Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • Okay, free speech pop quiz: can the government throw Dear Abby in jail?

  • Or ban Doctor Phil from TV just for giving advice?

  • If you said no, congrats, you understand the First Amendment.

  • But if you said yes, then you might be the Kentucky Attorney General.

  • Here's the deal. John Rosemond is a North Carolina family psychologist,

  • the author 18 books and since 1976

  • he has written a popular advice column on parenting that is now syndicated in

  • over two

  • hundred newspapers. Okay, cue sinister music.

  • May 2013

  • the Kentucky Attorney General sent John a letter ordering him

  • to stop publishing his column in Kentucky or face fines

  • and even jail. So what did John write in the world's freest press

  • that got him censored? Brace yourselves. John told some parents to take away

  • their slacker sons cell phone till he shapes up.

  • John also truthfully called himself a family psychologist

  • in the tag line in his column. So what's going on here? How can Kentucky possibly

  • believe it can censor

  • a newspaper column? The problem is government licensing boards.

  • They're the new censors, they don't believe the First Amendment applies to them

  • and they're going after people just like John all across the country.

  • In John's case, the Kentucky Attorney General is doing the dirty work

  • of the state psychologist board. The board thinks that John's advice column is the

  • unlicensed practice of psychology because he answers personal questions

  • from readers. Licensing boards don't think that one-on-one advice is speech.

  • They think it's conduct, like filling cavities or installing pipes.

  • Because the government doesn't think that advice is speech, it's willing to do

  • something

  • absolutely crazy like ignore the First Amendment and ban a nationally

  • syndicated newspaper column.

  • What's next Kentucky? Hard labor for Doctor Oz?

  • Treating advice like it isn't speech has drastic implications.

  • Let me demonstrate with a beautiful baby. Sometimes he's fussy at night.

  • Hm, well I'm a dad and it sounds to me like he's a gassy little guy.

  • you should try some Gripe Water and fennel. And then just pump his chubby

  • little legs like he's riding a bicycle.

  • Okay, thanks!

  • You bet, happy to help. You just witnessed a crime.

  • Sound far-fetched?

  • In 2012 the North Carolina nutritionist board came down on caveman blogger Steve

  • Cooksey

  • for helping people follow the paleo diet over the Internet.

  • Censoring advice is unconstitutional because advice is speech protected by

  • the First Amendment.

  • That's what John and the Institute for Justice have gone to federal court

  • to give Kentucky a little piece of advice. Americans don't tolerate

  • censorship.

  • %uh

  • %uh

Okay, free speech pop quiz: can the government throw Dear Abby in jail?

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it