Labor Cases And Trends To Watch In 2021 – Law360

Law360 (January 3, 2021, 12:02 PM EST) -- The U.S. Supreme Court is set to decide whether a California regulation requiring farms to allow organizers onto their properties violates the Fifth Amendment, a new wave of litigation over profane outbursts by workers could find its way to the National Labor Relations Board and the board doctrine that shields unions from being ousted while collective bargaining agreements are in effect is under the microscope in 2021.

Here, Law360 looks at the notable labor cases and trends to watch in the upcoming year.

High Court Mulling Union Access

The Supreme Court will soon decide whether a California regulation requiring agricultural businesses...

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Labor Cases And Trends To Watch In 2021 - Law360

Banning Government Use of Face Recognition Technology: 2020 Year in Review – EFF

If there was any question about the gravity of problems with police use of face surveillance technology, 2020 wasted no time in proving them dangerously real. Thankfully, from Oregon to Massachusetts, local lawmakers responded by banning their local governments' use.

On January 9, after first calling and threatening to arrest him at work, Detroit police officers traveled to nearby Farmington Hills to arrest Robert Williams in front of his wife, children, and neighborsfor a crime he did not commit. He was erroneously connected by face recognition technology that matched an image of Mr. Williams with video from a December 2018 shoplifting incident. Later this year, Detroit police erroneously arrested a second man because of another misidentification by face recognition technology.

For Robert Williams, his family, and millions of Black and brown people throughout the country, the research left the realm of the theoretical and became all too real. Experts at MIT Media Lab, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and Georgetown's Center on Privacy and Technology have shown that face recognition technology is riddled with error, especially for people of color. It is one more of a long line of police tools and practices that exacerbate historical bias in the criminal system.

2020 will undoubtedly come to be known as the year of the pandemic. It will also be remembered for unprecedented Black-led protest against police violence and concerns that surveillance of political activity will chill our First Amendment rights. Four cities joined the still-growing list of communities that have stood up for their residents' rights by banning local government use of face recognition. Just days after Mr. Williams' arrest, Cambridge, MAan East Coast research and technology hubbecame the largest East Coast City to ban government use of face recognition technology. It turned out to be a distinction they wouldn't retain long.

In February and March, Chicago and New York City residents and organizers called on local lawmakers to pass their own bans. However, few could have predicted that a month later, organizing, civic engagement, and life as we knew it would change dramatically. As states and municipalities began implementing stay in place orders to suppress an escalating global pandemic, City Councils and other lawmaking bodies adapted to social distancing and remote meetings.

As those of us privileged enough to work from home adjusted to Zoom meetings, protests in the name of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd spread throughout the country.

Calls to end police use of face recognition technology were joined by calls for greater transparency and accountability. Those calls have not yet been answered with a local ban on face recognition in New York City. As New Yorkers continue to push for a ban, one enacted bill will shine the light on NYPD use of all manner of surveillance technology. That light of transparency will inform lawmakers and the public of the breadth and dangers of NYPD's use of face recognition and other privacy-invasive technology. After three years of resistance from the police department and the mayor, New York's City Council passed the POST Act with a veto-proof majority. While lacking the community control measures in stronger surveillance equipment ordinances, the POST Act requires the NYPD to publish surveillance impact and use policies for each of its surveillance technologies. This will end decades of the department's refusal to disclose information and policies about its surveillance arsenal.

TAKE ACTION

End Face Surveillance in your community

Building on the momentum of change driven by political unrest and protestand through the tireless work of local organizers including the ACLU-Massachusettsjust days after New York's City Council passed the POST Act, Boston's City Council took strong action. It voted unanimously to join neighboring Cambridge in protecting their respective residents from police use of face recognition. In the preceding weeks, EFF advocated for, and council members accepted, improvements to the ordinance. One closed a loophole that might have allowed police to ask third parties to collect face recognition evidence for them. Another change provides attorney fees to a person who brings a successful suit against the City for violating the ban.

Not to be outdone by their peers in California and Massachusetts, 2020 was also the year municipal lawmakers in Oregon and Maine banned their own agencies from using the technology. In Portland, Maine, the City Council voted unanimously to ban the technology in August. Then in November, the City's voters passed the first ballot measure prohibiting government use of face recognition.

Across the country, the Portland, Oregon, City Council voted unanimously in September to pass their government ban (as well as a ban on private use of face recognition in places of public accommodation). In the days leading up to the vote, a coalition organized by PDX Privacy, an Electronic Frontier Alliance member, presented local lawmakers with a petition signed by over 150 local business owners, technologists, workers, and residents for an end to government use of face surveillance.

TAKE ACTION

End Face Surveillance in your community

Complimenting the work of local lawmakers, federal lawmakers are stepping forward. Senators Jeff Merkley and Jeff Markey), and Representatives Ayanna Pressley, Pramila Jayapal, Rashida Tlaib, and Yvette Clarke introduced the Facial Recognition and Biometric Technology Moratorium Act of 2020 (S.4084/H.R.7356). If passed, it would ban federal agencies like Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Customs and Border Patrol from using face recognition to track and identify (and misidentify) millions of U.S. residents and travelers. The act would also withhold certain federal funding from local and state governments that use face recognition.

While some high-profile vendors this year committed to pressing pause on the sale of face recognition technology to law enforcement, 2020 was also a year where the public became much more familiar with how predatory the industry can be. Thus, through our About Face campaign and work of local allies, EFF will continue to support the movement to ban all government use of face recognition technology.

With a new class of recently elected lawmakers poised to take office in the coming weeks, now is the time to reach out to your local city council, board of supervisors, and state and federal representatives. Tell them to stand with you in ending government use of face recognition, a dangerous technology with a proven ability to chill essential freedoms and amplify systemic bias.

This article is part of our Year in Review series. Read other articles about the fight for digital rights in 2020.

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Banning Government Use of Face Recognition Technology: 2020 Year in Review - EFF

McConnell and Pelosi’s homes vandalized after Congress fails to pass $2,000 stimulus checks – CNBC

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.

Reuters

The homes of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi were vandalized days after Congress failed to approve a measure toincrease coronavirus stimulus checks to $2,000.

Photos captured on Saturday showed the words "WERES MY MONEY" scrawled in white spray paint on the front door of McConnell's Louisville, Kentucky, home. "MITCH KILLS THE POOR" was written in red on a window.

"I've spent my career fighting for the First Amendment and defending peaceful protest. I appreciate every Kentuckian who has engaged in the democratic process whether they agree with me or not," the Republican leader said in a statement. "This is different. Vandalism and the politics of fear have no place in our society."

The home of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell is shown as it was vandalized overnight in Louisville, Ky., Saturday, Jan. 2, 2021.

Timothy D. Easley | AP Photo

McConnell said he and his wife were not intimidated, but "hope our neighbors in Louisville aren't too inconvenienced by this radical tantrum."

The Louisville Police Department did not immediately return a request for comment Saturday.

At Pelosi's San Francisco home, a garage door was defaced on Friday with phrases including "$2K," "Cancel rent!" and "We want everything!"

Police said a pig's head and fake blood were left on the ground.

The San Francisco Police Department's Special Investigations Division is looking into the vandalism, police said in a statement. Pelosi has not yet responded to a request for comment.

The House passed the CASH Act on Monday to increase stimulus payments from $600 to $2,000 to help people during the coronavirus pandemic, but it wasblocked by McConnellwho said the bill had "no realistic path to quickly pass the Senate."

"The Senate's not going to be bullied into rushing out more borrowed money into the hands of Democrats' rich friends who don't need the help," he said on the Senate floor.

The act would have increased thechecks from $600to $2,000 and wassupported by President Donald Trump.

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McConnell and Pelosi's homes vandalized after Congress fails to pass $2,000 stimulus checks - CNBC

Can Robocalls Be Stopped? – The Regulatory Review

Scholars propose solutions to endless robocalling.

Receiving ominous calls about your cars expiring warranty, even if you do not own a vehicle? Or perhaps vaguely worded voicemails alerting you to an alleged debt you need to pay right away?

Telemarketingunsolicited calls or voicemails selling a product or serviceis not a new phenomenon. Telemarketing operations blossomed in the early 1980s as technology enabled businesses to dial more consumers at a lower cost. Pre-recorded messagesalso known as robocallscould reach thousands of phones at once. Companies invested in telemarketing, finding it to be a productive method for increasing sales, and over the course of the next decade the telemarketing industry grew nearly ten-fold.

In 1991, Congress enacted the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) to try to curb the deluge of unsolicited calls to consumers. The problem had gotten so bad that former Senator Ernest Hollings (D-S.C.), one of the sponsors of the TCPA, called robocalls the scourge of modern civilization.

Under the TCPA, the penalty for any robocall is $500 per call but can rise to $1,500 per call if petitioners can show in court that the robocallers willfully or knowingly violated the TCPA.

The TCPA was far from the death knell of the robocall, however. In another effort to stymie unsolicited calls, in 2003 the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) teamed up with the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) to launch the National Do-Not-Call Registry. Now administered by the FTC, the National Do-Not-Call Registry allows consumers to add their telephone numbers to a national database specifying that those numbers are, in theory, off limits for certain types of unwanted calls.

But even with the TCPA and the National Do-Not-Call Registry, robocalling has continued to grow. Americans received over 100 billion robocalls in 2019, with the average consumer receiving an unwanted call nearly every day.

In a further effort to address the seemingly unfettered growth of robocalling, Congress enacted the Telephone Robocall Abuse Criminal Enforcement and Deterrence Act (TRACED Act) in 2019. The TRACED Act, among other things, increased penalties under the TCPA, gave the FCC greater authority to enforce the TCPA, and required the FCC and the U.S. Department of Justice to work together to develop better methods for combatting robocalls.

In this weeks Saturday Seminar, scholars discuss telemarketing, robocalls, and the future of the TCPA.

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Can Robocalls Be Stopped? - The Regulatory Review

First day hikes extended due to weather – The Herald Bulletin

ANDERSON Indiana State Parks offered a rain check of sorts, extending their New Year's Day First Day Hikes through Sunday.

The change was made due to the weather forecast for Friday that included freezing rain changing over to rain.

Several people,including Stacey Valentine, took advantage of a dry spell Friday afternoon to hike at the park .

Valentine said she has participated in the First Day Hikes over the last couple of years and enjoyed the opportunity to just get outside.

The hikes are popular at the park and normally draw a large crowd, but due to the pandemic the format was changed this year.

Instead of a large group, hikers could go on their own schedule with groups limited to members of the same household to maintain social distancing.

Stickers were available at the nature center that could be worn so hikers crossing paths could identify fellow participants and greet each other with a "Happy New Year."

First Day Hikes originated more than 20 years ago at Blue Hills Reservation, a state park in Milton, Mass. The program was launched to foster healthy lifestyles and promote year-round recreation at state parks.

Follow Don Knight on Twitter @donwknight, or call 765-622-1212 ext. 204567.

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First day hikes extended due to weather - The Herald Bulletin

Letter: Amendment needed to reverse campaign finance precedents – Eagle-Tribune

To the editor:

Christian Wade's recent article "Lawmakers spend big bucks" reveals the degree to which fundraising influences our state legislators.

The necessity of building up a campaign war chest forces them to ask themselves what policies their major donors might prefer, rather than asking themselves what policies might be best for the majority of their constituents.

Thus we end up with government of, by and for the wealthy.

This problem was created by a series of anti-democratic U.S. Supreme Court rulings, such as Citizens United v. Federal Electron Commission (2010), that have opened the floodgates to big money in politics.

The constitutionality of state limits on campaign fundraising and spending has also been called into question by a subsequent Supreme Court ruling, American Tradition Partnership Inc. v. Bullock (2012), which nullified a 100-year-old Montana law called the Corrupt Practices Act that had kept corporate money out of state politics for a century.

Only a constitutional amendment can overturn flawed Supreme Court decisions. Please ask your state representative and state senator to support the We the People Act (H.3208 and S.2163), which would have Massachusetts join five other states (Vermont, California, Illinois, New Jersey and Rhode Island) in proposing an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to overturn Citizens United v. FEC and other anti-democratic Supreme Court rulings based on the doctrines that political spending is a form of First Amendment speech and that artificial incorporated entities have inalienable rights, as if they were real people.

Paul Lauenstein

Sharon

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After Trumps drubbing in the courts, liberals fear a legal hangover – POLITICO

There is some risk that some of these decisions that have come in post-election litigation could be bad for progressive plaintiffs going forward if you have courts choose to extend some of these doctrines towards pre-election challenges, said Jon Greenbaum, chief counsel at the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law. There is some danger in that.

Judges tossed out nearly all of the roughly 60 suits filed by the Trump campaign and its backers for a variety of reasons and, in many instances, individual cases were dismissed on many different grounds. Some judges said the Trump campaign lacked legal standing to challenge voting procedures. Others said Trump electors or individual voters lacked standing.

Many cases were thrown out for laches a legal principle barring untimely suits. Others were declared to be moot or precluded by ongoing litigation at the state level. At least two suits were deemed to violate the Eleventh Amendment the constitutional provision limiting federal-court litigation against states and state officials.

The Trump campaign and their allies werent working with the most skilled lawyers, said Loyola Law School professor Justin Levitt. They werent paying close attention because, all of a sudden, they found out to their surprise that the courthouse doors are quite narrow. Theyre only open a crack.

Nearly every decision now stands as precedent that Republicans or state officials can seek to wield against Democrats or civil rights groups in the endless legal wars that surround the U.S. electoral system. Lawyers who handle such cases have no doubt the turnabout is coming, although they differ over its significance.

The rulings on standing will be important down the road. They will make it harder for individual voters to have standing to bring these challenges, Republican election lawyer Jason Torchinsky said. Weve also seen the federal judiciary is really skeptical about challenges to duly-enacted laws. This is going to make it harder for the left or right to bring challenges to voting laws.

As a civil rights litigator constantly looking for creative ways to raise legal complaints in court, Greenbaum acknowledged that he doesnt typically celebrate judges ruling that litigants lack standing to have their cases heard.

Im normally not a big fan of attacking standing, given the context that were usually the ones trying to establish standing, he said.

The chief architect of the Democrats legal strategy, Marc Elias, said he doesnt think the Trump cases had much impact on election law because the suits were rather obviously meritless.

Those werent close calls, Elias said of the rulings shutting the cases down. They were not cases that represented difficult questions when the court had to draw a hard line.

Elias, a partner at law firm Perkins Coie, added that he was not overly worried that the cases had damaged the future ability of genuinely injured voters and groups to bring suits. Most of these cases were a caricature of a real voting-rights suit, he said. They werent plumbing the carefully drawn lines of standing doctrine. They were pretty much coloring outside the lines.

Some judges also used another basis to throw out the Trump lawsuits finding that the claims were too speculative to proceed. Those kinds of dismissals trouble many left-leaning lawyers because they deny court-ordered discovery like subpoenas and depositions in cases where litigants lack details about how they were defrauded or injured.

I have misgivings about the extent to which it has become harder to access the courts and I think some of these election decisions rested on doctrine that has been used to restrict access to the courts, said Alexander Reinert, a professor at Cardozo School of Law at Yeshiva University. But, he added, I dont think from a systemic perspective, there is any damage thats been done that isnt already being done in other areas. I dont think any of the cases stretched the law.

Some lawyers cautioned that its too soon to pass definitive judgment on the Trump-related suits because of signs the U.S. Supreme Court may still take up a dispute from Pennsylvania that arose before the election and involves the power of state courts to impose voting-related rules that arguably contradict or go beyond what a state legislature dictated. Trump is seeking to intervene in that case, which was brought by GOP state senators and could affect voting procedures across the country if the high court chooses to hear it.

The reservations among some voting-rights advocates over the bevy of Trump defeats highlight another curious aspect of this particular chapter in the voting wars: a role reversal that saw Democrats and their allies seeking to knock the GOP cases out of court, while Trumps legal team and its backers scrambled to adopt arguments that liberal civil-rights litigators have long pursued in the face of strident Republican opposition.

The head-spinning shift was on clear display last month during arguments before a federal judge in Atlanta over GOP efforts to force a more elaborate signature matching process for absentee ballots in the runoff Senate elections scheduled for Jan. 5.

In the lead-up to the November election, as Democrats and voting rights advocates were pushing courts to force more Covid-19-related accommodations in the voting process, Republicans urged strict enforcement of a legal theory called the Purcell principle a line of Supreme Court rulings that discourage federal judges from making changes to election rules in the days or weeks before the vote.

However, during the Dec. 17 Atlanta court session, lawyers for the GOP argued for a minimalist interpretation of Purcell, insisting it is not an insurmountable obstacle to changing signature verification procedures in an election where absentee and early voting is already underway.

The last time I checked, Purcell was not one of the first 14 amendments to the United States Constitution, said Michael Francisco of law firm McGuireWoods, contending that the interest in pre-election certainty shouldnt be allowed to trump the basic right to have the vote carried out fairly. It doesnt say you excuse constitutional violations just because youre two weeks out from an election.

And while civil rights lawyers and Democrats often advance lawsuits claiming that minority voters are suffering from vote dilution due to practices that give voters in one part of a state more influence or shift minority voters to districts where theyll have little impact, a lawyer representing Democratic Party groups urged the Atlanta federal judge to reject arguments that Republicans votes are being diluted when local officials count absentee ballots without carefully scrutinizing the signatures.

Amanda Callais, also with Perkins Coie, dismissed the notion of vote dilution the GOP was advancing in the case and argued it amounted to a generalized grievance that cannot support standing.

The judge in the suit, Obama appointee Eleanor Ross, dismissed it on standing grounds alone. The theory of future injury is too speculative," Ross said.

The rejection of the Trump and GOP-initiated cases is in line with a decades-long trend often advanced by lawyers and judges aligned with the conservative Federalist Society to push back against a perception during the 1960s and 1970s that federal judges were issuing sweeping decisions in cases that lacked a firm basis under the Constitution.

Those conservatives argue for a narrow view of standing they contend federal court lawsuits should only be brought by litigants who are directly injured by the governments conduct and should not be used to obtain advisory opinions on the legality of various government policies or actions.

For his part, Trump seems clueless about the legal principles involved and baffled by his loss.

The Supreme Court had ZERO interest in the merits of the greatest voter fraud ever perpetrated on the United States of America. All they were interested in is standing, which makes it very difficult for the President to present a case on the merits. 75,000,000 votes! Trump lamented on Twitter.

Trumps offhand dismissal of the standing issue the sort of slight that might set off a brawl at a Federalist Society convention indicates he lacks a basic grasp of the core principles extolled by the conservative judges he has nominated.

Obviously, Trump does not have a very deep understanding of many of the things he tweets about, and I think maybe standing doctrine least of all, said Jameel Jaffer of the Knight First Amendment Institute.

Jaffer, who was on the losing end of a standing ruling in 2013 from the Supreme Court over the National Security Agencys surveillance programs, was tempted to find some wisdom in Trumps tweet before reversing course.

"Theres a kernel of truth in what hes saying. No. What am I saying? Im giving him too much credit," Jaffer said. "All he cares about is that hes losing, and he has no idea what hes talking about."

The Trump election litigation also created some unusual ideological bedfellows, as liberal professors and litigators sometimes found themselves praising conservative jurists they rarely agree with.

One of the most significant rulings trouncing the Trump-related litigation was a federal appeals court opinion last month tossing out a lawsuit brought by well-known Georgia attorney Lin Wood. The ruling was authored by William Pryor, considered for many years to be the most conservative appointee on the federal bench.

Many who welcomed Trumps legal rout said the outpouring of joy in their circles reflected not so much an endorsement of the courts increasingly miserly approach to voting litigation as satisfaction at seeing that restrictive rubric applied evenhandedly and not altered to produce a particular political outcome.

The cheering was a little bit for the rule of law, but I dont think theyre actually cheering the substance, said Levitt.

Some people walked into this situation thinking judges are political actors and are going to vote according to their ideological priors, Reinert added. But judges, for the most part, have not. So, thats a refreshing reminder what is different about the judiciary.

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After Trumps drubbing in the courts, liberals fear a legal hangover - POLITICO

Don’t allow First Amendment rights to be seen as ‘wrongs’ – The Record

When it comes to exercising your rights of free speech, assembly and petition in Tennessee, be careful. Setting up a tent for an overnight stay during a protest could land you in prison for up to six years.

A new law signed quietly into effect Nov. 5 by Gov. Bill Lee changes the crime of overnight camping on state property without a permit aimed at deterring protesters who have done that from a misdemeanor to the much more serious felony. It also provides for stricter penalties and minimum jail terms for such clear threats to the republic as drawing in chalk on state property or interrupting legislators or local officials who are in a meeting.

In recent years, police have resorted to sweeps during demonstrations that operate on the theory of arrest all and sort them out later, sometimes taking into custody non-protesters simply walking to lunch or shopping. The Volunteer States new anti-protest law advocates call it criminal justice reform requires a magistrates intervention to gain early release for anyone sooner than a mandatory 12-hour minimum stay behind bars.

A move in states to si-lence public protest began about a decade ago, around the time of the Occupy movement. The latest Tennessee statute was sparked by demonstrators who set up camp in Nashvilles War Memorial Plaza for nearly two months this year while seeking removal of a bust of Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, first leader the Ku Klux Klan, from the state Capitol building.

By some reports, as many as 40 states have considered or adopted direct or backdoor attempts modeled on a draft law prepared by a conservative alliance of legislators and corporations to restrain public protest. Some proposals include providing legal immunity for motorists who essentially absent a declaration of intent to injure or kill strike demonstrators standing in a public thoroughfare.

Some proposed laws have been deemed outright to be unconstitutional for targeting certain groups or simply for being too broad or too vague. But government officials can enact lawful restrictions on time, place and manner in how we protest. If upheld by the courts, such laws reasonably can limit the hours and locations of public demonstrations or individual protests, the size of signs or the number of people who can gather in public spaces or on sidewalks.

Such laws nonetheless can chill free speech in ways seemingly distant from the 45 words of the First Amendment. Being convicted of a felony also may mean forfeiting the rights to vote, carry a gun or obtain a professional license and negatively can affect your ability to get a job or obtain a mortgage.

In Florida, Gov. Ron DeSantis recently proposed not only felony charges on protestors, but also penalties on cities and towns deemed not to be taking appropriate law and order measures in response to demonstrations. If enacted and if the provisions survive court challenge Florida would have the harshest anti-protest laws in the nation.

DeSantis proposal, to be considered when the legislature meets in March, includes felony charges for obstructing traffic during an unauthorized protest or for toppling a monument; an initial no bail provision for those arrested during a demonstration, and a mandatory six-month jail term for anyone who strikes a law enforcement officer during a protest. Anyone who organizes or simply donates money to protesters would risk penalties under the states racketeering laws.

Tennessees chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union said the new law in that state law requiring 12-hour holds upon arrest, putting in place mandatory minimums and enhancing petty crimes to felony-level offenses will send a message loud and clear that Tennessee is no place to exercise your constitutional rights if state or local government entities disagree with you.

U.S. Supreme Court decisions stretching back more than 140 years have upheld our rights to assemble and petition. In 1937, the US. Supreme Court ruled unanimously in De Jonge v. Oregon that the right to peaceably assemble for lawful discussion, however unpopular the sponsorship, cannot be made a crime. And in 1939 the court held in Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization that streets and parks ... have immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public and, time out of mind, have been used for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens and discussing public questions.

Ten years later, Justice William O. Douglas, in Terminiello v. City of Chicago, wrote free speech is intended to ... invite dispute. It may indeed best serve its high purpose when it induces a condition of unrest, creates dissatisfaction with conditions as they are, or even stirs people to anger ...

It may strike at prejudices and preconceptions and have profound unsettling effects as it presses for acceptance of an idea.

More recent court rulings echo Douglas in acknowledgement that protest is inherently disruptive, may well be offensive or cause anguish to some, but is protected because of a need for robust public discussion around public policy and practices.

Yes, democracy is messy and public demonstrations at times may well inconvenience, insult or infuriate you and me. But legislative acts designed to restrain, remove or chill our rights to protest are not just unconstitutional, but also unpatriotic.

As James Madison, author of the First Amendment, once observed about the new nation: The censorial power is in the people over the government, and not in the government over the people.

Gene Policinski is chief operating officer of the Freedom Forum Institute and its First Amendment Center. He can be reached at gpolicinski@newseum.org or 202-292-6290.

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Don't allow First Amendment rights to be seen as 'wrongs' - The Record

We’re in for a wild First Amendment ride – Sunbury Daily Item

Buckle up, America. U.S. Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito may well have pulled the start switch on the First Amendments legal equivalent of a popular carnival attraction, the Tilt-a-Whirl a wild, spinning legislative ride propelled by a revolving wheel of judicial review.

In a speech Nov. 12 to the conservative Federalist Society, Alito offered a list of grievances about the state of individual rights in America, with a special focus on the freedoms of religion and speech.

Alito was very critical of a 5-4 Supreme Court decision this summer that rejected a churchs objection to Nevadas COVID-19-based restrictions on attendance at religious services. He pointed out that casinos in that state were limited to 50 percent capacity, while houses of worship were subject to a smaller, flat 50-person limit.

Rejecting this disparate treatment should not have been a very tough call, he said. Take a quick look at the Constitution. You will see the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment, which protects religious liberty. You will not find a craps clause, or a blackjack clause, or a slot machine clause.

Noting that comedian George Carlin once identified seven dirty words not allowed to be spoken on television, Alito said that today you can see shows on your TV screen in which the dialogue appears at times to consist almost entirely of those words But it would be easy to put together a new list called Things You Cant Say If You Are a Student or a Professor at a College or University or an Employee of Many Big Corporations. And there wouldnt be just seven items on that list. Seventy times seven would be closer.

Following the courts legalization of same-sex marriage, which he opposed, Alito predicted vilification of those opposing the decision. In his speech, Alito claimed that You cant say that marriage is a union between one man and one woman. Until very recently, thats what the vast majority of Americans thought. Now its considered bigotry.

A second justice, Clarence Thomas, has twice this year called for the court to revisit and perhaps reverse a landmark 1964 free speech and free press case, New York Times v. Sullivan, which generally rules out successful defamation lawsuits by political or public persons without evidence of actual malice.

A new, 6-3 conservative balance on the court may provide additional support for both Alito and Thomas and for the construction of new legal shields based on religious views against anti-discrimination laws. The court will rule next spring in Fulton v. City of Philadelphia, involving that citys attempt to withhold public funds from a Catholic social workgroup that refuses to consider same-sex couples when placing children for adoption.

Both Republicans and Democrats in Congress seem intent on reviewing First Amendment rights and special legal protections under Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, now enjoyed by Silicon Valley tech companies. The changes would target social media giants such as Twitter and Facebook and perhaps even attempt to reduce Googles dominant position among search engines.

Advocates say changes and limits are needed to ensure diverse viewpoints. Removing some or all of those protections, the companies argue, would force them to adopt draconian restrictions on what we freely say online in these 21st-century equivalents of the colonial public square.

Congress also is expected to quickly take up other complicated, First Amendment-ish aspects around free speech on the web that is, balancing the need to fight misinformation and distortion of facts online with unfettered access by individuals to this new, electronic version of the public square.

A new conservative majority on the U.S. Supreme Court seems likely to heed Alitos call to revisit both new and long-standing First Amendment rulings, particularly on religion and speech. State legislatures in more than 40 states seem bent on rewriting laws across a dizzying array of rulings, all aimed at restricting protest and assembly.

Freedom of the press will continue to be beset by both critics who would diminish its First Amendment protections and those advocates who would save independent American journalism by inserting government into the unprecedented role of at least a partial funder.

And within the First Amendment scholarly community itself, there is growing sentiment that the original 45 words, adopted in 1791, need to be reworked and revised to meet the challenges of a modern, 24/7 globally connected planetary society.

Even the relatively new doctrine of government speech is gaining ground that government itself has free speech rights, as in what slogans are banned from state-issued license plates, or which religious symbols are allowed in public spaces. As it happens, Justice Alito has played both a major role in court decisions advancing the doctrine but also cautioning against its overuse.

For nearly 100 years, First Amendment law has been largely focused on protecting the free expression of individual viewpoints, particularly those considered fringe or extreme. Now in vogue: Claims to a right not to hear someones views.

Many of these new voices and approaches in the marketplace of ideas echo Alitos basic pitch: Its time for conservative views and limits to take over from what they see as overly broad, liberal expansions across the five freedoms.

Keep both hands and feet firmly inside the whirling legal constructs, dear fellow citizens. And pay close attention to what people are saying in the upcoming debates over balancing our core freedoms with other values.

Hang on through the ride and listen to the debates as if the very meaning and application of the First Amendment for the next generation depends on it because it will.

Gene Policinski is a senior fellow for the First Amendment at the Freedom Forum, and president and chief operating officer of the Freedom Forum Institute.

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We're in for a wild First Amendment ride - Sunbury Daily Item

Chief diversity officer: ‘First Amendment excuse is out’ regarding offensive speech – The College Fix

In a recent interview with the student paper, the chief diversity officer at Georgia Southern University said that the First Amendment excuse is out when it comes to dealing with insensitive and racist speech.

The George-AnnesAndy Cole prompted TaJuan Wilson by discussing a blackface incident from June: The university did not rescind the admission of a student who had donned black makeup, scrawled the N-word on his forehead and posted a pic on social media.

You know, a lot of students take issue with the words Georgia Southern usesthe First Amendment excuse, Cole told Wilson. A lot of students feel that all Georgia Southern says is, Well, we respect the right to the First Amendment.

Cole argued that, despite the futility of going to court over an obvious free speech matter, the university could show its commitment to anti-racism by doing just that: Hey, we hate this so much that were willing to go to court for it.

Wilson (at left) responded: I agree with you 100-percent the I agree with you 100-percent the First Amendment excuse is out. Right? First Amendment excuse is out. Right? Folks are sick of that.

The diversity officer did cede that the First Amendment is important and that it protect[s] folks on both sides of an issue. He also concurred that public colleges absolutely would lose in court if they expelled students for merely saying something stupid.

Wilson also told Cole his job isnt to punish students who have done or said offensive things. Nevertheless, he reiterated the excuse of free speech doesnt wash: Whats most important, he said, is showing up for students in the moment.

Despite the nebulousness, Dr. Wilson might be saying that spewing hateful racial epithets merely because one can is a poor excuse. And hed be correct. But if the facts of the June blackface incident are as reported, it seems to be merely an instance of a teenager acting stupid and therein lies the import of the First Amendment.

The College Fix reached out to Dr. Wilson for clarification of his remarks, but he did not respond.

Last year, Wilson suddenly resigned from the University of Iowa as associate vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion claiming it wasnt the right fit for him. His salary was close to a quarter of a million dollars annually, and despite not staying in his position for a full year, he wasnt required to repay $25k in moving expenses.

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Chief diversity officer: 'First Amendment excuse is out' regarding offensive speech - The College Fix