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Title: Ch. 13 Constitutional Freedoms


1
Ch. 13 Constitutional Freedoms
2
Acts
  • Sedition Act of 1798- crime to write, utter, or
    publish any false, scandalous, and malicious
    writing to defame the government or public
    officials
  • Espionage and Sedition Acts 1917-1918
  • Smith Act 1940- illegal to overthrow the
    government

3
Cultural Conflicts
  • Ethnic, religious, and cultural differences
    continue to grow
  • Jews offended by a Nativity scene, a group of
    figures arranged to represent the birth of Jesus
    Christ
  • All English
  • Boy scouts no homosexuals- 2000 decision based
    on free association (which allows a private
    organization to exclude whomever it wishes).

4
Civil liberties
  • Protection of Bill of Rights, due process clause
    and the 14th Amendment

5
14th Amendment (1868)
  • Due Process clause no state shall deprive any
    person of life, liberty, or property without due
    process of law
  • this principle gives individuals a varying
    ability to enforce their rights against alleged
    violations by governments and their agents, but
    normally not against other private citizens.
  • Equal protection clause no state shall deny to
    any person within its jurisdiction the equal
    protection of the laws

6
First Amendment
  • Freedom of Expression (Congress shall make no
    lawabridging the freedom of speech, or of the
    press, or the right of people peaceably to
    assemble, and to petition the government for a
    redress of grievances)

7
  • Freedom of religion (Congress shall make no law
    respecting an establishment of religion or
    abridging the free exercise thereof)

8
Church and State
9
What does the free exercise clause of the 1st
amendment refer to?
10
Free Exercise clause
  • Clearer of the two clauses
  • Prohibits government from unduly interfering with
    the free exercise of religion. The meaning of
    these clauses may seem clear, but their
    interpretation has led to a continuing debate in
    American politics.
  • Limitations-for example are - polygamy, blood
    transfusion, vaccinations, and child marriage.

11
Free Exercise Clause-1st Amendment forbids laws
prohibiting the free exercise of Religion
  • Reynolds v. United States-George Reynolds a
    Mormon who lived in Utah, had two wives and was
    convicted of polygamy. He appealed to the U.S.
    Supreme Court.The case established that people
    are not free to worship in ways that violate laws
    protecting the health, safety, or morals of the
    community.
  • Oregon v. Smith-The Court denied unemployment
    benefits to two counselors fired for using drugs
    as part of a religious ceremony. But as Native
    Americans and members of the Native American
    Church, they used peyote as part of their
    traditional worship service. Peyote is a mild
    hallucinogenic drug derived from mescaline
    cactus. With the majority opinion written by
    Justice Scalia, the Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in
    1990 that the Oregon law was constitutional and
    that, therefore, the denial of unemployment
    benefits was permissible. Of particular
    importance was the fact that the Oregon law was
    not directed at the Native Americans' religious
    practice specifically thus, it was deemed
    constitutional when applied to all citizens.

12
The Flag Salute Cases
  • Flag Salute Cases- Minersville School District v.
    Gobitis(1940)-Concerns whether children could be
    forced to salute the American flag. Lillian and
    William Gobitis were expelled for refusing to
    salute the flag. They were Jehovahs Witnesses,
    they believed saluting the flag violated the
    Christian commandment against bowing down to any
    graven image.The Court upheld school regulation.
    The flag was a patriotic symbol, the Court ruled,
    and requiring the salute did not infringe on
    religious freedoms.
  • West Virginia State Board of Education v.
    Barnette(1943)-The Court overruled the Gobitis
    decision and held such laws to be an
    unconstitutional interference with the free
    exercise of religion. Patriotism could be
    achieved w/o forcing people to violate their
    religious beliefs.

13
What is the Establishment Clause?
14
Establishment Clause
separation of church and state
  • Government involvement in religious activities is
    constitutional if it meets the following tests
  • Secular purpose-Primary effect neither advances
    nor inhibits religion
  • No excessive government entanglement with
    religion
  • In 1801, Baptists in Connecticut-a state where
    the Congregational Church was the official
    church-wrote to T. Jefferson asking his views
    about religious liberty. Jefferson wrote back
    strongly supporting the First Amendment. He
    stated that by passing the First Amendment,
    Americans had Declared that their legislature
    should make no law respecting an establishment
    of religion or prohibiting the free exercise
    there of, thus building a wall of separation
    between Church and State.

Thomas Jefferson
15
Cases
  • 1947- Everson v. Board Education-involved a
    challenge to a New Jersey law allowing the state
    to pay for busing students to parochial schools.
    The court ruled that the New Jersey law was
    constitutional. The court determined that the
    law benefited students rather than aided a
    religion directly.
  • 1947- Unconstitutional for public school to have
    prayer in school
  • 1992- Unconstitutional for public school to have
    rabbi or pastor pray at graduation
  • 2000 Santa Fe isd. V. Doe- The Supreme Court
    ruled that public school districts cannot let
    students lead stadium crowds in prayer before
    football games.

16
Question Does the Santa Fe Independent School
District's policy permitting student-led,
student-initiated prayer at football games
violate the Establishment Clause of the First
Amendment?
  • Conclusion Yes. In a 6-3 opinion delivered by
    Justice John Paul Stevens, the Court held that
    the District's policy permitting student-led,
    student-initiated prayer at football games
    violates the Establishment Clause. The Court
    concluded that the football game prayers were
    public speech authorized by a government policy
    and taking place on government property at
    government-sponsored school-related events and
    that the District's policy involved both
    perceived and actual government endorsement of
    the delivery of prayer at important school
    events. Such speech is not properly characterized
    as "private," wrote Justice Stevens for the
    majority.

17
  • Westside Community Schools v. Mergens(1990) the
    Court ruled- Although a school may not itself
    lead or direct a religious club, a school that
    permits a student-initiated and student-led
    religious club to meet after school, just as it
    permits any other student group to do, does not
    convey the message of state approval or
    endorsement of that particular religion. (meet at
    the pole)
  • Teaching the Theory of Evolution- In Epperson v.
    Arkansas(1968) The justices voided an Arkansas
    law that banned teaching evolution in public
    schools. The court ruled that the state has no
    legitimate interest in protecting any or all
    religions from views distasteful to them.

18
Question Was Westside's prohibition against the
formation of a Christian club consistent with the
Establishment Clause, thereby rendering the Equal
Access Act unconstitutional?
  • Conclusion No. In distinguishing between
    "curriculum" and "noncurriculum student groups,"
    the Court held that since Westside permitted
    other noncurricular clubs, it was prohibited
    under the Equal Access Act from denying equal
    access to any after-school club based on the
    content of its speech. The proposed Christian
    club would be a noncurriculum group since no
    other course required students to become its
    members, its subject matter would not actually be
    taught in classes, it did not concern the
    school's cumulative body of courses, and its
    members would not receive academic credit for
    their participation. The Court added that the
    Equal Access Act was constitutional because it
    served an overriding secular purpose by
    prohibiting discrimination on the basis of
    philosophical, political, or other types of
    speech. As such, the Act protected the Christian
    club's formation even if its members engaged in
    religious discussions.

19
  • Edwards v. Aguillard(1987) -the Supreme Court
    struck down state legislatures that required
    teaching the Bibles account of creation with
    evolution as an alternative. (it endorsed a
    particular religion doctrine so it violates the
    establishment clause)
  • Not all establishment clause issues concern
    education- Lynch v. Donnelly(1984)-The court
    allowed the city of Pawtucket, RI, to display a
    Nativity scene with secular items such as
    Christmas trees and a sleigh and reindeer. In
    1989 the Court ruled that a publicly funded
    Nativity scene by itself violated the
    Constitution.

20
  • Other related items
  • Released time religious instruction only
  • Pay for textbooks, bus, buildings for both
    parochial and private schools but not for salary,
    reimburse for tuition, counseling, or creationism
    books(cant be used for religious purpose)
  • Recent ruling- vouchers given in Ohio to attend
    private or religious school
  • Since 1789- House Senate opens each session
    with a prayer
  • Public schools cannot have a chaplain but armed
    services can.

21
  • Dollar bill- In God we trust

In the decades following the Civil War, In God
We Trust appeared on most coins. And since 1938,
the motto has appeared on all American coinage.
The phrase, which is the nations official motto
as well, has been caught in a broader debate over
just how high the wall separating church and
state should stand.Most courts view the motto
and the pledge as ceremonial deism, a legal
term for religious statements that are deemed to
have lost their fundamental religious character
due to their longtime, customary use.The
Declaration of Independence, for instance, makes
reference to God on more than one occasion. And
the same Congress that in 1789 passed the First
Amendment prohibition on the establishment of
religion also started each day with a prayer, as
does the current Congress.
22
What is speech?
To answer such questions the Supreme Court has
distinguished two general categories of speech
that the 1st Amendment protects Pure speech-The
verbal expression of thought and opinion before
an audience that has chosen to listen. Symbolic
speech-involves using actions and symbols, in
addition to or instead of words, to express
opinions. Since the rights of free speech must be
balanced against the need to protect society,
some restraints on speech exist. Cannot claim
protection for an otherwise illegal act on the
grounds that it conveys a political message
(example burning a draft card) However, statutes
cannot make certain types of symbolic speech
illegal e.g., flag burning is protected speech.
23
Regulating Speech-Congress and state
legislatures, for example, have outlawed
seditious speech-any speech urging resistance to
lawful authority or advocating the overthrow of
the government Other Speech Not
Protected-Defamatory speech and fighting words
fall outside of the 1st Amendment.
false advertising
obscenity
symbolic speech
libel
24
Schenck v. U.S.
  • Charles T. Schenck-the general secretary of the
    Socialist Party was convicted of printing and
    distributing leaflets that urged draftees to
    obstruct the war effort during WWI
  • Violating Espionage Act-Willfully utter, print,
    write, or publish any disloyal, profane,
    scurrilous or abusive language
  • Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes clear and
    present danger
  • first determined the meaning of the freedom of
    speech protection of the First Amendment to the
    Constitution of the United States. In a unanimous
    decision, the Court ruled that there are certain
    limits to the First Amendments guarantees of
    this freedom.

25
Other cases
  • Clarence Brandenburg (leader of Ku Klux Klan in
    Ohio)v. Ohio He refused to stop a rally/cross
    burning. The Supreme Court held that laws that
    punish people for advocating social change
    through violence violate the 1st amendment. The
    Court than reversed the conviction of a member of
    the Ku Klux Klan for holding a rally and making
    strong derogatory statements against African
    Americans and Jews.
  • 1977- Nazis in Skokie Illinois right to speak
  • 1992- Supreme Court overturned Minnesota statute-
    crime to display symbols or objects- swastika

26
  • Defamatory Speech
  • Libel a written false statement defaming another
  • Slander a defamatory oral statement
  • Public figures must also show the words were
    written with actual malicewith reckless
    disregard for the truth or with knowledge that
    the words were false
  • The Court has limited the right of public
    officials, however, to recover damages for
    defamation.
  • The Court allowed some defamatory speech about
    public officials for fear that criticism of
    government, a basic constitutional right, might
    be silenced. In later years this has extended to
    protection of statements about public
    figures-political candidates, entertainers and
    athletes, and even private citizens who become
    newsworthy.

27
Obscenity
  • Not protected by 1st amendment
  • Miller v. California(1973)-Established the test
    for determining if a book, movie, television
    programs is obscene and thus unprotected by the
    1st Amendment.
  • A work is obscene if
  • 1) the avg. person would find that the work taken
    as a whole appeals to prurient interests 2)the
    work defines or depicts sexual conduct in a
    patently offensive way as determined by state
    law and
  • 3) the work taken as a whole lacks serious
    literary, artistic, political, or scientific
    value.

28
Prior Restraint
Government censorship of information before it is
published or broadcast
rules telling a newspaper what it can publish
Freedom from censorship
29
Freedom of the Press
  • Prior Restraint Forbidden-Censorship of
    information before it is published-a common way
    for government to control information and limit
    freedom.(Can be restrained in the U.S. if it
    involves national security)
  • New York Times Co. v. United States-widely known
    as the Pentagon Papers case. In 1971 a Pentagon
    employee leaked to the NY Times a secret gov.
    report outlining the U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
    (Some documents showed proof that gov. officials
    had lied to the American people) The gov. tried
    to stop further publication of the papers arguing
    that national security would be endangered. The
    court ruled that stopping publication would be
    prior restraint. One Justice William O. Douglas,
    noted that the dominant purpose of the 1st
    Amendment was to prohibit the widespread practice
    of governmental suppression of embarrassing
    information

30
Freedom of Assembly
  • The right of the people peaceably to assemble,
    and to petition the Government for a redress of
    grievances

31
Tree Sitter
For 738 days forest activist Julia Butterfly Hill
lived 180 feet high in the canopy of an ancient
redwood tree to help make the world aware of the
plight of ancient forests. Julia, with great help
from steelworkers and environmentalists,
successfully negotiated to permanently protect
the tree and a nearly three-acre buffer zone. She
came down to a world that recognized her as a
heroine and powerful voice for the
environment. Julia's occupation of the over
1,000-year-old tree known as Luna is only a part
of the actions taken over many many years to save
Headwaters Forest and the 3 of the ancient
redwood ecosystem that remains.

32
Protecting Freedom of Assembly
  • Assembly on Public Property-Freedom of assembly
    includes the right to parade and demonstrate in
    public. It is possible they could interfere with
    the rights of others who use the same
    facilities(parks, streets, etc.) For safety
    reasons, parades and demonstrations are subject
    to government regulations than exercises of pure
    speech and other kinds of assembly. Permits are
    usually required for groups who want to parade or
    demonstrate.
  • Other public facilities such as airports,
    libraries, courthouses, schools, and swimming
    pools also may be used for public demonstrations.

33
  • The right to assemble does not allow a group to
    convert private property to its own use, even if
    the property is open to the public- Lloyd
    Corporation v. Tanner(1972) The Court ruled
    that a group protesting the Vietnam War did not
    have the right to gather in a shopping mall.
  • Public Assembly and Disorder-
  • The Nazis in Skokie- Skokie officials, citizens
    argued that the Nazis should not be allowed to
    march. To prevent the march, the city required
    the Nazis to post a 300,000 bond to get a
    permit. The Nazis claimed this high bond
    interfered with their freedoms. A federal
    appeals court ruled that no community could use
    parade permits to interfere with free speech and
    assembly.

34
  • This case illustrates problems with what is
    called the hecklers veto-The public vetoes the
    free speech and assembly rights of unpopular
    groups by claiming demonstrations will result in
    violence. Such claims may be effective because
    gov. officials will almost always find it easier
    to curb unpopular demonstrations than to take
    measures to prevent violence.
  • This dilemma leads to two related questions
  • Does the Constitution require the police to
    protect unpopular groups when they incite
    violence?
  • May the police order demonstrators to disperse in
    the interest of pubic safety?

35
  • Feiner v. New York
  • Feiner urged African Americans to fight for
    civil rights. When the crowd he drew became
    hostile he was arrested for disturbing the
    police. The Court upheld Feiners conviction,
    ruling that the police had not acted to suppress
    speech but to preserve public order.
  • Gregory v. City of Chicago
  • The Court has overturned the convictions of
    people whose only offense has been to demonstrate
    peacefully in support of unpopular causes.
  • Gregory, and African American activist, led a
    group of marchers from city hall in downtown
    Chicago to the mayors home. A crowd of 1,000 or
    more hostile all white onlookers gathered. They
    began to heckle and throw rocks and eggs at the
    marchers. The police ordered the parade to
    disperse. Gregory refused and the group was
    arrested for disorderly conduct. The Court
    overturned these convictions. The Court ruled
    that the demonstrators had been peaceful and had
    done no more than exercise their right of
    assembly and petition. Neighborhood residents,
    not the marchers had caused the disorder.

36
Examples of people protesting
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