Archive for the ‘First Amendment’ Category

What's really protected under the first amendment?

Created: 05/23/2014 11:17 PM WHEC.com

After controversial remarks about the transgender community, talk show hosts Kimberley Ray and Barry Beck were suspended and subsequently fired. Friday, the pair issued an apology -- saying "our attempt was to discuss a controversial healthcare issue; however our lack of sensitivity and understanding of the transgender people and their plight created 12 minutes of radio that we wish we could take back."

Many have argued that their comments are protected by the constitution, even if they do offend some people. So News10NBC took quandary to a civil liberties attorney.

While talk show hosts may have the right under the constitution to express themselves and not fear government intervention. That right doesn't necessarily protect them in the private sector. Entercom Media, the company that employed them, determined their words were "hateful" and crossed the line.

Paul Polyak was born in the Ukraine where people could speak freely, but even as an American, with the protections of the constitution, he says people should be careful.

Polyak tells us, "I think you do have the right to say whatever you want to say, but you are held accountable for your words.so if you're saying something in the public domain, there are repercussions for what you say."

Rochester resident Latrice Halter agrees. Especially in situations where people are speaking publicly.

Halter says, "I believe they should be held accountable for what they say, because what you say can hurt other people even though you have the right or the freedom to say it."

But what does the constitution guarantee all americans? We turned to civil liberties lawyer Scott Forsyth.

He says, "People many times confuse the right to speak out and with the first amendment and the limitations of the first amendment."

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What's really protected under the first amendment?

Glenn Greenwald: First Amendment Speech – Video


Glenn Greenwald: First Amendment Speech
Glenn Greenwald, honored at the First Amendment awards at the Newseum, addresses his surprising meeting with Edward Sownden.

By: Janet Donovan

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Glenn Greenwald: First Amendment Speech - Video

Ted Cruz Senate Dems to Repeal the First Amendment – Video


Ted Cruz Senate Dems to Repeal the First Amendment
Via CNS http://cnsnews.com/news/article/penny-starr/ted-cruz-democratic-senators-want-repeal-first-amendment http://SavingtheRepublic.com http://SavingtheRepublic.com/blog Fair Use Clause...

By: STRVidNewsOpinion

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Ted Cruz Senate Dems to Repeal the First Amendment - Video

Goldberg: IRS Must Stop Regulating First Amendment Freedoms – Video


Goldberg: IRS Must Stop Regulating First Amendment Freedoms

By: National Review

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Goldberg: IRS Must Stop Regulating First Amendment Freedoms - Video

Courant Wins Several Top Awards In SPJ Contest

WALLINGFORD The Hartford Courant swept the top three awards at the Connecticut Society of Professional Journalists' annual contest, winning honors for public service, investigative journalism and First Amendment protection.

The Courant won the Stephen A. Collins Public Service award for its coverage of resilience and recovery in Newtown in the year following the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.

Top investigative honors went to The Courant for a series on deaths in group homes for the developmentally disabled.

The First Amendment award honored an expose of a behind-the-scenes effort to limit access to public records.

"As we celebrate our 250th anniversary, these awards are a clear reminder of the vital role The Courant continues to play in the life of Connecticut," said Courant publisher Nancy A. Meyer.

The Courant's coverage of Newtown in the wake of the Sandy Hook massacre, cited by the society, asked a difficult question: How do you rebuild a community after so devastating a tragedy? The coverage included profiles of parents who lost children, efforts to help those left behind recover and a special section "To Honor Their Lives: Remembering the Joys of Those Who Died At Sandy Hook." That focused on how the victim's memories have been celebrated and cherished by family and friends in various ways, including playgrounds, non-profit organizations and fundraisers.

The Sandy Hook coverage included work by Alaine Griffin, Josh Kovner, Matt Sturdevant and Dave Altimari, among others.

"The events at Sandy Hook were horrific. But in the year that followed, members of our staff documented how an act of extraordinary evil was slowly washed away by extraordinary acts of kindness hope and love," said Courant Editor Andrew Julien.

The Theodore Driscoll Award for Investigative Reporting went to Courant reporters Dave Altimari, Matthew Kauffman and Josh Kovner for "Fragile Lives, Needless Deaths," a series that exposed how dozens of developmentally disabled people died in public and private group homes, institutions and nursing homes through what investigators concluded was abuse, neglect or medical error from 2004 through 2010.

The investigation found that substandard care was cited during investigations into the deaths of 76 intellectually disabled people receiving state services or 1 out of every 17 clients who died over those seven years.

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Courant Wins Several Top Awards In SPJ Contest