to push the group off campus for good.

The organization is the Pacifica Forum, a discussion group hosted on campus by an emeritus professor, as permitted by university rules. The group is so controversial, it appears, because every so often it discusses topics that a lot of people on campus find extremely offensive—such as the swastika or Nazism—well, not just because of the topics, but because some of the participants appear to the critics to be voicing far too much sympathy for ideas of white supremacy. You can find this criticism of the Pacifica Forum in full force on the Facebook.com group “UofO students and community members against the Pacifica Forum,” and you can find defenses of the group’s right to free expression in reasonably good order on the website of student publication the Oregon Commentator.

…The group met at the university’s Erb Memorial Student Union until a few weeks ago, when it met in a larger space than usual because of the expectation of hundreds of protesters for the discussion of the swastika on January 15. The protesters came and disrupted the event.

The disruption appears to have been organized by student government president Emma Kallaway, and Vice President Getachew Kassa who, according to the Oregon Commentator‘s January 25 issue, helped to coordinate a rally prior to the disruption:

“We wanted to create fear and anger in the forum, and we accomplished that today,” said Kassa.

According to campus newspaper the Oregon Daily Emerald, the disruption was severe enough that law enforcement officers had to remove several protesters from the room.

And that is how not to deal with “bad” speech.

Some people have bad ideas.  Some people subscribe to hate, and they seek out like minded people to discuss these views with.  That’s just a part of life.

At issue is how you deal with such people.  If all they’re doing is exercising their rights to speech and association, then theatrics are the wrong way to go.  Protesting, disruption, temper tantrums – all just serve to bring attention on the target group.

The best way to deal with bad speech is with more speech.  If people are listening to their ideas, then use your own speech to say why they are wrong.  Don’t toss aside your own principles to have them silenced.

Thursday

21

January 2010

0

COMMENTS

Victory For Free Speech

Written by , Posted in The Courts, Criminal Justice & Tort

The long awaited Citizens United decision has been handed down, and it appears to be a resounding victory for free speech!

From Volokh Conspiracy:

The Court held 5–4 that restrictions on independent corporate expenditures in political campaigns are unconstitutional, overruling Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce and parts of McConnell v. FEC, and it upheld the disclosure requirements 8–1 (Thomas dissenting).  Justice Kennedy explained that the Court was overruling some of its prior decisions because it was not possible to rule in favor of the petitioners on narrower grounds without chilling protected political speech.  According to Justice Kennedy, the Court is re-embracing the principle that a speaker’s corporate identity is not a sufficient basis for suppressing political speech, as held in pre–Austin cases.  It would appear this holding applies equally to unions.

The media is predictably spinning it as “rolling back” and overturning “key campaign limits,” rather than as upholding First Amendment rights.

It will be some time before the jumble of partial concurrences and dissents is fully dissected.

Wednesday

11

November 2009

0

COMMENTS

Meddling Is What Rewards Congressmen With Campaign Funds

Written by , Posted in Big Government, Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements, Waste & Government Reform

Single issue organizations often try to piggy-back on the big issues of the day and gain publicity by tying major news items to their agenda.  I can hardly fault them for it, but when they use bad logic in an effort to restrict freedoms, I must call them out.

Members of Congress who noted “no” on health care reform legislation late Saturday night have received $2.3 million more in campaign donations from health insurance interests than those who voted in favor of the legislation to overhaul of the nation’s health care system, according to analysis released by a coalition of campaign reform groups.

“The health care debate shows that our campaign finance system is as much in crisis as our health care system,” said David Donnelly, national campaigns director of Public Campaign Action Fund, the watchdog group that conducted the analysis for the coalition. “As measured in campaign donations, it clearly pays to be against reform and with the health insurance interests.”

There are several problems with this account of their findings. First, the difference in donations for the two sides isn’t all that great. One group got $12.5 and the other closer to $10 million. Yet clearly they want to paint it as nefarious to donate to people opposing PelosiCare, but it’s no problem for those who support it.

Which brings me to my second point. They are wrong to assert that the “vote shows the need to transform our current campaign finance system.” Their idea of transforming campaign finance is to restrict the freedom to financially support politicians on the basis of their views, and they argue this is necessary by inferring, but not substantiating, corruption when it comes to voting on health care reform. But their claim that it “clearly pays to be against reform” misses the point:  it clearly pays to be on either side of the issue.  The $2.3 million difference between being for or against the legislation is minimal compared to the $10+ million difference between have or not having a piece of controversial legislation to vote on in the first place.

Whether they are for or against the particular bills before Congress, both sides are financially better off for having the “debate” at all. The incentive then is not to switch sides for money, but to threaten governmental interference in all manner of issues, and as often as possible, in order to create more anxiety in the private sector. Every additional “crises” that needs “reform” will bring out new stakeholders with buckets full of cash who want to make sure they don’t get shafted in the process.

Restricting donations is not likely to solve anything because both sides – industries who want favorable regulations and politicians who want money with which to seek reelection – are highly motivated to get around any restrictions.  New ways will always emerge for money to get from industry pocket A into Congressional pocket B.

The best solution is not to limit our freedoms, but to limit the powers of Congress. The fewer issues that are within their regulatory purview, the fewer opportunities they have to go around kicking ant mounds in hopes of seeing which deep pockets get stirred up.

Wednesday

30

September 2009

0

COMMENTS

Congress Looks To Muzzle Internet Over Cyber Bullying

Written by , Posted in Legislation, The Nanny State & A Regulated Society

The biggest bullies in America, collective referred to as Congress, are tackling the issue of cyber bullying.  Their solution? An all out assault on the first amendment via the Megan Meier Cyberbullying Prevention Act:

‘(a) Whoever transmits in interstate or foreign commerce any communication, with the intent to coerce, intimidate, harass, or cause substantial emotional distress to a person, using electronic means to support severe, repeated, and hostile behavior, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than two years, or both.

‘(b) As used in this section–

‘(1) the term ‘communication’ means the electronic transmission, between or among points specified by the user, of information of the user’s choosing, without change in the form or content of the information as sent and received; and

‘(2) the term ‘electronic means’ means any equipment dependent on electrical power to access an information service, including email, instant messaging, blogs, websites, telephones, and text messages.’.

What could possibly go wrong with such a broad piece of legislation? Some of the things I seek to do with this blog could hypothetically be described as: intimidating politicians into actually obeying their oath to defend the Constitution, harassing corrupt officials into complying with the law, and causing substantial emotional distress to those politicos who think that mortgaging our children’s future is a viable means to achieve reelection.

In other words, you can pry the keyboard from my cold, dead fingers.

Monday

21

September 2009

3

COMMENTS

This Is Why You Don't Let Government In The Door

Written by , Posted in Government Meddling, Health Care, Welfare & Entitlements

Some people wonder what the big deal is about letting government run a little insurance agency, or help people out by spreading some of other people’s money around.  Out of compassion, of course.  Well, here’s your answer:

Political intimidation has always been part of the current Congress’s health-care strategy: “If you’re not at the table, you’re on the menu” is tattooed on every lobbyist and industry rep in Washington. But Max Baucus’s latest bullying tactics are hard to believe by even these standards, as the Senate Finance Chairman has sicced federal regulators on the insurer Humana Inc. for daring to criticize one part of his health bill.

Earlier this month, Humana sent a one-page letter to its customers enrolled in its Medicare Advantage plans, which offer private options to Medicare beneficiaries. Humana noted that, because of spending cuts proposed by Democrats, “millions of seniors and disabled individuals could lose many of the important benefits and services that make Medicare Advantage health plans so valuable.” The Kentucky-based company also urged its customers to contact their Representatives. Pretty tame stuff, as these things go.

Mr. Baucus took it as a declaration of war. He complained to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal health-care agency, which on Friday duly ordered Humana to cease and desist. CMS claimed the mailer was “misleading and confusing” and told the company it has opened an official probe as to whether the mailer violated laws about how the insurers that manage Advantage plans are allowed to communicate with their customers, as well as other federal statutes.

And here‘s the actual letter.

Once government involves itself in any way, it will justify all manner unconstitutional restrictions on liberty in the name of protecting the political class in charge.  Private companies beware: you work with these thugs at your peril.

Wednesday

9

September 2009

0

COMMENTS

Free Speech On The Rise?

Written by , Posted in The Courts, Criminal Justice & Tort

That’s the hope following Wednesday’s rehearing of Citizen’s United.  SCOTUSblog paints an optimistic picture for freedom lovers:

Three Justices — Anthony M. Kennedy, Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas — have explicitly urged the Court to overturn the two precedents that sustained congressional limits on campaign financing by corporations and labor unions. Kennedy and Thomas only seemed to reinforce that position on Wednesday; Thomas remained silent, but had given no indication earlier of a change of mind.

That lineup has always put the focus, as the Court volunteered to take on new constitutional questions in the Citizens United case, on the Chief Justice and Justice Alito.  While both have been skeptical in the past about campaign finance laws, supporters of such laws had fashioned an array of arguments they hoped would lead Roberts and Alito to shy away from casting their votes to create a majority to free corporations to spend their own treasury money to influence federal elections.  None of those arguments seemed to appeal to either Roberts or Alito.

This is a good opportunity to clear up some misconceptions about free speech.  NPR asks:

The question always is: Who does the First Amendment apply to? Do only individuals have the right of free speech? Or does this right extend to corporations and unions as well?

These are the wrong questions. The First Amendment says:

Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

NPR (along with the rest of the advocates for government regulation of speech) thinks the First Amendment creates a right to free speech, and that reasoned people can debate its scope, or divine through enlightened discourse just who that creation applies to.  The text does not justify this approach.

The amendment references “the freedom of speech” as a right already in existence – as is the case for all true rights – in the course of restricting government. The Constitution did not create the right, and has no more say as to whom it applies than it does the application of the right to life, or any other right.  These are natural rights that predate the document created to protect them.

Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech.

The restrictions placed on government in the First Amendment leave little room for debate.  What part of “no law” is unclear?