More Than Half of Americans Think the First Amendment Provides Too Many Rights
"Evidently, one out of every two Americans wishes they had fewer civil liberties," said one researcher. "This is a dictator's fantasy."
"Evidently, one out of every two Americans wishes they had fewer civil liberties," said one researcher. "This is a dictator's fantasy."
You don't promote acceptance by locking people up for victimless crimes.
Officials suspend efforts to force X to suppress the world’s access to video of a crime.
Yes, when the restriction is being imposed by the government.
Eric Levitz argues that the left should take a stand against censorship—for practical rather than principled reasons.
A Jewish journal argues the problem is not the Act's definition of antisemitism, but the larger anti-speech bureaucratic edifice.
Calls from the left and right to mimic European speech laws bring the U.S. to a crossroads between robust First Amendment protections and rising regulation.
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I'm against it, whomever it's coming from.
“Even open democracies have implemented restrictive measures,” finds a global report.
and also because private clubs generally have broad discretion in interpreting their internal rules.
Restricting speech about the world's most pressing problems does not make them go away, nor does it settle any disputes.
Liz Magill and two other university leaders provoked bipartisan outrage by defending freedom of expression on campus.
Younger Americans, in particular, appear to support calls for Palestinian liberation, but do they understand what a common slogan means?
"And in (partial) defense of Harvard President Claudine Gay's controversial congressional testimony."
"Conservatives like Rep. Elise Stefanik should ask themselves: Do you honestly believe this [proposed new rule against "calls for genocide"] won't be weaponized to ban an Israeli cabinet official from speaking at Penn? An Israeli Defense Force soldier?"
"Double standards are frustrating, but we should address them by demanding free speech be protected consistently — not by expanding the calls for censorship."
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“We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up.”
“We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up.”
Democrats and Republicans are united in thinking their political agendas trump the First Amendment.
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression responds.
Even content creators outside of New York would feel its effects.
"For the most part, the American Civil Liberties Union, Young Americans for Freedom, and the Babylon Bee don't see eye to eye."
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A federal judge compared Waylon Bailey’s Facebook jest to "falsely shouting fire in a theatre."
The paper worries that "social media companies are receding from their role as watchdogs against political misinformation."
Langford had been in the news for joining a sorority, which has caused a good deal of controversy at the University of Wyoming.
can go forward, rules a federal judge, denying Cleveland State University's motion to dismiss.