Access to Public Health Information in the Age of COVID-19 – Columbia University

This is part of aColumbia Newsseries, titled Lessons Learned, which invites the Columbia community to reflect on the pandemic and the insights they have gained from their COVID-19 experience. These essays speak to the innovation, creativity and resourcefulness we have witnessed during this period of unprecedented challenge, as well as some of the silver linings in the actions we have had to take by necessity.

As the nation continues to grapple with the enormity of the COVID-19 pandemic, concerns about the publics access to the data and information it needs to evaluate critical health and policy decisions have become increasingly urgent.

The stakes couldnt be higherthe staggering demand for treatments and vaccines, the hundreds of billions of dollars on the line, and the rush to a cure, all mean that we need access to that data more than ever. Data can help show us whether regulators are doing their jobs too. This is critically important, especially because President Trump has been promoting unproved cures, and because of the reports of retaliation against officials inside the administration who have insisted on high standards and refused to accommodate politically motivated interference with funding and study design.

The first thing we need is solidly designed studies for candidate treatments and vaccinesthat itself isnt assured, and companies are doing really crazy things, like throwing a whole handful of drugs at patients with study designs that make it impossible to sort out the true effects of the drugs. The public needs to know that we need to wait for randomized controlled trial results before we know what works. And we need national and international coordination to ensure that the most important candidates are being tested in some coordinated fashion, and that the design of the tests can give us answers.

We should be concerned about reports that employees of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention need to get approval before speaking publicly about COVID-19 because it hinders the flow of accurate information to the public. This administrationand particularly Trump himselfhave repeatedly lied or misled the public about everything from how serious this infection is, to how many tests we have. Inside of these federal agencies there are many good scientists, people whose job it is to collate and publish information and data that the public desperately needs. We cannot shape our response without good data and information, and in a pandemic that means listening to scientists, and not politicians, about questions of science.

Amy Kapczynski is a seniorvisiting research scholar at the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University.

This piece has been adapted from an interview with the Knight First Amendment Institute'sKaty Glenn Bass.

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Access to Public Health Information in the Age of COVID-19 - Columbia University

VERIFY: The Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing masks at a grocery store – WBIR.com

If a medical condition prevents you from wearing a mask, and a business employee asks about your medical condition, is that a violation the Fourth Amendment?

WASHINGTON D.C., DC QUESTION:

If a medical condition prevents someone from wearing a mask, and a business employee asks about his/her medical condition, is that a violation of that person's Fourth Amendment right?

Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution

Erwin Chemerinsky- Dean and Professor of Law at University of California Berkeley School of Law

Robert Dinerstein- Acting Dean at American University Washington College of Law and Director of the Disability Rights Law Clinic

Several posts going around claim that a business can't legally ask you about your medical condition, because that would violate the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

So we're verifying if the Fourth Amendment bans a private business from asking about medical conditions.

Our Verify researchers contacted Erwin Chemerinsky with Berkeley School of Law and Robert Dinerstein with American University's Washington College of Law and their Disability Rights Law Clinic.

Boiled down,the Fourth Amendment is your right to privacy, and protects a person against unreasonable searches and seizures.

The Fourth Amendment only applies to the government, just like the First Amendment only limits what the government can do with regard to freedom of speech," Chemerinsky said. "The Constitution is meant to limit government action, and it doesn't restrict what private businesses, private universities or private entities can do."

Chemerinsky also said that simply asking a personal question is not considered a search.

Robert Dinerstein agreed.

"The Fourth Amendment really has no applicability here," he said. "The relevant law is the Americans with Disabilities Act."

So we can Verify, experts said the Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing a mask at a business.

Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, it's illegal to discriminate against a person because of a disability. So in a situation where someone says they can't wear a mask because of a medical condition, Dinerstein suggests taking them at their word and offering a reasonable accommodation.

You should take the person at his or her word at that point, I think, and it's a whole lot easier and less intrusive, Dinerstein said. Who walks around with medical documentation when you want to go to the grocery store?

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VERIFY: The Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing masks at a grocery store - WBIR.com

Why Reforms to Section 230 Could Radically Change How You Use the Internet – NBC New York

Does the phrase 'Section 230' mean anything to you? Well, if you've ever used the Internet it actually does whether you realize it or not. Here's what it is and why it matters.

Section 230 is just 26 words, passed into law in 1996, that protects Internet providers and websites from legal liability if someone using their platform or service posts something illegal.

It reads, "no provider or user of an interactive computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider. It's often considered the single most-important piece of legislation that helped innovate the Internet.

The legal protections offered by Sec. 230 have allowed sites like Google, Yelp, YouTube, Facebook and countless others to provide users a place to quickly and easily post their videos, reviews, photos, and other content. It also allows Internet service providers to provide cheap and easily-accessible Internet.

Without that law, websites and Internet service providers could be liable for users actions online, meaning they might otherwise restrict the ability to create and post content without moderation.

Given the sheer size of user-generated websites, the Electronic Frontier Foundation writes, it would be infeasible for online intermediaries to prevent objectionable content from cropping up on their site. Rather than face potential liability for their users' actions, most would likely not host any user content at all or would need to protect themselves by being actively engaged in censoring what we say, what we see, and what we do online.

After Twitter flagged several of his tweets for violating company policies, President Trump issued an Executive Order on Preventing Online Censorship that directed his administration to consider reforms to Sec. 230. He specifically mentioned Twitter, selective censorship, and the goal of eliminating political bias.

Tech companies warned the narrowing the Sec. 230s legal protections would stifle innovation online and could permanently alter the way we use the Internet.

If the websites were legally responsible for every word, every image, (and) every video their users posted...they might not allow your content, altogether, said Jeff Kosseff, a cybersecurity professor at the Naval Academy and author of The Twenty-Six Words That Created The Internet. The other possibility...would be that platforms want to incur less liability, so they'll just take a hands off approach and allow everything."

Former Vice President and presumptive democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has also suggested revoking the law because he doesnt think sites like Facebook are doing enough to censor false and hateful content.

Yes. Because of Section 230, a judge ruled the Congressman could not sue Twitter over a parody account, Devin Nunes Cow, which now has more than 750,000 followers.

The First Amendment prohibits Congress from passing laws that limit free speech. However, the First Amendment does not pertain to rules created by private businesses.

You can reach out to your member of Congress to voice your opinion. And, your votes in November will help determine the future of Section 230 too.

Jeff Kosseffs book details the origins and impact of Section 230, and the EFF provides Section 230 resources and news on its website.

Sometimes, adults make things more complicated than necessary. NBCLX told this story using children on-camera because its a simple law that needed a simple explanation.

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Why Reforms to Section 230 Could Radically Change How You Use the Internet - NBC New York

VERIFY: The Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing masks at a grocery store – WUSA9.com

If a medical condition prevents you from wearing a mask, and a business employee asks about your medical condition, is that a violation the Fourth Amendment?

WASHINGTON D.C., DC QUESTION:

If a medical condition prevents someone from wearing a mask, and a business employee asks about his/her medical condition, is that a violation of that person's Fourth Amendment right?

Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution

Erwin Chemerinsky- Dean and Professor of Law at University of California Berkeley School of Law

Robert Dinerstein- Acting Dean at American University Washington College of Law and Director of the Disability Rights Law Clinic

Several posts going around claim that a business can't legally ask you about your medical condition, because that would violate the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

So we're verifying if the Fourth Amendment bans a private business from asking about medical conditions.

Our Verify researchers contacted Erwin Chemerinsky with Berkeley School of Law and Robert Dinerstein with American University's Washington College of Law and their Disability Rights Law Clinic.

Boiled down,the Fourth Amendment is your right to privacy, and protects a person against unreasonable searches and seizures.

The Fourth Amendment only applies to the government, just like the First Amendment only limits what the government can do with regard to freedom of speech," Chemerinsky said. "The Constitution is meant to limit government action, and it doesn't restrict what private businesses, private universities or private entities can do."

Chemerinsky also said that simply asking a personal question is not considered a search.

Robert Dinerstein agreed.

"The Fourth Amendment really has no applicability here," he said. "The relevant law is the Americans with Disabilities Act."

So we can Verify, experts said the Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing a mask at a business.

Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, it's illegal to discriminate against a person because of a disability. So in a situation where someone says they can't wear a mask because of a medical condition, Dinerstein suggests taking them at their word and offering a reasonable accommodation.

You should take the person at his or her word at that point, I think, and it's a whole lot easier and less intrusive, Dinerstein said. Who walks around with medical documentation when you want to go to the grocery store?

Excerpt from:

VERIFY: The Fourth Amendment has nothing to do with wearing masks at a grocery store - WUSA9.com

Reclaim Idaho: Court delays would leave K-12 initiative ‘dead in the water’ – Idaho EdNews

The states attempts to delay electronic signature gathering would leave Reclaim Idahos K-12 funding initiative dead in the water, attorneys for the group said Tuesday.

In a filing before the U.S. Supreme Court, Reclaim Idaho attorneys Deborah Ferguson and Craig Durham urge justices to let the online campaign continue. U.S. District Judge B. Lynn Winmill ordered the state to allow Reclaim Idaho to resume signature gathering last month, and the group began the effort last week.

The court simply gave Reclaim Idaho an opportunity far from a sure thing to meet Idahos rigorous standards to qualify its initiative for the fall ballot, Ferguson and Durham wrote. If they are successful, voters can vote against the initiative if they so choose.

Tuesdays filing, requested by Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan, is the latest development in a complex legal dispute between Reclaim Idaho and state leaders a struggle that has stretched across three levels of the federal judiciary:

In Tuesdays response, Reclaim Idaho attorneys dismissed two of the states arguments that the federal court orders would lead to voter confusion, and that online signature gathering is ripe for fraud and abuse.

Technology offers a safe, secure, and reliable alternative to in-person signature gathering through electronic petition circulation and electronic signatures, Ferguson and Durham wrote. Courts rely on the authenticity of electronic signatures every day. That includes Idaho courts.

Reclaim Idahos Invest in Idaho initiative would increase corporate tax rates and income tax rates for Idahoans making more than $250,000 a year. The new taxes, $170 million to $200 million, would go into a dedicated fund for K-12 programs.

If the initiative qualifies for the November ballot, it would require a simple majority to pass.

Senior reporter and blogger Kevin Richert specializes in education politics and education policy. He has more than 30 years of experience in Idaho journalism. He is a frequent guest on KIVI 6 On Your Side; "Idaho Reports" on Idaho Public Television; and "Idaho Matters" on Boise State Public Radio. Follow Kevin on Twitter: @KevinRichert. He can be reached at [emailprotected]

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Reclaim Idaho: Court delays would leave K-12 initiative 'dead in the water' - Idaho EdNews

New Developments in COVID-19 Litigation for New York City Landlords: Saving Grace or Hail Mary? – JD Supra

Since the COVID-19 pandemic began, real estate owners and tenants have faced unprecedented day-to-day operational challenges from the loss of business and income. Two new real estate lawsuits seek to address these issues.

The first is by a flagship retail lingerie store tenant doing business in the heart of Herald Square. The second is by property owners seeking a judicial declaration that new legislation enacted by the City Council on June 20 [Commercial Harassment Law (New York City Local Law 53 of 2020), Residential Harassment Law (New York City Local Law 56 of 2020), and the Guaranty Law (New York City Local Law 55 of 2020), collectively, the Harassment Law] is constitutionally defective and unenforceable. Victorias Secret Stores v. Herald Square Owner LLC, No. 651833/2020, (N.Y. Cty. Sup. Ct. 2020) and Melendez et al. v. City of New York et al., No. 20 Civ. 05301, (S.D.N.Y. 2020). The outcomes of these two cases may significantly impact the real estate industry and subsequent lawsuits, shifting the burdens of the pandemic from one segment of society to another.

On June 8, 2020, Victorias Secret sued its landlord, Herald Square Owner LLC, in New York State Supreme Court in connection with its lease of Two Herald Square claiming the store has been shuttered since mid-March and abandoned due to COVID-19. Victorias Secret seeks a declaration that its obligation to pay the $937,734.17 monthly rent is rescinded. The suit is predicated on three legal theories: frustration of purpose, impossibility of performance and reformation of the lease.

The Landlord recently moved to dismiss the Complaint. It first alleges that the parties negotiated and agreed to limit the abatement of rent (in a provision not found in the standard form commercial leases), whereby the Tenant agreed that if forced to close its store for 6 consecutive days solely because Landlord failed to perform any obligation, where such failure is expressly not caused by governmental preemption in connection with a national emergency or government order. Second, it argues that the contractual defenses of frustration of purpose and impossibility of performance are limited to cases where the event was not foreseen at the time the lease was made and the parties could have limited their exposure contractually, but did not do so. Third, the Landlord contends that the two types permissible reformation (scriveners error and mutual mistake) do not apply here, insofar as this particular lease generally allocated risk requiring the Tenant to pay rent for any forced store closing that is not due to an inexcusable failure solely by the Landlord, that the mistake was not about a fact existing at the time of lease execution and that such reformation is time-barred (6 years from the date of signing here, August 2001).

Victorias Secrets opposition to the Landlords motion is not due until July 29, 2020. Oral argument awaits.

On July 10, plaintiffs Marcia Melendez and Ling Yang both first-generation immigrants and landlords, sued in the Southern District of New York seeking to invalidate the Harassment Laws and Guarantee Law. They allege that the Harassment Laws violate the First Amendment, insofar as they prohibit otherwise lawful commercial speech (i.e., owners requesting the payment of rent and back rent). They contend that the Harassment Laws impermissibly restrict speech, and do not directly advance a government interest, nor are they tailored to meet that interest. Plaintiffs claim that the interest in helping small business owners is not advanced by the legislation, which actually hurts them as small business property owners insofar as it prevents them from making otherwise lawful requests for rent and back rent. The Plaintiffs further claim that the legislation is overly broad and vague by failing to define material terms. (Notably, the law itself does not define the term threatening or impacted by COVID-19.) The Harassment Laws impose civil penalties of $10,000 - $50,000. Parallel Fourteenth Amendment due process claims are also alleged under both federal and state law.

The Plaintiffs also bring another constitutional challenge against the Guarantee Law, claiming that it violates the Contracts Clause of the US Constitution that restricts passage of any law impairing the obligation of contracts (here, leases), by prohibiting landlords from enforcing personal (good guy) guarantees for unpaid rent owed by the tenant for the period March 7, 2020 to September 20, 2020. They argue that the law bars them forever from collecting unpaid rent, utilities, fees, building maintenance charges, or taxes owed by the tenant for defaults occurring during the same seven-month period by defining such collection efforts as harassment.

Finally, the Plaintiffs allege that the Harassment Laws directly conflict with existing New York State laws, particularly the State Legislatures conferring exclusive jurisdiction upon the Governor the authority to shape the contours of his Executive Orders on a state-wide basis to address the pandemic. The City has not yet responded to the lawsuit, which has been assigned to Judge Gregory H. Woods.

As we noted in our prior AF Alert, the force majeure defense in New York generally does not apply to the obligation to pay rent. This may be why Victorias Secret did not allege it (or possibly because as the landlord alleges, no such clause is in the lease). By the same token, New York law restricts the defenses of impossibility of performance and frustration of purpose to instances where the event triggering the lawsuit was unforeseen at the time the parties signed the lease. Victorias Secret like many other suits recently filed thus pits the classic battle between the express language of the lease against the tenants contention that COVID-19 was unforeseen. Parties would be advised to review their lease with a view toward negotiating appropriate language in connection with amendments, renewals, or rent adjustments. It would also be prudent to review insurance policies for coverage for specific causes of loss.

In regard to the Melendez case, the United States Supreme Courts decision in Central Hudson Gas and Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission (1980) set up the first question that the district court likely will address: whether the speech at issue here (owners request for rent or back rent) is fraudulent or illegal. The Plaintiffs contend that there was negligible evidence demonstrating that landlords were using fraudulent means in requesting the rent. If the speech is found fraudulent or illegal, though, government regulation may be freely applied without First Amendment constraints. Proper consideration of whether the governments interest in protecting tenants was sufficiently tailored will also be at issue. The claims will also test whether the demand for rent during such a pandemic is fraught with overreaching or simply a contractual obligation that ought to be enforced. Stay tuned.

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New Developments in COVID-19 Litigation for New York City Landlords: Saving Grace or Hail Mary? - JD Supra

The Protean Progressive Free Speech Clause – Forbes

13th November 1953: Members of Supreme Court. Seated, Felix Frankfurter (far left) and William O ... [+] Douglas (far right). Standing, Robert H. Jackson (second from left). (Photo by George Tames/New York Times Co./Getty Images)

Felix Frankfurter was a man of the Left. He wrote often for The New Republic, and he helped found the ACLU. He lobbied the United States to recognize the Soviet Union during the Russian Civil War. He was the foremost proponent of a new trial for the anarchists Sacco and Vanzetti.

While Frankfurter was agitating and organizing as a professor at Harvard Law School in the 1910s and 20s, the Supreme Court was striking down state licensing requirements, consumer-protection rules, and wage-and-hour laws. Like many on the Left of that day, therefore, Frankfurter believed in judicial restraint. Justice Louis Brandeis captured the contemporary progressive attitude in a 1932 dissent. It is one of the happy incidents of the federal system, he wrote, that a single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory and try novel social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.

Brandeiss great ally on the court was Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. It was not progressive principle that made Holmes a restrained judge; it was a bullet in the neck in the Civil War. What damned fools people are who believe things, he once told the socialist professor Harold Laski. Although he said it of a pacifist in a case before the court, the line captures how he saw most things, including judging. Oddly enough, the idealistic Frankfurter worshiped the cynical Holmes. A justice willing to uphold social legislation he thought pointless, even ridiculous, was in Frankfurters eyes the pattern of a sound judge. This might explain why Frankfurters own judicial principles would remain fixed as times changed.

And change they did. Frankfurter became a justice in 1939. The next year, on behalf of an 8-1 majority of the court, he declared that the First Amendment has nothing to say about the expulsion from school of Jehovahs Witnesses who refuse to pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States. Local governments must, Frankfurter thought, have the authority to safeguard the nations fellowship. Just three years later, however, in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943), the court voted 6-to-3 to overturn Frankfurters opinion. If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, Justice Robert Jackson wrote for the majority, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.

Now in dissent, Frankfurter fumed about judges who write their private notions of policy into the Constitution. It must be remembered, he wrote, quoting Holmes, that legislatures are ultimate guardians of the liberties and welfare of the people in quite as great a degree as the courts. True, but not a very compelling point in a case about forcing schoolchildren to swear an oath against their (and their parents) will.

Shortly after the First World War, in fact, Holmes had started to take a more expansive view of the Free Speech Clause. When men have realized that time has upset many fighting faiths, he explained in dissent in Abrams v. United States (1919), they may come to believe even more than they believe the very foundations of their own conduct that the ultimate good desired is better reached by free trade in ideas. When it came to free speech, Holmes could use his old philosophical skepticism to justify a new judicial assertiveness. His pivot was driven in part by distress at the persecution Frankfurter and Laski suffered at Harvard for their radical views. Yet Frankfurter himself remained in awe of the Holmes who told Laski, just a year after Abrams, that if the people want to go to hell, a judges job is to help them along.

Frankfurter clashed often with a group of justices, led by William Brennan and William Douglas, who placed little stock in text, precedent, or history. This activist wing became increasingly dominant. Frankfurters hour was pastor, rather, had never come. When Brennan, writing for the court in Baker v. Carr (1962), overturned a raft of precedents on the way to declaring that legislative redistricting decisions can be challenged in court, Frankfurter issued a long and bitter dissent, suffered a stroke, and retired.

Frankfurter complained that the courts hard left produced opinions that were shoddy and result-oriented. He might have added anarchic. In 1968 a man wore a jacket emblazoned with the words F*** the Draft in a courthouse. He was arrested and prosecuted for disturbing the peace ... by offensive conduct. In his final months on the court, John Marshall Harlan wrote the decision in the mans appeal. An heir, in many ways, of Holmes, Brandeis, and Frankfurter, Harlan set a trend for many later conservative justices by evolving on the bench. His opinion in Cohen v. California (1971) declared the protester's conviction inconsistent with the First Amendment.

Because the offensive-conduct statute applied throughout the state, the defendant, Harlan concluded, was not on notice that certain kinds of otherwise permissible speech or conduct would ... not be tolerated in certain places. Harlan dodged the key questionwhat counts as offensive conduct in a courthouseby denying that the law can turn on context or matters of degree. Having thus oversimplified the case (and infantilized every citizen), he was free to ask simply whether a state may ban the use of expletives in public. At that point he could at least have knocked down his straw man with a straightforward no. Instead Harlan offered a paean to vulgar relativism, a tract now remembered mainly for the assertion that one mans vulgarity is anothers lyric. As Robert Bork noted in The Tempting of America, that statement is a challenge to all laws on all subjects. After all, one mans larceny is anothers just distribution of goods.

Does Cohen remain a totem of left-wing free-speech jurisprudence? The courts progressives seem to have reversed gear. Take the courts decision earlier this month in Barr v. American Association of Political Consultants Inc. The Telephone Consumer Protection Act bans almost all robocalls to cell phones. The Act contains an exception for robocalls that seek to collect a debt owed to the federal government. At issue in Barr was whether this carveout violates the First Amendment. While acknowledging that robocalls are widely despised, the court concluded, by a vote of 6-to-3, that the government nonetheless may not engage in content-based discrimination, baselessly favoring some robocalls over others.

Writing for himself and Justices Ginsburg and Kagan, Justice Breyer argued in dissent that robocalls are not vital to core First Amendment objectives, such as protecting peoples ability to speak or to transmit their views to government. Congress, in Breyers view, should have greater leeway to impose ordinary regulatory programs that pose little threat to the exchange of thought. Maybe sobut this is not the outlook on display in Cohen. Say the government prohibits writing political statements on tax returns. According to the Barr dissent, it is hard to imagine that such a rule would threaten political speech in the marketplace of ideas. Dont count on the wing of the court that let a man say F*** the Draft in a courthouse in 1968 to let you say F*** Taxes on a tax form today.

Why has the courts left wing lost its enthusiasm for free-speech absolutism? One factor is the emergence on the court of a right wing that upholds the free-speech rights of corporations. No longer the only ones patrolling constitutional boundaries, the progressives are more careful about loose rights talk.

Another factor might soon come to the fore. If the Left conquers American culture, sheds liberal values, and becomes a force for conformity, will the progressive justices shift in turn? In the case of a child expelled from school for refusing to acknowledge, and renounce, her privilege, would they chastise the wielders of power and discuss the fixed star in our constitutional constellation? Or would they gain a new understanding of Justice Frankfurters belief in the value of making parents accept the training of [their] children in good citizenship? In the appeal of a man charged with offensive conduct for wearing, amid a hostile crowd, a jacket maligning political correctness, would they use Cohen to lecture the easily offended about simply avert[ing] their eyes to avoid further bombardment of their sensitivities? Or might they suddenly see wisdom in the Cohen dissenters claim that absurd and immature antic[s] are conduct rather than speech?

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The Protean Progressive Free Speech Clause - Forbes

First Amendment | Contents & Supreme Court Interpretations …

First Amendment, amendment (1791) to the Constitution of the United States that is part of the Bill of Rights and reads,

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.

The clauses of the amendment are often called the establishment clause, the free exercise clause, the free speech clause, the free press clause, the assembly clause, and the petition clause.

The First Amendment, like the rest of the Bill of Rights, originally restricted only what the federal government may do and did not bind the states. Most state constitutions had their own bills of rights, and those generally included provisions similar to those found in the First Amendment. But the state provisions could be enforced only by state courts.

In 1868, however, the Fourteenth Amendment was added to the U.S. Constitution, and it prohibited states from denying people liberty without due process. Since then the U.S. Supreme Court has gradually used the due process clause to apply most of the Bill of Rights to state governments. In particular, from the 1920s to the 40s the Supreme Court applied all the clauses of the First Amendment to the states. Thus, the First Amendment now covers actions by federal, state, and local governments. The First Amendment also applies to all branches of government, including legislatures, courts, juries, and executive officials and agencies. This includes public employers, public university systems, and public school systems.

The First Amendment, however, applies only to restrictions imposed by the government, since the First and Fourteenth amendments refer only to government action. As a result, if a private employer fires an employee because of the employees speech, there is no First Amendment violation. There is likewise no violation if a private university expels a student for what the student said, if a commercial landlord restricts what bumper stickers are sold on the property it owns, or if an Internet service provider refuses to host certain Web sites.

Legislatures sometimes enact laws that protect speakers or religious observers from retaliation by private organizations. For example, Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964 bans religious discrimination even by private employers. Similarly, laws in some states prohibit employers from firing employees for off-duty political activity. But such prohibitions are imposed by legislative choice rather than by the First Amendment.

The freedoms of speech, of the press, of assembly, and to petitiondiscussed here together as freedom of expressionbroadly protect expression from governmental restrictions. Thus, for instance, the government may not outlaw antiwar speech, speech praising violence, racist speech, pro-communist speech, and the like. Nor may the government impose special taxes on speech on certain topics or limit demonstrations that express certain views. The government also may not authorize civil lawsuits based on peoples speech, unless the speech falls within a traditionally recognized First Amendment exception. This is why, for example, people may not sue for emotional distress inflicted by offensive magazine articles about them, unless the articles are not just offensive but include false statements that fall within the defamation exception (see below Permissible restrictions on expression).

The free expression guarantees are not limited to political speech. They also cover speech about science, religion, morality, and social issues as well as art and even personal gossip.

Freedom of the press confirms that the government may not restrict mass communication. It does not, however, give media businesses any additional constitutional rights beyond what nonprofessional speakers have.

Freedom of petition protects the right to communicate with government officials. This includes lobbying government officials and petitioning the courts by filing lawsuits, unless the court concludes that the lawsuit clearly lacks any legal basis.

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First Amendment | Contents & Supreme Court Interpretations ...

Staff column: the Wide World of Politics, in Brighton – Brighton Standard-Blade

Im not old enough to have watched ABCs Wide World of Sports myself, but Ive heard tell. Apparently, there were all sorts of events televised on the program, from log rolling to arm wrestling to demolition derbies.

The Blades news headlines werent so different this past week. On Tuesday, Brighton City Council unanimously voted to opt out of Tri-County Health Departments mask mandate, joining other cities that could be on the more conservative end of the political spectrum. Eventually, that vote was nullified by Gov. Jared Polis statewide mandate.

However, city councils vote, its leadup and its aftermath were fascinating to observe. Some people see mask wearing as a simple act that helps ensure public health and safety. Others cite different scientific claims arguing the opposite. Then theres a whole other cohort that opposes the mandate because they dont like orders from Tri-Countys board, who Mayor Greg Mills called unelected bureaucrats. After council cast its vote, residents didnt hesitate to share those differing opinions with fierce passion.

The night thereafter, I saw another side of politics I hadnt previously: First Amendment auditing. At a city council finalist meet-and-greet, three YouTubers showed up to pose a series of questions to finalist Jane Shang. All the while, they live streamed the confrontation on YouTube. After the confrontation happened, I pulled these figures aside to ask them questions, which they also proceeded to live stream.

The next day, I learned a little more about their shtick. First Amendment auditors is a term loosely used to describe a community of YouTubers that tests the First Amendments limits. A person in that camp who I spoke with described another auditor as a constitutionalist, or in this instance, someone who acts out of an inerrant, superseding belief in rights granted by the U.S. Constitution.

These auditors live stream themselves in public, confronting police officers or public officials who they allege are corrupt. They keep at it until, many times, authorities see no other choice but to arrest them. When that YouTuber is arrested, though, their supporters might see them as a martyr, only fueling the movement.

No arrests happened at the meet-and-greet, but the YouTubers certainly made a scene. Eric Brandt, one of the auditors in attendance, told me that instead of getting Shang to admit to wrongdoing, I was there to get that womans reaction. In other words, he was trolling Shang out of deeply held political beliefs, and he did it all through a specific social media platform.

The politics I observed this past week, with both the mask debate and First Amendment auditing, were completely new to me. I saw libertarianism and constitutionalism in ways I wasnt previously exposed to. By the way, Im not commenting on the merit of those ideologies or whether I think theyre right or wrong. Thats not my place as a reporter. My whole point is that Im fascinated by it all. You cant make it up.

Im not surprised that new forms of political eclecticism are coming out of the woodwork in Brighton. To the south of the city is relatively liberal Denver and to the north is relatively conservative Weld County. Brighton is smack dab in the middle. What surprises me is how eclectic that eclecticism is. So, Brighton, thanks for keeping it spicy.

Cheers,

Liam

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Staff column: the Wide World of Politics, in Brighton - Brighton Standard-Blade

Our View: We should demand that they stop – Daily Astorian

George Floyds death at the hands of Minneapolis police in May forced all of us to examine our attitudes toward institutional racism.

Protests around the country, from big cities like Portland to small towns like Astoria, are a potential turning point. White people who live in communities with very few Black, Hispanic or other people of color are confronting issues that for generations have been convenient to ignore.

One of the most difficult is that the police act on our behalf, using force derived from the governments we elect.

We have been fortunate on the North Coast that protests have been mostly peaceful.

In Portland, protests over the past several weeks have often spiraled into violence. Scenes of vandalism and looting, along with police overreach in attacking journalists and legal observers, have been shared across the United States.

The First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution gives people the right to peaceably assemble, but in nightly clashes downtown near the Multnomah County Justice Center and the Mark O. Hatfield U.S. Courthouse, demonstrators and police have struggled to find the line between protest and riot.

We trust Portland the people who live there, the police, the mayor and other city leaders can find that line.

Unfortunately, the Trump administrations misguided decision to deploy militarized federal agents has dragged the entire country into the streets of Portland.

Last week, a federal agent acting on our behalf, using force derived from the government we elected fired a less-lethal round at a protesters head, causing critical injuries. Oregon Public Broadcasting and other news media have reported that federal agents are patrolling in unmarked vans, snatching protesters who do not appear to be immediate threats to federal property.

The New York Times reported that federal agents on the ground in Portland were not specifically trained in riot control or mass demonstrations.

Oregon Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum filed a federal lawsuit to try to prevent federal agents from detaining protesters in Portland without identifying themselves or without probable cause or warrants. The lawsuit names the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the U.S. Marshals Service and the Federal Protective Service.

The lawsuit alleges their tactics violate the First Amendment right to peacefully gather, the Fourth Amendment right against unreasonable seizures and the Fifth Amendment right to due process.

Citizens who are reasonably afraid of being picked up and shoved into unmarked vans possibly by federal officers, possibly by individuals opposed to the protests will feel compelled to stay away, for their own personal safety, and will therefore be unable to express themselves in the way that they have the right to do, the lawsuit states.

Portland Mayor Ted Wheeler and Gov. Kate Brown have made it clear the federal agents are not welcome. The federal elected officials who represent us U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden, U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley and U.S. Rep. Suzanne Bonamici demanded the Trump administration remove the forces.

Wyden, in an op-ed for NBC News, faulted President Donald Trump. Not content with simply dropping squads of federal agents into my hometown to clash with peaceful protesters, as he first did in early July after signing an executive order to supposedly protect monuments from protesters, Trump and his acting secretary of Homeland Security, Chad Wolf, have now unleashed these agents like an occupying army complete with fatigues, military-style equipment and tactics that are utterly unacceptable in an American city.

These invaders are mounting this assault against my city on the flimsiest of justifications: While Acting Secretary Wolf rants about law and order, most of the incidents of violent anarchists he cites are actually graffiti, or low-level vandalism.

Portland was chosen as a stage for the Trump administration to make a political statement in an election year. But it would be a mistake to view what has been happening on the streets only through a partisan political lens.

Just like nearly everyone familiar with Floyds death saw the injustice, anyone looking at what federal agents have done in Portland should see the assault on our civil liberties.

They are acting on our behalf, using force derived from the government we elected. We should all demand that they stop.

See the rest here:

Our View: We should demand that they stop - Daily Astorian