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Supreme Court rules for student in social media free speech case Mahanoy Area School District v. BL

Guest blog post by Gene Policinski

Public school students can speak freely – even vulgarly – off-campus in most instances without fear of being punished by their schools, an 8-1 majority of the U.S. Supreme Court said Wednesday in a case that had a lot of First Amendment advocates holding their breath.

The Tinker siblings from Tinker v. Des Moines

Most notably, Mahanoy Area School District v. BL, the court Wednesday upheld the main principle of the core 1969 student speech case, Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, that neither students nor teachers “shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.”

There was wide concern that a new conservative majority on the court – which over the past 40 years has supported school authority to regulate some in-school student speech – would extend the power of administrators into after-school hours and off-school grounds.

In one of the more recent cases, Morse v. Frederick – more popularly known as the “Bong Hits 4 Jesus” case – the court upheld an Alaskan school’s right to punish a student for the off-campus banner carrying those words, as an important school role in preventing use of illegal drugs. [NOTE: The “Bong Hits” banner is currently on display at the First Amendment Museum, in Augusta, Maine).

Bong Hits 4 Jesus

The ruling restrains the off-campus reach of school officials, even as its decision acknowledges exceptions such as field trips, athletic events, bullying that continues off-campus or when student speech specifically targets an individual teacher or student. The decision also notes the increasingly difficult line to draw between “on” and “off” campus given the rising use of online instruction and social media in general.

Brandi Levy, the student in question. Source: ACLU

In the case at hand, a student used and posted on social media criticisms of the school and its cheerleading squad when she failed to make the varsity team. On the following weekend, while at a local convenience store, she used her smartphone to post two images on Snapchat – where such images disappear after a time — one showing her and friend with raised middle fingers and repeated use of the f-word. A few other students relayed the images around the school and to teachers and coaches, and the posts were discussed briefly during an Algebra class taught by one coach.

The court said with no evidence of significant disruption of the educational work of the school, legal justification was lost for a public school to punish the student for her posts – noting such territory has been reserved to parents.  Also, the court said that since school officials already can regulate in-school student speech that otherwise would be protected, extending that authority to off-school hours “may mean the student cannot engage in that kind of speech at all.”

Justice Stephen J. Breyer, writing for the majority, left open the door for adding circumstances in which school might be able to act without violating First Amendment rights:  “Particularly given the advent of computer-based learning, we hesitate to determine precisely which of many school-related off-campus activities” might warrant future oversight and “neither do we know how such a list might vary, depending on a student’s age, the nature of the school’s off-campus activity or the impact on the school itself.”

In words that will echo longer after the specifics of this case, Breyer took special note of the role of schools as “the nurseries of democracy.” The governing system only works, he said, if it protects “the marketplace of ideas” in which “free exchange facilitates an informed public opinion.”

Breyer said that “Schools have a strong interest in ensuring that future generations understand the workings in practice of the well-known aphorism, ‘I disapprove of what you say but I will defend to the death your right to say it’.”

Justice Stephen J. Breyer

Justice Clarence Thomas the lone dissenter, offered the view that schools are unlike other public bodies in that they traditionally have functioned in the place of parents – and thus are not bound in the same way by First Amendment concerns. He also wrote that the intent of the cheerleader’s post was to “degrade” the program and cheerleader staff in front of other students, “subverting” the coaches’ authority.

The fact that schools in some circumstances may act as parents does not, to me, mean that applies in all cases – especially when students are away from school, after regular school hours and not participating in a circumstance that would imply school approval or involvement. And the majority opinion by Beyer notes that the coaches saw no impact on their work other than having to respond to a few students when the posts became public.

While not dismissing the vulgarity of the student’s remarks, Breyer noted that had she “uttered the same kind of pure speech … the First Amendment would provide strong protection” as it does for “even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure we do not stifle public debate.”

As if to speak to the media attention that – at times, somewhat gleefully in my view – focused on the shock value of a cheerleader using the “f-word” in the posts, Breyer said “it might be tempting to dismiss (her) words as unworthy of the robust First Amendment protections discussed herein. But sometimes it is necessary to protect the superfluous to protect the necessary.

The “necessary” here was the need to balance the need for schools to be able to educate, the right of parents as the primary actor in overseeing their children’s conduct away from school and – most importantly – the need for student’s First Amendment rights to be respected and protected, both in the moment and as a learning tool for full participation in a self-governing democracy.


Gene Policinski is a member of the board of trustees and board secretary of the First Amendment Museum and frequently writes on issues involving the First Amendment.


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Bong Hits 4 Jesus banner at the FAM

Learn more about the Morse v. Frederick case, in which the Supreme Court ruled against off-campus student free speech, and see the original banner that caused it all in our Bong Hits 4 Jesus exhibit.

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Journalists again in the crosshairs in Gaza Strip violence

Guest blog post by Gene Policinski

Who’s on the “right side” in the current outbreak of violence between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip?

Well, don’t look for that answer here – but do know that good journalism allowed to do its job is among the ways to explore that question, and more.

Destroyed building in Gaza City, source Getty Images

Destroyed building in Gaza City. Source: MAHMUD HAMS/Getty Images

For the moment, here is what we do know, thanks to reporters and correspondents risking their lives among bombs and rockets.

We again see disturbing images of civilians in Israeli cities and settlements dashing for underground shelters against incoming rockets fired from Gaza. On the Palestinian side, again we see wailing women and weeping men, cradling injured children, or mourning over bodies of family members killed in airstrikes.

We may be seeing less, though, even as the two sides appear to be groping toward yet another tenuous cease-fire.

Even scrupulously neutral news operations such as The Associated Press have raised suspicions that Israel is working to control news reporting from the region. The New York Times reported “a prominent 12-story building in Gaza City …(was) destroyed in an Israeli airstrike” – a building that house AP offices as well as other news outlets.” Reporters and staff were warned of the attack only a short time before bombs fell.

Airstrike attack on building that housed The Associated Press, source: New York Times

An Israeli airstrike destroyed a building in Gaza City that housed media outlets, including The Associated Press and Al Jazeera. Source: New York Times

AP president Gary Pruitt said on Saturday, May 15 that “the world will know less about what is happening in Gaza because of what transpired today.” And that gets to the heart of the matter: We need information from independent news sources, with such reports all the more important and urgent as the death tolls rise.

Another circumstance also has produced complaints from multiple press operations: Early Friday, Israeli officials told international journalists – but not local Israel news outlets – that IDF forces had entered the Gaza Strip, only to pull back the statement about an hour later. Journalists are dependent on government announcements because Israel has declared its side of the Gaza region off-limits to news organizations.

A later report on the non-incursion in the Jerusalem Post was headlined “Did IDF deception lead to massive aerial assault on Hamas’ Metro? – noting speculation that Israel’s initial claim was an effort to get Hamas’ fighters to gather to repel such an incursion, making themselves easier to target.

Members of the press in Gaza, source: Newsweek

Members of the press in Gaza. Source: Newsweek

The independent Committee to Protect Journalists, headquartered in New York City, asked in a statement if the IDF was “deliberately targeting media facilities in order to disrupt coverage of the human suffering in Gaza.” On Wednesday, May 19, it also condemned the killing of a Palestinian journalist for a Hamas-run radio station, Al-Aqsa in an aerial attack on the top floors of a Gaza apartment building, saying “Israeli authorities must explain why they bombed the home of a journalist, a civilian who was protected under international law.”

Armed members of the Palestinian Hamas, source: AFP

Armed members of the Palestinian Hamas, Source: AFP

For Hamas’ part, Israeli officials said they believed the terror group was using the Gaza building to direct rocket attacks on the Jewish state. In response to criticism of the bombing, an Israeli official reminded reporters that “this week’s case is far from the first time Hamas used journalists as human shields. During the 2014 Gaza War, Hamas was caught red-handed launching rockets 50 yards from a Gaza hotel known to be housing foreign journalists.”

A government spokesman also said it appears to Israel that Hamas used the brief warning time to remove possible munitions from the building before the attack began. The IDF has not yet responded to media requests for evidence.

Reporting from the Middle East – and globally – is difficult enough without the added burden of being in the crosshairs of whatever combatant chooses to attack the press, an increasingly common tactic.  With the introduction of the Web and social media, journalists are no longer needed to convey messages or images to the outside world – and thus “protected.” In fact, as both governments and terrorist organizations have developed sophisticated online operations, reporters often are viewed as threats to carefully crafted narratives.

The Middle East has long been a danger zone for journalists, from kidnappings and murder to the risks of reporting from live combat areas and in operating in nations controlled by dictatorial regimes. The nonpartisan group Reporters Without Borders’ recent World Press Freedom Index 2021, noted that given political tensions and the COVID-19 crisis … “most of the Middle East’s governments responded … with increased authoritarianism,” undermining already shaky free press guarantees across the region.

The decades-old Middle East crisis won’t be solved by journalists, and to be sure some – perhaps many – will report through the lens of nationalism or partisanship. But many also will report the facts needed to find an end to the conflict – if they can gather and report them without fear of restrictions, injury, or death.


Gene Policinski is a trustee of the First Amendment Museum and a First Amendment scholar. He can be reached at genepolicinski@gmail.com.


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Guest blog post by Genie Gannett, granddaughter of former Portland Press Herald owner, and president & co-founder of the First Amendment Museum. This article was originally published in the Portland Press Herald on May 1, 2021.

Many Americans can’t name the five freedoms this amendment guarantees: the freedoms of religion, speech, press, peaceful assembly and government petition.

Recent months have shown that the phrase “free speech” is often misunderstood. Americans generally know about the First Amendment, but most cannot name the five freedoms it guarantees – the freedoms of religion, speech, press, peaceful assembly, and government petition.

Through my work with the First Amendment Museum in Augusta, I’ve encountered many people who do not know how to put their First Amendment rights into real, concrete practice. Here are five examples of living your freedoms:

Family at dinner table

HOSTING A FAMILY DINNER

When I was growing up, my family sat down for dinner together every single evening. It was during those family dinners that we had our most robust, informative conversations, touching on politics, religion and everything in between. From a young age, I learned how to express myself and listen to others, in case I might learn something. And I often did.

While family dinners are less common nowadays, they represent a comforting example of lively discourse. We can learn a lot from our family members, with the tool of free speech in our toolbox.

GETTING A LIBRARY CARD

Of course, there’s more to learning than just eating with the family. Even the simple act of obtaining a library card and roaming the stacks of books reinforces the pivotal role that free expression has played throughout human history. Libraries are filled with thousands of books on a wide range of topics, but that would never be possible if the writers couldn’t express themselves freely.

Now, we can all reap the benefits of their speech, using it to elevate our own knowledge in many different ways. As the French philosopher Rene Descartes once said, “The reading of all good books is like a conversation with the finest minds of past centuries.”

USING SOCIAL MEDIA

Perhaps the most popular form of free expression today is social media. Whether you’re using Facebook, Twitter or something else, technology has gifted us with unprecedented platforms, which can be used to engage with and contact millions of people around the world.

We can not only post whatever we want (for better or worse), but we can also learn from all sorts of interesting people – from family and friends to “influencers” overseas. Even clicking “send” on a single tweet is an example of the First Amendment at work.

Hand holding a phone with social media icons
Man in synagogue with Torah

GOING TO CHURCH

While the First Amendment is most commonly associated with free speech, there are four other freedoms:

“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.”

For example, freedom of religion is what enables millions and millions of Americans to attend church, synagogue, mosque or other house of worship. Whatever your religion, it is American for you to be able to worship as you choose, without government interference. From Christianity to Pastafarianism, which is the worship of the “Flying Spaghetti Monster” (yes, it’s real), we all have the freedom to get in touch with the divine.

PROTESTING – PEACEFULLY

The First Amendment also affords us with another freedom: “The right of the people peaceably to assemble.”

And Americans are living it now more than ever. Last year, as many as 26 million people joined the Black Lives Matter protests after the tragic deaths of George Floyd and other African Americans. They took to the streets, marching, mourning and advocating for change. This also happened during an election year, which saw tens of millions of Democrats and Republicans mobilize on behalf of their respective candidates.

And it was all possible because freedom includes the right to peaceably assemble. Emphasis on the word “peaceably”: Americans can and should assemble nonviolently, without any rioting, looting and other forms of violence.

So get out there and live your five freedoms! As Americans, the best way to show gratitude for the First Amendment is by exercising it in our daily lives.

Learn more about the Gannett Family, as well as Genie Gannett and the rest of the First Amendment Museum board.

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Regulating “sticks and stones” … and free speech on social media

Guest blog post by Gene Policinski

Remember the old children’s adage: “Sticks and stones can break my bones, but words will never hurt me?” 

A retort to hurtful insults and harsh words that the young can sometimes hurl, the saying has picked up new impact – and irony in free speech terms – in the age of pervasive social media.

Retooled for these times, it could read “Sticks and stones do hurt my bones, and tweets encourage some to hurt me.”

Hate crimes against Asian Americans have spiked across the United States, totaling nearly 3,800 hate-related incidents across all 50 states, according to a report Tuesday by Stop AAPI Hate (Stop Asian American Pacific Islander Hate).

Demonstrators take part in a rally to raise awareness of anti-Asian violence in Los Angeles on 13 March. Photograph: Ringo Chiu/AFP/Getty Images

Demonstrators rally against anti-Asian violence in Los Angeles on March 13. Photograph: Ringo Chiu/AFP/Getty Images

Critics say crass remarks describing the COVID-19 pandemic as “Kung Flu” or the “China virus” and unproven claims about the origin of the pandemic have fueled those increased attacks.  Rep. Hakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.) has called on congressional colleagues “who have used that kind of hateful rhetoric — cut it out because you also have blood on your hands.” 

White supremacist propaganda reached new levels across the U.S. in 2020, according to a new report by the Anti-Defamation League on Wednesday, The Associated Press reported. It said 5,125 cases of racist, anti-Semitic, anti-LGBTQ and other hateful messages were spread through physical flyers, stickers, banners and posters — nearly double those noted in the 2019 report. The ADL said online instances probably totaled millions.

White Supremacist Propoganda incidents in the US 2017-2020

Increase in white supremacist propaganda incidents on and off-campus in the U.S. Source: ADL

Mass shooting in Atlanta

Mass shooting at spas in the Atlanta area. Source: WSJ

Tuesday’s mass shootings at several Atlanta-area spas in which eight people, at least four of Korean ancestry, were killed may or may not be classified as a hate crime. Police said the suspected gunman told them he has a “sex addiction.”

Regardless, the incident already has raised renewed calls for government intervention to censor posts on social media sites that might be classified as “hate speech” – from clearly racist language to images and words that prolong decades-old demeaning stereotypes. The sites currently are protected by their own free speech rights and an added layer of legal security that prevents them from being held liable for content posted on their operations.

There’s no denying the value to society of stifling hate and ridding us of racial and ethnic profiling rooted in shameful history. But the government has proven to be very clumsy and very slow as a censor.  

“Community standards” on obscenity have been difficult to define let alone fairly impose. The so-called “Fairness Doctrine” applying to broadcast TV and radio eventually failed because it produced the unintended consequence of chilling the open exchange of conflicting ideas.  When TV or radio personalities have uttered racially insensitive remarks, the “court of public opinion” reacted within days while a court of law properly took months or years to work through due process. 

And, as Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts wrote in a 2011 decision involving a group that protested at military funerals, “as a nation we have chosen a different course – to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.” Roberts also noted such a commitment is to be upheld even recognizing “speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and – as it did here – inflict great pain.”

Still, the speed, reach and very nature of social media seems to present a new challenge to the old idea that “the antidote to speech you don’t like is more speech” in opposition.  Does hateful speech on social media create, in effect, a virtual community in which such language and imagery is not just acceptable, but with the impact of repeated echoing, has such resonance that some will be driven to action? 

The quickest solution is for Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, and such to act themselves to stifle dangerous posts.  But do we want secret algorithms and private panels as the sole determiners of what is dangerous, and the proper remedy of what it or they deem improper speech.

social media and free speech

Conservative commentators decry “Cancel Culture” and attack social media outlets for what they say is unfair treatment limiting conservative voices – even when such restrictions are applied to such things as clear misinformation about the effects of COVID-19 vaccinations. Liberal voices want bans on right-wing posts as racist and advancing white supremacist ideas, failing to recognize what Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson noted in the late 1940s: We sometimes need to hear ideas we find repugnant if only to be better armed to refute them.

There are other good reasons to wish the 24/7 omnipresence of social media could be restrained:  So-called “revenge porn,” instances in which family members must endure over and over reposted public images or videos of loved ones insulted, assaulted, or killed.  And then there are the kinds of societal dangers noted in a just-declassified report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI), which found evidence that Russia and Iran both attempted through online tactics to influence public opinion during the 2020 presidential election.

Antitrust by Nick Youngson CC BY-SA 3.0 Pix4free

What to do?  Some solutions are relatively benign and hold great promise. Fostering competition in the social media sphere – either by funding startups or use of anti-trust laws – will reduce the power and impact of a few dominant Big Tech firms. Some social media companies already have taken steps to eliminate the financial rewards for posting blatant misinformation designed to produce as many “clicks” as possible. 

Public pressure, even if it’s after-the-fact, also produced results more quickly than would moves by government regulators – and can serve as an instant barometer of public opinion.  Racially-rooted jokes largely are absent in open society today not because a law was passed, but because the jokester finds quick disapproval – and for some, commercial, social or political consequences. 

We have found ways in laws openly arrived at and tested openly in the courts to prevent – or at least punish – speech deemed harmful. We can file lawsuits over defamatory remarks and the authorities can prosecute conduct spurred by “fighting words” that are outside First Amendment protection.  

There are ways to draw the fine First Amendment lines between repugnant ideas and illegal conduct: The Supreme Court has ruled that cross-burning can serve as an emblem of racist views and thus be protected speech but becomes criminal conduct when the intent is to intimidate a person or group.

 

Hard to make such decisions, create such laws or draw such lines? Yes. Likely to be stop-start, one-step-forward-at-a-time path to a workable system? Again yes. Likely to fall short at times and be frustratingly slow even in success? Almost assuredly. And in the end will we need to simply take personal responsibility to question what we read, hear and see?  Absolutely.

It will take that kind of creative approach, deep engagement, constant vigilance and frequent revision and revisiting if we wish to stop short of some kind of proposed instant cure like a national speech czar – an impossible job, but with the real power of the government to rule for a time over what we say or post.


Gene Policinski is a trustee of the First Amendment Museum and a First Amendment scholar. He can be reached at genepolicinski@gmail.com.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mFcYRh99ngo

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Protecting Democracy is a full-time job. We all must do our part to defend our Freedoms. Won’t you help today?