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  • Hi, I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today, we're talking about free speech.

  • Finally, today we can let loose and establish the kinds of things we can say

  • to criticize our government, like the crazy idea that money and speech are the same thing.

  • Not so fast, Clone, the Supreme Court has ruled that spending money,

  • at least in the political context, is speech. You do have the right to criticize that decision

  • though. Unless your boss or YouTube says that you can't.

  • All right, we're trying to talk about free speech, shut up. Let's get started and

  • see if we can figure out what the limits of free speech are, assuming that there are some.

  • There aren't.

  • That's a lie. But I'm free to say that.

  • [Theme Music]

  • There are two really important things to remember about the First Amendment protection of free speech.

  • The primary reason we have freedom of speech is to allow for public criticism

  • of the stupid government. Stupid government. That's the sort of thing that can land you

  • in jail in countries that don't have strong free speech protections, or should I say,

  • you would be Putin jail, heh, don't put me in jail. Oh, that's right, I'm in the US, it doesn't matter.

  • The stories of oversensitive kings and dictators silencing people who question their rule or

  • even make jokes at their expense are too numerous to recount, but for the most part, that kinda

  • thing doesn't happen in the US, which is why no one gets arrested for carrying around a

  • giant picture of Obama as Hitler, or former President Bush as a monkey. Well, that's stuff's

  • okay, as far as the First Amendment is concerned, but that doesn't mean it's respectful or in

  • good taste. The second thing to remember is that the First Amendment protects you from

  • the government doing things that try to deny your speech, but not anyone else. What this

  • means is that you don't have an absolute right to say whatever you want, wherever you want,

  • to whomever you want and not suffer any consequences. Isn't that right, Stan, you dingus?

  • I'm fired? I was just kidding; it was a joke.

  • If you work for a private company, your boss can certainly fire you for saying mean things

  • about them or revealing company secrets, and you don't have any First Amendment claim against them.

  • Unless, of course, your boss is the government, or a branch of the government, in which case,

  • you might be able to claim a First Amendment right. See, like most things, it's complicated.

  • Among the speech that is protected, not all of it has the same level of protection under

  • the First Amendment. Now, let's exercise our right to free Thought Bubble. The speech that

  • gets the strongest protection is political speech. Criticism of, but also praise for

  • particular officials, their parties, or their policies is usually protected. It's given

  • what is called preferred position, which means that any law or regulation or executive act

  • that limits political speech is almost always struck down by courts. The big case that made

  • pretty much the final decision on political speech was Brandenburg v.s Ohio in 1968. In

  • this case, a Ku Klux Klan leader was making a speech that, as you can imagine, was offensive

  • to a lot of people and could have been considered threatening, too. The court ruled that because

  • the speech was political, it was protected by the First Amendment, no matter how outrageous

  • it was. The court said, "The Constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do

  • not permit a state to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or law violation

  • except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent action and

  • is likely to produce such action." According to the court, the First Amendment protects

  • speech even if it advocates the use of force or encourages people to violate the law. So

  • you can advocate overthrowing the government or not paying your taxes as much as you want,

  • unless what you say is likely to produce the thing you're advocating. Overthrowing the

  • government, say. And it is likely to happen imminently, meaning very soon after you make

  • the statement. This case limited an older standard regarding free speech that was put

  • forward in the case US v. Schenck in 1917. In that case, Schenck distributed pamphlets

  • urging people to avoid the draft for World War I. This was a violation of the Espionage

  • Act, which made it a crime to obstruct the draft or the war effort. The law was more

  • complicated than that, but that's the basic gist. In his decision on this case, Oliver

  • Wendell Holmes wrote that, "When that speech presents a clear and present danger, the state

  • can then abridge that person's speech." Memorably, he explained that the First Amendment does

  • not protect a person who shouts "fire" in a crowded theater. In later cases, Holmes

  • limited this idea, largely because it gives the government a lot of leeway to say what

  • kind of speech creates danger, especially during a war, as was the case with Schenck.

  • Thanks, Thought Bubble.

  • Political speech isn't the only type of speech that the courts have addressed. Symbolic speech

  • can also be protected by the First Amendment, and if that symbolic speech has political

  • content, it usually is protected. Symbolic speech includes wearing armbands, carrying

  • signs, or even wearing a jacket with an obscene word directed at the military draft. Symbolic

  • speech also includes burning an American flag, which pretty much is always a political message.

  • Not all symbolic speech is protected, though. For example, if you're a high school student

  • who holds up a banner that reads, "Bong hits 4 Jesus" at a school-sponsored function, don't

  • expect that the First Amendment will prevent the school, a government agent, from suspending

  • you. And yes, that really happened. Also, this is not symbolic speech. That's violence.

  • Even hate speech is protected. Even if it's really hateful, like burning a cross on a

  • person's lawn, although this might be prosecuted as vandalism or trespassing. Public universities

  • that try to punish hate speech have seen their discipline code struck down. Commercial speech

  • might not be protected, but if it's a political commercial, it will be, and as we've pointed

  • out before, spending money on political campaigns has been determined to be speech that is protected

  • by the First Amendment, although we shall see donations to political campaigns are still

  • treated differently, at least for now.

  • Pretty much the only kind of speech that's not protected, other than speech that's likely

  • to incite immediate violence, is what's called fightin' words. In the actual case that dealt

  • with fighting words, Chaplinsky v.s New Hampshire, the defendant uttered what seemed more like

  • insults than a call to engage in fisticuffs. What'd you call me? Still, the court ruled

  • that some words were so insulting that they were more than likely to result in a fight,

  • so fighting words are not protected speech. One thing to note, though, the fighting words

  • free speech exception is almost never used.

  • So as you can see, the First Amendment pretty much protects you from the government throwing

  • you in jail or otherwise punishing you for what you say in most instances, but it's important

  • to remember than the First Amendment is not unlimited. Most important, it only protects

  • you from government action, not the action of private people, especially your employers.

  • One final example might make this clear. In Pickering v.s Board of Education, a public

  • school teacher wrote a letter to the editor of his local paper complaining about the way

  • that the school board was spending money on the schools. He didn't write it on school

  • time or using school paper or email, especially since it was 1968 and there was no email.

  • The school board, or his principal, fired him. He brought the case to the Supreme Court,

  • claiming that he was fired for his speech, which was political in nature criticizing

  • local government and not for anything related to his job performance, and he won. But the

  • only reason he was able to get his job back is that his employer was the government, so

  • it was the government that punished him for speaking out. For most of us, complaining

  • about our employer's policies may get us fired, and unless we are government employees, we

  • can't claim that it violated our First Amendment rights. The First Amendment, like all of the

  • Amendments, is meant to protect us from an overreaching government. There are other types

  • of laws that help us deal with individuals who do things that we think are wrong, but

  • we'll talk about those in another episode.

  • Thanks for watching. See ya next time. Mmmph! Third eagle punch in the video. Is that too

  • much? It doesn't matter. I'm free to do it. Crash Course Government and Politics is produced

  • in association with PBS Digital Studios. Support for Crash Course US Government comes from

  • Voqal. Voqal supports nonprofits that use technology and media to advance social equity.

  • Learn more about their mission and initiatives at Voqal.org. Crash Course was made with the

  • help of all of these free speakers. Thanks for watching.

Hi, I'm Craig, and this is Crash Course Government and Politics, and today, we're talking about free speech.

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