| The Civil War era | ||
| Censorship 1800s - 1860s
Thomas Jefferson's death in 1826 marked a new era in the South as the ideals of the 18th century Enlightenment were discarded in favor of a pragmatic repression designed to hold on to slavery. Following the1822 Denmark Vessey and 1831 Nat Turner rebellions in South Carolina and Virginia, new laws forbid possession or distribution of abollitionist literature. In Virginia, anyone who "by speaking or writing maintains that owners have no right of property in slaves" could be sentenced to a year in prison. Tensions kept rising despite efforts of some editors to avert Civil War. Elijah Lovejoy, editor of the Alton. Ill. Observer, was killed by a pro-Southern mob in 1837. Another exception involved the burning of newspapers containing articles that condemned peace terms in 1865. (illustration at left) This amendment would be used in Gitlow v. New York, 1925, to apply the First Amendment to state law, which set a precedent for the bedrock media law case, New York Times v. Sullivan, 1964.
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| Progressive Era -- Prior restraint and obscenity | ||
Social attitudes towards free speech have often lagged behind ideals expressed in law. While the church persecuted very early books and engravings of an obscene nature in ecclesiastical courts, by the time Fanny Hill: Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure by John Cleland was first publishedt in 1749, British authorities took no notice. Trade in erotic literature grew in the 19th century. By the 1830s, Booksellers Row in London (Holywell Stree) had over 50 bookstores devoted to pornography. All had displays that attracted attention from the thrill-seekers passing . The stores sold novels, erotic prints, etchings, and catalogues for prostitutes that featured their 'specialities.' In England, the Society for the Surpression of Vice led to the first of several laws that gave magistrates authority to issue warrants to sieze and destroy obscene materials. Prosecution of "obscene libel" also became common as laws became more explicit in Victorian era. Queen (Regina) v. Hicklin (1868 L. R. 3 Q. B. 360)- In 1857 the Lord Campbell Act was adopted to set a standard for obscenity in England. This was tested in 1868 when Henry Scott was brought up on charges for printing a pamphlet called "The Confessional Unmasked." It was a piece of crude anti-Catholic propaganda that was part of the social turmoil around the Murphy Riots. Scott appealed to Benjamin Hicklin, a recorder in London, and although Hicklin ruled in Scott's favor, this ruling was later overturned by Alexander Cockburn, Britain's chief justice. Cockburn said:
This came to be known as the Hicklin Rule because the case in question was Regina v. Hicklin. It set an early precedent for obscenity and was cited in American court cases in the 1800s and early 1900s. The rule allowed a publication to be judged for obscenity based on isolated passages of a work considered out of context and judged by their apparent influence on most susceptible readers, such as children or weak-minded adults. In the US, most of the censorship took place on the state level until after the Civil War. State censors tried, unsuccessfully, to ban Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure in Massachusetts as early as 1821. |
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Comstock Laws Freedom of speech and press did not apply to materials considered to be "obscene." The US Tarrif Act of 1842 was the first federal law restricting imports of obscene material. It didn't have much effect, and as the Victorian era dawned in America in the wake of the Civil War, self-styled crusaders set about improving America's moral posture. The most successful of these was crusading moralist Anthony Comstock(1844 - 1915) who lobbied Congress for a "decency" bill. The "Comstock Act" of 1873 banned any information whatsoever about family planning, abortion, venerial disease, contraceptives and reproductive health. Even a printed discussion of birth control was obscene and therefore not protected by the First Amendment. Comstock was named a special agent of the Post Office and given free transportation to go wherever he wanted to enforce the law that carried his own name. He bragged later that he was responsible for 15 suicides and for sending enough people to jail to fill a 61 coach passenger train. |
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"Comstockery is the world's standing joke at the expense of the United States. Europe likes to hear of such things. It confirms the deep-seated conviction of the Old World that America is a provincial place, a second-rate country-town civilization after all." -- George Bernard Shaw |
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Comstock was not only concerned about publications with dirty pictures. Like other social conservatives of the era, he worried that the women's suffrage movement (to give women the vote) and new ideas about "free love" and even spiritualism were undermining American morality. Indeed, propaganda against suffrage workers like Victoria Woodhull was fairly typical. At right, we see Woodhull as the devil with her free love doctrine trying to lure a woman with an alcoholic husband and a crying baby down the path away from salvation, not toward it. Comstock attacked many people, but was especially interested in Margaret Sanger. A nurse who was shocked at the lack of scientific information about reproductive health and birth control, Sanger insisted on the free speech right to discuss birth control. In 1914, Margaret Sanger published the Woman Rebel, which included frank discussions about contraception, and was indicted for violating the Comstock Acts. The newspaper was was banned and Sanger was indicted for violating postal obscenity laws. She went into exile in England for several years, and then returned to open clinics and continue her advocacy through a group that eventually became known as Planned Parenthood.
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** Mutual Film v. Industrial Commission of Ohio, 1915 -- Ohio set up a system of board of censors which, by law, could only approve films that were "of a moral, educational, or amusing and harmless character." The law was upheld and, on appeal, the Supreme Court said that the state has an intereest in public morals and that films "may be used for evil." Noting that audiences were made up of both adults and children, the court said that "a pretense of worthy purpose" might make films "even more insidious in corruption." Freedom of speech does not apply to spectacles and circuses, the court said. It is interesting that the court considered the state constitution's guarantee of free speech here and not the US Constitution's First Amendment. Following this decision, the system of censorship continued on a national level through the Hays Committee and the Motion Picture Association of America through the 1960s, then changed to the current rating system: G, PG, PG-13, R and NC-17. Naturally, many Americans chafed at the absurdities of Comstockery. As is often the case, high-handed tactics were met with satire. For example, the propaganda about Victoria Woodhull (illustration above left with devil wings) was not necessarily meant to be taken seriously. Nor was Ogden Nash's poem about the Smoot Hawley Tariff Act of 1930, although the case brought by publisher Vincent Cerf of Random House (One Book Entitled Ulysses) certainly was meant to be taken seriously:
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| Early 20th Century -- US censorship / prior restraint | ||
![]() US government's Committee for Public Information ad, 1917, urged Americans to beware of strangers and to turn in anyone overheard speaking German. "Imagine going down to your local brewpub or coffee shop. You meet some friends. The talk turns to the war. You criticize the President and his wealthy supporters. Next thing you know, a couple of husky fellows at the next table grab you, hustle you out the door and down to the local police station. You are arrested on a charge of sedition. Within months you are indicted, tried and convicted. The judge sentences you to 5-10 years in prison — and off you go!" -- Montana Sedition Project |
Between WWI and the 1930s, US citizens were routinely arrested for criticizing the government.
They were also arrested in some states for displaying the wrong flag (black for anarchism or red for communisim). In 1923, Upton Sinclair, author of "The Jungle," was arrested for trying to read the text of the First Amendment at a union rally. Many people were arrested merely for membership in groups regarded as "radical" by the government as the Charlotte Whitney case (noted next) shows. The most significant surppression of free speech involved protests against the First World War. Eugene Debs, the Socialist Party chair, was sentenced to prison merely for opposing the war. Others, such as college professor Scott Nearing, lost jobs or were badly harrassed. Nearing's "The Great Madness" typified the era. The
Espionage Act of 1917 and
the Sedition Act of 1918 were wartime measures designed to curtail
all criticism of the government and the war effort. Unlike the Alien &
Sedition Acts of 1798, the World War I era acts were vigorously enforced,
with about 2,000 arrests and 1,000 convictions. A number of these cases
were appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court. --
In Schenck
v. U.S., 1919, the Supreme Court tested the Espionage Act and
held that Socialist Party secretary Charles T. Schenck had violated it
by circulating pamphlets to denouncing the draft as involuntary servitude.
His conviction was upheld and the Supreme Court used the case to create
the "clear and present danger" test of when speech could
lawfully be suppressed. Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes used a famous analogy:
"Free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting 'fire'
in a theater and causing a panic." --
In two other related cases, some justices began a line of minority dissent
which would later become the opinion of the majority. **
In Abrams v. US, 1919, for instance, Holmes' dissent said that
"Congress certainly cannot forbid all effort to change the mind
of the country ... nobody can suppose that ... a silly leaflet by an unknown
man, would present any immediate danger ..." **
In Whitney v. California, 1927, Justice Louis Brandeis dissented
from this trend. He didn't think it was right to uphold a state conviction of a woman who was simply a member of the
Communist Party: "Those who won our independence by revolution
were not cowards. They did not fear political change. They did not exalt
order at the cost of liberty.... No danger flowing from speech can be
deemed clear and present unless the incidence of the evil apprehended
is so imminent that it may befall before there is opportunity for full
discussion. .." Note that in both cases, the effort is to define
"clear and present danger" in more concrete terms.
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NOTE that in Near we see print media protected from prior restraint. In similar cases of the era, such as Trinity Methodist Church v. FRC, prior restraint could be imposed on a radio station.
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Near v. Minnesota, 1931 -- State's prior restraint law struck down as unconstitutional. This is one of those "bedrock" cases. J.M. Near's Saturday Press had published a number of articles highly critical of gangsterism in Minneapolis. The state banned further publication under a nuisance law. The Minnesota state supreme court upheld the state ban, saying that the Constitution "was never intended to protect malice, scandal and defamation when untrue or published with bad motives or without justifiable ends... Liberty of the press does not mean that an evil-minded person may publish just anything any more than the constitutional right of assembly authorizes and legalizes unlawful assemblies and riots." This state decision did not stand. Near challenged the law under the First and Fourteenth
Amendments
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Sen. Joseph McCarthy as depicted by editorial cartoonist Herbert Block, Washington Post, March 4, 1954. |
World
War II and the McCarthy Era After
the Sedition Act expired in 1921, the federal government stopped prosecuting
dissent. At the outbreak of World War II, a new sedition law was attached
to the Alien Registration Act of 1940. It became known as the Smith
Act for its sponsor, Howard Smith. There
were no cases involving the Smith Act during the war, partly because
few people opposed the fight against fascism in the U.S. However, after
the war, the act was used to prosecute members of the Communist Party
in the U.S. --
In Dennis v. U.S., 1951, for example, the "clear and present
danger" test was used again to uphold the convictions of 12 party
members under the Smith Act. --
About 121 others were prosecuted under the Smith Act's conspiracy
provisions, and many thousands of others were prosecuted under state laws
outlawing mere membership in organizations that advocated violent overthrow
of the government. Many of these prosecutions were unsupported by evidence,
and the McCarthy Era (named for then- Senator Joseph McCarthy) is remembered
today for its "witch hunt" atmosphere. But times were changing.
--
In Yeats v. U.S. (1957), the Supreme Court (which now had several
new members, especially the new Chief Justice Earl Warren) made a distinction
between the abstract doctrine of overthrow of of the government and actually
advocating violent action. |
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Content neutral restrictions must:
Involve a substantial government interest |
Outright prior restraint is usually unconstitutional because it targets particular content, but regulations that are content neutral and that advance an important interest are often considered to be acceptable. For example, banning any billboards that advertise a certain political party in a city would be an unacceptable prior restraint. However, banning all billboards in an historic neighborhood in order to preserve the character of the neighborhood would be content neutral. Similarly, keeping religious messages out of public buildings does not prevent people from creating and disseminating religious messages in a society. While courts ordered the removal of a promient monument to Ten Commandments brought by a judge to a courthouse in Birmingham, Alabama in 2003, the courts did not prevent the people of Birmingham from discussing or practicing religion. |
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New York Times v. US, 1971 -- President Nixon tried to stop publication of the "Pentagon Papers," a secret history of the Vietnam War made for the Defense Dept. The papers had been leaked to reporters by Daniel Ellsberg, a Pentagon consultant. The court said the government had a heavy burden to prove there was a national security issue, and had failed to meet it. Thus, court orders halting publication of the papers were lifted. US v. The Progressive 1979 -- The Progressive magazine of Wisconsin was going to print plans to build an H-bomb, gathered from public sources. The government got a restraining order. The appeal was made moot when other papers printed the leaked materials. Daniel Ellsberg discusses Pentagon Papers |
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Along with restrictions, incentives must also be content neutral. In Texas Monthly v. Bullock, 1989, the court said religious publications can't be exempt from taxes when other publications have to pay taxes, the court decided in this case. This is an example of the "content neutral" doctrine. It would be OK to tax all publications, but not to exempt any one group on the basis of their content. US v. OBrien, 1968 -- laws criminalizing draft card burning were upheld because the Supreme Court said that effect of the law was not only to stifle dissent and the government's interest was to be able to raise an army efficiently. Similarly, in Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence, 1984, a law that said homeless people could not sleep in Lafayette park was upheld. |
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Of course, there have been many cases in which overly broad restrictions on speech have been struck down. Perhaps most famous are the forced speech cases and the flag burning cases. In Texas v. Johnson, 1989, the Supreme Court said that a state law prohibiting flag burning was not constitutional because only messages of protest were being punished. Burning the flag in a respectful way (an approved method of destroying old flags) was not illegal. When Congress passed a similar law in 1990, it was struck down in US. v. Eichman. Considerable debate followed |
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Modern day sedition Laura Berg, a clinical nurse specialist, wrote a letter in September 2005 to a weekly Albuquerque newspaper criticizing the administration for Hurricane Katrina and the Iraq War. She urged people to "act forcefully" to remove an administration she said played games of "vicious deceit." A few weeks later, the head of the VA asked the FBI to investigate her for sedition, and her work computer was confiscated. Berg absoutely refused to back down, and by February the ACLU was suing the VA. By March 2006 the VA apologized. This year, Berg got a PEN award for free speech and a terrific write-up in the New York Times. |
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| Hate Speech | ||
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Chaplinsky
v. N.Hampshire, 1942 This case set out the "fighting words
doctrine." Chaplinsky was cited for a breech of peace for calling
someone "a damned fascist."The state law specifcally stated:
"No person shall address any offensive, derisive or annoying word
to any other person... " He appealed and the court said that the
words could lead to action. Brandenburg
v. Ohio,
1969, set a new "imminent action" test that replaced
"clear and present danger." The case involved a racist who spoke
at a Ku Klux Klan rally and advocated "revengence" against blacks
and Jews. Brandenburg's conviction under Ohio law was reversed, and so
was the precedent set in Whitney v. California. The Supreme Court also
drew on the dissenting opinions of Holmes and Brandies in Whitney and
other cases in setting the new test. RAV v. St Paul, 1992 -- An ordinance banned burning crosses, displaying swastikas or expressing religious or racial hatred. Some in the court said the city had plenty of ways to punish cross burners without an overly broad ordinance. The majority said fighting words doctrine cant be used to limit hate speech, and more or less overturned Chaplinsky Virginia v. Black, 2003 --A Virginia state law that bans cross-burning is (as in RAV) a violation of free speech rights, but if the cross is burned with the intent to intimidate, a law to prevent it is NOT unconstitutional. Arguments are discussed here at a Freedom Forum site. A burning cross, so long associated with racial violence in the US, is a "true threat" (as in Watts v. United States, 394 U.S. 705) A state may choose to prohibit "only those forms of intimidation that are most likely to inspire fear of bodily harm." Columnist James Kilpatrick said: "The Virginia law makes it a felony publicly to burn a cross "with the intent of intimidating any person or group of persons." How is "intent" to be proved? No problem. "Any such burning of a cross shall be prima facie evidence of an intent to intimidate." Heads I win, tails you lose. This was a law that could not withstand the first breeze that blows across the First Amendment." |
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Planned Parenthood and "true threats" |
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Planned Parenthood v. American Coalition of Life Activists -- This is the "Nuremburg Files" abortion web site case involving an Oregon office of Planned Parenthood and a Christian activist named Neil Horsley. The web site featured X-ed out names of doctors who had been assassinated and inflamatory "wanted for murder and genocide" posters of living doctors. There were also testimonials to Paul Hill, an anti-abortion activist who used a shotgun at short range to kill a doctor and his guard. A jury found that the web site contined "true threats" and violated the Federal Access to Clinic Entrances (which protects against threats) and ordered the site taken down (see injunction). The coalition won at the 9th Circuit appeals level, but the case was heard again en banc and Planned Parenthood won. The coalition appealed to the US Supreme Court but cert. was denied in June 2003. |
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| Parades and parodies | ||
Compelled speech |
Hurley v. Irish American gay lesbian and bisexual group of Boston, 1995 -- The Supreme Court said veterans groups have a right of association, and can decide whom they will include in their St. Patricks day parade. Gays have right to parade, too, and can exclude veterans if they like. To deny a right of association would be akin to forced speech, the court said. The sensitivity to forced speech comes from a series of cases brought by Jehovah's Witnesses For example, in West Virginia Brd. of Ed. v. Barnette, 1943, the Supreme Court said that the state cannot compel students to salute the flag. |
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Free speech on private property |
Pruneyard Shopping Center v. Robins, 1980 -- This is the culmination of a series of cases about free speech on private property that is open to the public. Previous cases had finally settled on restricting free speech in shopping centers and other semi-public places. In Pruneyard, a California law permitted literature distribution in shopping centers. The Supreme Court said state laws could expand on constitutional freedoms, and ruled against the shopping center's property interests. In many other states, such as Virginia, surpression of speech on private property is routine. In fact, political activity is often protected on public land during concerts or even during political events. |
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Speech protected from long-term court injunction |
A year later, the lawsuit on behalf of the heirs of the author of Gone With the Wind author was settled. The
court's final decision noted: "Copyright does not immunize a
work from comment and criticism." |
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International perspectives on censorship |
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Reporters Without Borders "We obviously need to reflect more on this and seek appropriate responses. This means our work is not over. What more do we need to be roused to further action ?" -- Pierre Veilletet,. President, Reporters Without Borders - France, 2004. |
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| Cuba -- "That travesty of justice in Havana... Such a grotesque and sinister farce again, one not seen since those cold war films, which back then, of course, were said to reflect "crude anti-communism." You have to recognise that the old methods have been recycled in the tropics in 2003 : sentences ranging from six to 28 years in prison ! Not for exercising the universal right to free speech, since that scarcely exists in Cuba anyway, but just for being suspected of wanting to exercise it one day." (RSF) | ||
| France -- Banning head scarves in school has been controversial. Despite protests from British and American officials – and street demonstrations by French Muslims at home – the French government remains determined to reaffirm what it calls “the neutrality of our state schools.” (First Amendment Center) | ||
Venezuela -- New press laws may threaten government criticism, but media owners have combined against a popularly elected government and backed several coup attempts. |
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| North Korea asked that the US not allow the James Bond film "Die Another Day" to be shown because it "slanders" the country by portraying it as a degenerate violent sex culture (AP Dec. 15, 2002) | ||
| The story of international censorship continues with accounts of illegal imprisonment, murders and disappearances in dozens of countries and in thousands of instances in recent history. | ||
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See also the Committee to Protect Journalists web site |
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