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Why You Should Doubt Reports that the First Amendment Would … – Just Security

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The Logan Act, a 1799 federal law that makes it a federal felony for a private person to engage in international diplomacy in a way that undermines U.S. foreign policy, has recently been plucked from the dustbin of history. As widely reported, Michael Flynn, President Trumps national security adviser, resigned amid controversy over his phone calls with the Russian ambassador to the United States. It has been reported that the two discussed U.S. sanctions imposed on Russia for its alleged interference in the 2016 presidential election. Flynn allegedly told the Russian ambassador not to worry about the sanctions, since there would soon be a new sheriff in town. The conversations appear to fall within the letter of the Logan Act, which applies to anyone who directly or indirectly . . . carries on any correspondence or intercourse with any foreign government . . . with intent to influence [it] . . . in relation to any disputes or controversies with the U.S. or to defeat the measures of the U.S. The Logan Act has been described as a paper tiger. No one has ever been successfully prosecuted under the Act, in part owing to doubts about its constitutionality. Specifically, many claim that prosecuting Flynn under the Logan Act would violate the First Amendment. As it turns out, its not so clear under the Supreme Courts case law that communications to a foreign government or agent are fully protected under that constitutional provision although I will argue that they certainly should be.

By the standards applicable in 1799, the Logan Act almost surely would not have violated the First Amendment. Back then, the concept of freedom of speech was not nearly as robust as it is today. Indeed, some prominent judges and commentators interpreted the First Amendment to prohibit only prior restraints on speech meaning that governments were free to punish speech after the fact. To give you a sense of just how anemic speech rights once were, federal courts upheld the Sedition Act of 1798, enacted by the same Congress that passed the Logan Act, which criminalized speech critical of the U.S. government and public officials. (President Jefferson later pardoned those convicted during his administration.)

Of course, this is 2017, not 1799. The Supreme Court has not generally interpreted the First Amendment with reference to its eighteenth century meaning for many reasons, but in part because what it actually meant to those who ratified it is not very clear. Today, the First Amendment is understood to provide robust free speech protections. Some of the strongest protections apply to speech critical of government and communications that address matters of public concern like Flynns phone calls. Under modern free speech rules, laws that target speech based on its content in the case of the Logan Act, communications about international diplomacy are subject to a rigorous form of judicial review called strict scrutiny. That standard requires the government to have a compelling interest in restricting speech and adopt the least restrictive means of serving its interest. The standard has been described as strict in theory, but fatal in fact. And so it has been, in nearly all cases involving content-based laws.

So Flynn would seem to have a slam dunk First Amendment defense. In the abstract, the government may have a compelling interest in ensuring that private citizens do not actually interfere with international diplomacy. But a law criminalizing a broad range of communications with foreign governments and their agents is not narrowly tailored to preventing actual interference with diplomacy. By its terms, the Logan Act seems to prohibit a U.S. citizen from sending a letter or email to Mexican officials encouraging them to reject new trade terms offered by the Trump administration. That hardly seems like a tailored way to address private meddling with international diplomacy.

Before Flynn and his lawyers can rest easy, though, theres something else to consider. The analysis above assumes that courts would actually apply traditional First Amendment standards to Flynns communications. But thats not necessarily the case.

Under modern free speech doctrine, the scope of a U.S. citizens right to communicate with foreign persons, powers, and audiences is not fully settled. Throughout American history, Congress and the Executive Branch have acted as if the First Amendment does not fully apply to communications directed to foreign nationals or foreign audiences. Thus, the U.S. government has imposed and enforced a variety of content-based limits on the import and export of films, artwork, propaganda, and other materials, excluded aliens on ideological grounds, and restricted citizens travel to foreign nations. The Logan Act belongs to this family of speech restrictions, which has deep roots in fears about foreign influence of U.S. citizens and institutions. The laws are suggestive of a provincial concept of the First Amendment it ceases to apply, or at least fades considerably, at the waters edge.

Few Supreme Court cases have considered speech, press, or associational rights that involve foreign aliens or foreign audiences. Although the Court has assumed the First Amendment applies in some non-domestic contexts, it has tended to apply a very deferential form of review in such cases. The Court has never squarely addressed how communications directed to foreign persons or powers jibe with traditional First Amendment principles and justifications. Absent any clear guidance, some federal courts reviewing export laws, travel restrictions, and regulations of Internet speech have expressed doubts regarding whether the First Amendment applies the same way in those contexts as it does when one domestic citizen communicates with another. Constitutional scholars have also expressed differing views on this matter, with some questioning whether speech directed solely to foreign persons or audiences is entitled to full First Amendment protection. The Logan Act applies in this murky realm of expression to international diplomacy communications, whether made within or outside the United States, which are directed solely to foreign governments and their agents.

Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, a case decided in 2010, illustrates how the Supreme Court applies the First Amendment differently when foreign audiences are involved. In HLP, a group of U.S. citizens wanted to communicate with members of international organizations the U.S. government had designated foreign terrorist organizations. Specifically, the U.S. citizens wanted to teach members of these organizations how to resolve their disputes peacefully and to provide them with instruction in principles of international law. The U.S. government threatened to prosecute the groups under a federal law that prohibits American citizens from providing material support to terrorists. Even though it determined that the law targeted certain communications based on their content, the Court concluded that it was narrowly tailored to serve compelling interests in national security and foreign relations. The Court added that in its view, exchanges with foreign nationals were not all to the good; indeed, they raised the danger of foreign influence, which the framers were particularly concerned about.

To give you a sense of just how rare HLPs result is, it is one of only two decisions in the Courts history where a majority of justices has upheld a content-based law under the First Amendment. The decision was a significant departure in another respect as well. The First Amendments incitement doctrine prohibits government from restricting speech that advocates unlawful activity unless that advocacy is likely to lead to imminent harm. Thats a really difficult standard to meet. Even speech that spreads terrorist ideologies or generally advocates terrorist activities can find shelter under the First Amendments incitement standard. Although the incitement standard presumably would have applied had the speakers and groups all been domestic, in HLP the Court did not apply it to the material support law. It also allowed the federal government to criminalize association with foreign persons without any proof that the U.S. citizens intended to facilitate their criminal activities a form of guilt-by-association that the First Amendment prohibits.

HLP, which is in many respects a modern-day provincial decision, casts some doubt on the conclusion that the Logan Act clearly violates the First Amendment. The Act regulates speech in a borderland that has not been clearly defined. At the very least, HLP suggests that we should not assume U.S. courts will apply ordinary First Amendment standards to speech and association involving foreign governments and foreign affairs.

But they certainly should. In HLP, the Court missed an important opportunity to explain why communicating and engaging with foreign actors and audiences are central concerns of a twenty-first century First Amendment.

The First Amendments marketplace of ideas has never stopped at the waters edge. Speech directed to foreign audiences, associations that cross international borders, and information-gathering that occurs beyond U.S borders are as important to American self-governance as purely domestic speech, local associations, and in-country newsgathering. The provincial First Amendment is a relic that does not suit the world we occupy, which features cheap communication across borders, greater commingling between citizens and foreign nationals, and forms of virtual association that were unfathomable when the First Amendment was ratified.

The Flynn case would be an odd one in which to finally jettison the provincial First Amendment. Think about it: An official associated with a nationalist administration would directly benefit from a more globalist or cosmopolitan interpretation of the First Amendment. That might be a salutary lesson for a young administration led by a president who views foreigners and foreign influences with suspicion, and who as a candidate suggested that the U.S. should shut down parts of the Internet. More to the point, it would be exactly the right result. The First Amendment ought to be interpreted to encourage citizen engagement with international affairs, not to permit government to turn such activity into a felony offense.

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Why You Should Doubt Reports that the First Amendment Would ... - Just Security

Appeals court: First Amendment gives public right to video police – Fort Worth Star Telegram


Fort Worth Star Telegram
Appeals court: First Amendment gives public right to video police
Fort Worth Star Telegram
A witness, Brandon Brooks, uploaded this video of the incident to YouTube. In a recent 5th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling, Justice Jacques Wiener wrote: Protecting the right to film the police promotes First Amendment principles. Brandon Brooks YouTube.

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Appeals court: First Amendment gives public right to video police - Fort Worth Star Telegram

1st Amendment stronger than ever – Hillsboro Times Gazette

The First Amendment is stronger than ever, and is being exercised more freely and aggressively than at any time in our nations history.

That may seem a surprising conclusion based on the handwringing from Big Media outlets like CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, NBC, The New York Times, the Washington Post and others who claim that the First Amendment is under attack from President Trump. But it is nevertheless true.

The Big Media outlets are doing their best to conflate themselves with the First Amendment, i.e., an attack on CNN, they say, is an attack on freedom of the press. That is a lie, as CNN would quickly label a dubious assertion by the president. CNN is merely an organization that takes advantage of First Amendment rights to do its job. CNN is not the embodiment of the First Amendment. Neither is The New York Times or the Washington Post.

What really bothers Big Media is that they are not as relevant, respected or necessary as they once were. But they want to be treated as if they are, as if its still 1950 or 1960 or even 1990. They want to be the filter through which news and information flows, but they are no longer that, and it is that fact that leads to their frequent hissy fits.

In this internet age, there are tens of thousands of alternative sources for news and information when it comes to national events, at least several hundred of which are regularly consulted by the masses on a daily basis. Most of these newer, alternative news sources are firmly planted in one ideological corner or the other, and their credibility is often suspect but unfortunately the same can be said for CNN, MSNBC, FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC, The New York Times, the Washington Post and countless additional metropolitan newspapers.

The cratering of respect and credibility for the once powerful Big Media outlets is not the fault of President Trump. It is the fault of the media outlets themselves. Their low standing is the result of their own irresponsible choices, culminating in their outrageously biased coverage of the 2016 presidential election.

Trump is off the mark when he criticizes certain outlets for delivering fake news. The news itself the content is real enough. Its the delivery that is flawed. The problem is not fake news. The problem is horrible journalism.

Understanding good journalism does not require an advanced degree. Good journalism is accurate. It is fair. It does not have an agenda. It is not out to get someone. It presents facts as completely as human beings are capable of gathering them. It does not seek out only the negative or the positive about the subjects that are covered. It follows the facts where they may lead, without a preconceived end result. Virtually none of the Big Media outlets follow these simple precepts anymore.

The First Amendment states, 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.

What a thing of beauty. So much is covered in so few words. But for todays purpose, our focus is on free speech and the press. Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press

The First Amendment does not say, The president shall not criticize the media or call it fake news. It does not say, Certain media outlets above others will have rights of access and the front row at press briefings. It does not say, The president shall always call on CNN for a question during press conferences. None of those examples, when they happen or do not happen, in no way threaten, harm or violate the First Amendment.

When he or his staff holds a briefing or event, the president of the United States can handpick any group of media outlets he desires and exclude any he wants to keep out. Doing so violates no ones First Amendment rights. The only way CNNs First Amendment rights could be violated is if Congress passed a law taking CNN off the air.

Everyone associated with the news media, big or small, has gone through battles with various public officials, whether local, state or national, over access and inclusion. There are always cases where some officials or organizations or groups invite some media outlets to an event and not others, or send press releases to one while not sending to the others, or provide information later to others while getting it into a preferred outlets hands first. These are age-old games that are as ancient as the written word.

When it happens, it is not a violation of anyones First Amendment rights. In some cases, open record or freedom of information laws might be violated, but First Amendment rights are not. Nothing is preventing a media outlet from exercising its First Amendment rights, both by complaining loudly about the treatment and by pursuing the information through a less convenient avenue than having it handed over on a silver platter.

But meanwhile, the First Amendment itself is being exercised in this internet age so freely, so aggressively, so without boundaries that it could be mistaken for being on steroids. Anyone with internet access and a blog, anyone with email, anyone with a Facebook or Twitter account both media members and non-journalists has a worldwide platform to exercise their freedom of speech, even the worst kinds of free speech (anonymous and therefore irresponsible). Far from inhibiting the exercise of free speech and a free press, President Trump, intentionally or not, is demonstrating that the jealous entitlement CNN and other Big Media outlets have had on the First Amendment is a thing of the past.

The only way the traditional Big Media outlets can recapture their special claim on the First Amendment and the respect they once enjoyed is by doing what they are most unlikely to do return to a form of journalism that is fair and unbiased, tough but respectful. Short of that, their standing and influence will continue to diminish. The fault will be theirs, not the presidents.

Reach Gary Abernathy at 937-393-3456 or by email at [emailprotected]

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1st Amendment stronger than ever - Hillsboro Times Gazette

Letter: Why not strike the First Amendment? – Iowa State Daily

The writers at the Daily have done an excellent job of examining the Constitution recently. However, there is one portion of that terrible document they forgot to condemn, and it threatens our lives even more than others they have decried.

Therefore, I modestly propose one addition to their editorials on the grounds that mine is milder and has more justification behind it. Yes, the First Amendment is outdated. This ill-conceived rule was only made so evil farmers could talk about the government, their peers and anyone else without being jailed for speaking without approval.

Back in those times, they didnt have rapid communication such as telephones and the internet. Words had to travel very slowly by mouth and perhaps carried by horses, giving plenty of time to prevent thought crime, which must be accounted for differently today. Besides, black people and women had a different legal position, so we can automatically discount any ideal from the era as outdated.

People like me who see the wisdom in discarding the First Amendment could amend the Constitution with a heavy majority in Congress. But it would be easier to tell people that its irrelevant and gradually pass laws to eliminate its range of application so we dont have to wade through the tedium of coming up with better arguments and getting more seats in Congress on our side.

Where does the First Amendment even fit in a good world? Should we have every mother and father explain their views of the world to their kids and spend the day worrying that the youth might come to a different conclusion? Should we accept the possibility that any worker you encounter on your daily business has different opinions than yourself?

If a man were to shout fire in a crowded theater, others would repeat his shout and some would shout the opposite, creating a complete mess for authorities determining if there ever had been a fire. Behold, this problem reaches to the beginning of recorded history, with individuals, nations and entire species that were described but whose existence is uncertain.

Lets make the ACLU a division of the government; any group that lobbies Congress is practically in the government already, never mind that some other lobbyist organizations are actually receiving federal funding. Perhaps they can distribute thesauruses or pamphlets on theories of government. When we give everyone a reason to question authority, what could go wrong? If someone shouted a slur at pedestrians from a car and sped away, Id like to see free-speech advocates open their mouths and try to think of a rebuttal to erase the damage.

Pro-speech rights people would rush to wave my example away as an exaggeration and argue that people would have training to prevent poor grammar and logical fallacies. But they forget, we already have plenty of politicians to handle public speaking for us, so letting civilians have their own ideas is redundant. Thats why we should strike the First Amendment.

Im not claiming we need to abandon words or even the English language. We just need to control people more. Lets clamp down the right to speak freely and peaceably assemble. We cant trust 18-year-olds, 22-year-olds or 26-year-olds with responsibility like that; who knows what they might say? More ideas and thinking arent the answer to a complex situation like our modern world. Instead, we should move the designated area to assemble with controversial ideas off campus, then into a basement, and then require a permit to enter the basement. Hopefully, people will forget about free speech and religion before a disaster happens.

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Letter: Why not strike the First Amendment? - Iowa State Daily

Trump: Fake love for First Amendment – Orlando Sentinel

UPDATED: President Trump understands press freedom about as well as he grasps humility.

In other words, not at all.

But that doesnt stop him from sounding off. His rip-roaring speech Friday to the Conservative Political Action Conference contained an unnerving threat and ironic demands.

Trump renewed his complaints about the media or as he calls it the fake media.

I say it doesnt represent the people, it doesnt and never will represent the people, and were going to do something about it because we have to go out and have to speak our minds and we have to be honest, Trump said.

That going to do something sounded ominous, yet if he just keeps talking, he is going to continue to do wonderful things for TVratings and newspaper subscriptions. Thank you, Mr. President.

Trump gave a journalism lecture: I'm against the people that make up stories and make up sources.They shouldn't be allowed to use sources unless they use somebody's name. Let their name be put out there.

That will never work, but the president happily spins the fantasy.

Unnamed sources drive a lot of coverage, inside and outside Washington. Trump made the complaintshortly afterhis own White House aides gave a briefing on the condition of anonymity.

Ah, hypocrisy. It never registers with the president, who just keeps complaining.

If unnamed sources arent used, Trump predicted, you will see stories dry up like you've never seen before.

He followed that by announcing: I love the First Amendment. Nobody loves it better than me. Nobody. I mean, who uses itmore than I do?

But theres a difference between reportingand shooting your mouth off.

If you want to see stories dry up, you cant really love the First Amendment. Dogged reporting can get at major issues facing the country. Perhaps Trump loves parts of the First Amendment, but the love in this case needs to be all the way.

President Trump has a tendency to make everything personal. He comes at the issues not as a politician but as a TV star who was treated to largely favorable press when he was a performeron The Apprentice.

He made that approach pay offfor him during the unpredictable 2016 campaign, but he cant seem to shift gears as president.

Thin-skinned and self-absorbed, he is not prepared for the rough-and-tumble of Washington.

And were all paying for it because hes easily distracted and offended. He says his achievements arent saluted, but he and his White House keep tripping themselves up.

Maybe he was serving distractions Friday from CNN and New York Times reporting about contacts between Trump associates and Russian intelligence officials. He finds ways to divert attention frombad press.

He can bean aggrieved star, and his White House can take revenge on reporters he doesnt like. Reporters from CNN, The New York Times, Politico, the BBC, the Huffington Post and The Los Angeles Times were kept out of a White House briefing on Friday.

Even so, the administration is probably helping those news organizations gainrespect. The digging about Russia wont end; Trump gives the press more reason to keep looking. Thank you, Mr. President.

The president has announced he wont attend the White House correspondents dinner in April. Thats for the best. Why try to fake that youre having a good time in front of the fake media?

For now, Trump is sending more than enough head-scratching messages. His media bashing on Friday was especially confused. But thats because when Trump talks about the First Amendment, hes just giving lip service.

hboedeker@orlandosentinel.com

Link:
Trump: Fake love for First Amendment - Orlando Sentinel