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Westboro Baptist
Amazing how many people think they should not be allowed to protest. They observed the 1000 feet rule at the funeral. Are they jerks? Of course. But if they want to hold up God Hates Fags signs etc, they are protected just as the '78 Skokie case showed and the 1988 case of Larry Flynt. If you don't like it, you have a choice. Ignore.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0meqcKTAcMU |
#2
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#3
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So? Bad people exist. And hate speech is protected. Wanting otherwise shows a lack of recognition on what the first amendment guarantees.
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#4
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Did I say their free speech shouldn't be protected? It really shouldn't be, but it has to be. No way around it even though the court is dying to find a loophole.
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#5
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There will be no loophole and it should be protected...They will win the case. It never should've gone to trial to begin with.
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#6
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yup
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#7
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They should get no police protection for their rallies and let the chips fall where they may.
__________________
Game Over |
#8
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What they do is tasteless, disgusting and completely vile to anyone with any legitimate sense of what activities a civilized society should conduct.
However, they're going to win this case. The appeals court threw out the ruling to give the deceased soldier's father 11 million dollars for intentional infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy. I think it's very hard to believe the Supreme Court will overturn that decision. The most nauseating part of the NIghtline story is when those two assholes scoffed at Terry Moran for even mentioning that they protest at the funerals of men and women who fight to support the right they so willingly use. Talk about circular logic. |
#9
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when speech is shown to clearly hurt others, it is not protected, I believe in the 1st Amendment but I think they cross the line. The emotional trauma they cause the families of slain heroes is certainly not what the founding fathers had in mind. Yes, much speech is crude and disgusting...that's protected but yelling "fire" in a crowded movie theater is not.
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"Always be yourself...unless you suck!" |
#10
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Obviously on a technicality, but I think you can see the difference between the two |
#11
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??? The way I understand it, the case isn't about Westboro's ability to stand on a sidewalk and demonstrate their low IQ's, it's when they specifically named these people on their website and went after them.
__________________
"Have the clean racing people run any ads explaining that giving a horse a Starbucks and a chocolate poppyseed muffin for breakfast would likely result in a ten year suspension for the trainer?" - Dr. Andrew Roberts |
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As eloquently as you typed this.....don't you realize where you are...now????? |
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#14
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But when "God hate fags and thank God for dead troops" is spewed at a funeral it becomes harmful to the families....I don't give a damn if they have their hate fests but not at military funerals. The right to one's opinion is not the same as attacking innocent folks and beating them over the head with one's perversion. They are encouraging violence....I think this is a gray area...hopefully the Court will use common sense!
__________________
"Always be yourself...unless you suck!" |
#15
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Alan Chen from NYTIMES has a better legal explanation. It’s never easy to defend free speech. People claiming First Amendment protection for their expression are almost always unpopular, mired in controversy, and socially and politically marginalized. Their speech is often intended to provoke public outcry, unrest and anger. That’s how they call attention to the causes they embrace. As a result, emotions run high. Speakers will very likely censor themselves out of fear that they will be sued for their free expression. The case of the Westboro Baptist Church’s funeral protests is no different. One would have to be heartless not to feel for families mourning the tragic loss of their loved ones who have served their country bravely. Our natural human impulse is to want to stop such speech. But the First Amendment protects our pluralistic society from this reflexive, majoritarian desire to censor messages that make us uncomfortable or upset. We don’t need the Constitution to protect wildly popular speech; we need it to protect expression with which we vehemently disagree. That is why First Amendment doctrine generally forbids the government (including courts, through judgments for plaintiffs who claim emotional distress based on the words of others) to penalize speech solely because of its content. Many suggest that the Constitution should allow an exception to this rule for the funeral protest in this case because the content of the speech was highly offensive. “Isn’t this different?,” people ask. “Haven’t these people crossed the line?” History is filled with similar pleas to the courts to protect people’s sensibilities by limiting the First Amendment. These have emerged from across the ideological spectrum, with claims for exceptions ranging from flag burning to abortion protest, from profane political expression to misogynist musical lyrics. The courts have usually resisted them, and with good reason. The composition of public discourse would be severely distorted if we permitted government to pick and choose which ideas we hear. A ruling protecting funeral protests under the First Amendment does not leave grieving families without protection. The law already allows regulation of speech or conduct that is threatening. Government also may regulate the volume of speech as well as the location where it occurs, so long as it applies the same limits to all speakers. Finally, the law permits people to protect themselves from trespass, the physical invasion of their private property or spaces. The case pending in the Supreme Court is about much more than funeral protests. Allowing a First Amendment exemption for highly offensive speech would open the door to a wide range of regulation that could seriously endanger our collective liberty. If the multi-million dollar judgment against the church and its supporters for intentional infliction of emotional distress and invasion of privacy is upheld, it will deter protestors of all political views. Speakers will likely censor themselves out of fear that they will be sued by someone who is highly offended or emotionally harmed by the passionate way that they convey their beliefs. The marketplace of ideas will be muted. The protection of these protesters’ rights ensures the liberty of many other speakers. But one of the prices of that liberty is tolerance for words that may hurt. |
#16
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you've simplified plaintiff arguments in a way that if true would, in fact, make this a slam dunk. so why did the supreme court grant cert?
plaintiff won $5 million against westboro in a lower court. the appeals court overturned that verdict. now the supreme court agreed to hear the case when all they had to do was deny cert and the appeals court ruling stands. why would they bother hearing the case? re-read what riot wrote. it's not about signs held up at funerals. it's about the speech specifically targeted at plaintiff on the westboro website. the issue is going to be whether or not this plaintiff is a public figure. that's where the justices questioning went. if he is, then falwell vs. flynt applies and it is indeed a slam dunk. if he's not, then they'll either expand the free speech rules from flynt so they also apply to private individuals or they'll distinguish from flynt and you could see a very different ruling than you expect. the court took on the case for a reason. i don't know what it is but i guarentee it wasn't to waste all the time and effort to say the appeals court had it exactly right. they're going to make a point. they wouldn't have taken the case otherwise. |
#17
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#18
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Yeah the government, big oil, blackwater etc. eat that s.hit up. It's a card used to censor objectors so these a.ssholes can continue lining their pockets with bogus wars that do ANYTHING but protect our freedoms.
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#19
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i like the idea of the justices sitting around deciding which cases to take based on the fact they haven't done it in a while. "yeah, it's settled law and there's nothing for us to add but it's been 150 years dude!" that's not the way it's done though. they have a point to make. we'll find out what it is. |
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