1st Amendment Thread

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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:35 am

The First Amendment and Disclosure Regulations: Compelled Speech or Corporate Opportunism?

Lucien J. Dhooge

51 Am. Bus. L.J. 559 (Fall 2014)

INTRODUCTION
Government regulation of business in the United States is ubiquitous and inescapable. Although regulation may take many different approaches, one common form is based upon disclosure. Disclosure regulations affect every citizen's life in great and small ways on a daily basis from the food and drink we consume, 3 the clothes we wear, 4 the properties in which we reside, 5 the substances in products we utilize, 6 and, perhaps most intrusively, the income we derive from our labors. 7 Such regulations are imperative to the creation of knowledgeable consumers who have the ability to maximize their choices in an information-driven age. 8

...

This article analyzes recent challenges to disclosure regulations in the context of the type of speech and the appropriate level of constitutional scrutiny. The article concludes that recent attempts to apply strict scrutiny are an overreach and would have significant negative consequences for government regulation. However, application of the reasonable relationship test has not been sanctioned by the U.S. Supreme Court outside of the context of actual or potential consumer confusion or deception. The article further concludes that the appropriate level of review for the subset of disclosure regulations that do not implicate consumer confusion or deception is the intermediate standard set forth in Central Hudson. The article also concludes that the recent wave of First Amendment litigation truly implicates compelled speech concerns due to conflicting circuit court decisions and the absence of clear guidance in U.S. Supreme Court decisions. The legitimate constitutional issues raised in these challenges belie the conclusion that they are solely motivated by corporate opportunism.
Full Article: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1 ... 4/abstract
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:38 am

New York rejects HAMMAS plate as ‘patently offensive’

Eugene Volokh - September 4 Washington Post
NY1.com reports, as to a plate seen on a car that also “had a Palestinian flag spread across the windshield”:

“We are pulling this plate [HAMMAS] off the road as patently offensive,” Jackie McGinnis of the state Department of Motor Vehicles said in a statement. “The group represented by the name on the plate is also on the list of entities designated by the U.S. Government as a terrorist organization.”

But federal courts — including the Second Circuit, which covers (among other states) New York — have generally concluded that personalized license plates are a so-called “nonpublic forum,” which means the government may restrict speech on such plates but only in viewpoint-neutral ways. Viewpoint-based restrictions on such plates are unconstitutional.

Here, the removal of the HAMMAS plate is indeed viewpoint-based — what makes the plate offensive is precisely that it expresses support for a particular organization. It’s an evil organization that does evil things, but restrictions on expressions of support for evil organizations are nonetheless viewpoint-based restrictions, and thus unconstitutional. Just as a state may not reject the license plate ARYAN-1 (that’s what an Eighth Circuit decision, applying a similar standard to the Second Circuit standard, held), so it may not reject HAMMAS.

Now there are quite plausible arguments that the state should be free to decide what to allow on plates that it issues, especially since people would in any event be free to put on whatever bumper stickers they please. Some government agencies have argued that the plates are “government speech,” in which the government can select which viewpoints are allowed and which are forbidden. But that’s not the conclusion that courts have generally reached on this point.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volo ... offensive/
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:38 am

Texas court throws out part of 'upskirt' photo law

Michael Muskal - LA Times
The top criminal court in Texas has struck down part of a law banning “upskirt” photos, becoming the latest state to try to define the line between constitutionally protected speech and personal privacy.

The Texas ruling, involving photos at a water park of swimsuit-clad females, including children, is at least the second state court to weigh in on the propriety of taking pictures in public spaces. In March, Massachusetts’ Supreme Judicial Court ruled that state law does not protect women’s privacy from a man with a cellphone who snapped upskirt photos on a Boston trolley.

“I think the central issue here is the expectation of privacy in a public place,” Gene Policinski, chief operating officer of the Newseum Institute and senior vice president of its First Amendment Center, told the Los Angeles Times on Friday. “With new technology, we have to redefine what is privacy in the public square. Fifty years ago upskirting wouldn’t have been an issue. Now we have cellphones and tiny cameras that make these photos easy. Laws will have to address this.”

...

The Texas law, part of the penal code, prohibits improper photography or visual recording “with intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of the defendant,” according to the court. It was that provision of arousal that became an important part of the court’s decision because of the questions of how to determine what is in a defendant’s mind.

In the Texas case, Ronald Thompson was accused of 26 counts of violating the state law, including several that refer to images of “unknown female with various colors of bathing suits or bikinis ‘in’ or ‘at’ a water park.” Some of the images reportedly involved children.

After he was charged, Thompson filed a pretrial motion to drop the charges on the grounds that prosecution was “unconstitutional in violation of the 1st Amendment.” A trial court denied the application and an appeals court upheld it. The case went to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals.

The state had argued that photography is conduct and is not inherently expressive, thus the 1st Amendment does not apply. “Photography is essentially nothing more than making a chemical or electronic record of an arrangement of refracted electromagnetic radiation (light) at a given period of time,” the court papers quote the state’s argument.

But the court rejected that limited vision of photography in an 8-1 ruling released last week.

“The camera is essentially the photographer's pen and paintbrush,” Presiding Judge Sharon Keller wrote in the majority opinion. “A person's purposeful creation of photographs and visual recordings is entitled to the same 1st Amendment protection as the photographs and visual recordings themselves.”

Once it had decided photography was protected by the 1st Amendment, the court went on to deal with the question of a photographer’s thoughts. It decided the law couldn’t protect the objects of the photos from the photographer’s thinking.

“Protecting someone who appears in public from being the object of sexual thoughts seems to be the sort of ‘paternalistic interest in regulating the defendant’s mind’ that the 1st Amendment was designed to guard against,” Keller wrote. “We also keep in mind the Supreme Court’s admonition that the forms of speech that are exempt from 1st Amendment protection are limited, and we should not be quick to recognize new categories of unprotected expression.”

“The Texas law seems to be overly broad,” said Policinski, separating conduct, which can be punished, from the thoughts of the person charged. “The pattern in these cases has been for the legislators to come back when a court rules and draw a narrower law.”


http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow ... story.html

That's the problem with that pesky Bill of Rights--the perverts get to exercise them, too...
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:39 am

Twitter Sues the Government for Violating Its First Amendment Rights

Kim Zetter - Wired.com - 10.07.14
Twitter just sued the federal government over restrictions the government places on how much the company can disclose about surveillance requests it receives.

For months, Twitter has tried to negotiate with the government to expand the kind of information that it and other companies are allowed to disclose. But it failed. Today, Twitter asserts in its suit that preventing the company from telling users how often the government submits national security requests for user data is a violation of the First Amendment.

...

Twitter was not part of the legal challenges filed by the other companies but engaged in its own battle for more transparency. Last April, the company submitted a draft of the kind of transparency report it sought to make public.

Twitter sought, among other things, to narrow the scope for reporting statistics. Instead of reporting requests in a range of 0 to 999, it wanted to be able to report actual aggregate numbers for the number of NSL and FISA orders it received and to be able to break down, in smaller batches, each type of request. For example, it wanted to be able to report the number of NSLs and FISA orders it received in a range of 1-99.

The Justice Department responded in September that the proposed report contained classified information—without specifying which part of the information was classified—that could not be publicly released under the current FISA and National Security Letter laws. These statutes come with a gag order preventing service providers from disclosing the data requests they receive.

In today’s filing (.pdf), Twitter notes that while the government is allowed to engage “in extensive but incomplete speech about the scope of its national security surveillance activities” as they pertain to data obtained from U.S. companies, those companies are prohibited “from providing their own informed perspective” on the matter.

That gag essentially forced Twitter to either engage only in speech pre approved by the government or to refrain from speaking altogether, a violation of the Constitution.

“Twitter’s ability to respond to government statements about national security surveillance activities and to discuss the actual surveillance of Twitter users is being unconstitutionally restricted by statutes that prohibit and even criminalize a service provider’s disclosure of the number of national security letters (“NSLs”) and court orders issued pursuant to FISA that it has received, if any.”

Twitter also took issue with the vagueness of the government’s response, which did not specify what part of its proposed transparency report could not be published, preventing Twitter from publishing any of it.

“When the government intrudes on speech, the First Amendment requires that it
do so in the most limited way possible,” Twitter wrote in its filing. “The government has failed to meet this obligation.”

First Amendment Rights
The American Civil Liberties Union applauded the legal challenge to the gag orders.

“If these laws prohibit Twitter from disclosing basic information about government surveillance, then these laws violate the First Amendment,” said Jameel Jaffer, deputy legal director for the ACLU, in a statement. “The Constitution doesn’t permit the government to impose so broad a prohibition on the publication of truthful speech about government conduct. We hope that other technology companies will now follow Twitter’s lead. Technology companies have an obligation to protect their customers’ sensitive information against overbroad government surveillance, and to be candid with their customers about how their information is being used and shared.”

Twitter’s constitutional challenge is in good company and may have been emboldened by a court decision in another case last year. In that case, a U.S. District Judge ruled that so-called National Security Letters that come with an automatic gag order on the recipient are an unconstitutional impingement on free speech.

That ruling involves a challenge filed by the Electronic Frontier Foundation in 2011 on behalf of an unidentified ISP. The timing of the Twitter suit may not be coincidental. A federal appeals court is scheduled to hear oral arguments in the EFF case in San Francisco tomorrow.
http://www.wired.com/2014/10/twitter-sues-government/
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:39 am

MCCUTCHEON CALLS FOR A NATIONAL REFERENDUM ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE (LITERALLY)

Andrew Tutt

114 Colum. L. Rev. Sidebar 84 (Oct. 2014)
In McCutcheon v. FEC, the Supreme Court tightened First Amendment limits on Congress's authority to regulate campaign financing. McCutcheon ostensibly left in place the old regime that allows campaign-finance regulation so long as it strikes at quid pro quo corruption or its appearance. But two recurring themes in the McCutcheon opinion indicate that this standard will from hereon be more difficult to meet. One is that campaign-finance laws prevent individuals from participating meaningfully in democratic change. The second is that Congress cannot be trusted to pass campaign-finance laws because such laws are tainted by self-interest. As Chief Justice Roberts wrote in McCutcheon's plurality opinion, "[T]hose who govern should be the last people to help decide who should govern." This Essay argues that these two themes actually chart a way forward for those who wish to see greater regulation of campaign financing. If Congress were to hold a national referendum to reenact the limits the Supreme Court struck down in McCutcheon, those limits would be constitutional even though the same limits passed by Congress were not. The reason is that limits backed by a popular vote would satisfy McCutcheon's concerns with congressional self-dealing while vindicating directly its concern with maximizing each individual's opportunity to take an active part in democratic self-governance. Moreover, an answer from the People themselves to the most relevant question in any campaign-finance case-whether a practice gives rise to the appearance of corruption-is the best way one could imagine for discovering whether it does so. One might say that McCutcheon literally calls for a referendum on campaign finance. This Essay explores this notion in depth and closes by assessing the constitutionality and practicality of the referendum option.
Full Article: http://columbialawreview.org/National-referendum_Tutt/
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:40 am

"Savagery" in the Subways: Anti-Muslim Ads, the First Amendment, and the Efficacy of Counterspeech

Engy Abdelkader, Esq.

21 Asian Am. L.J. 43 (2014)
From San Francisco to Washington, D.C. to Detroit to Chicago to New York, anti-Muslim hate placards have recently appeared on government-owned transit systems in various cities around the country. Anti-Muslim hate groups designed, funded, and placed the inflammatory advertisements, representing a well-orchestrated campaign to demean and attack the minority Muslim community. The ads have culminated in hate crime charges in the subway-pushing death of an immigrant of South Asian descent, as well as diverse manifestations of counter, official, and private speech and First Amendment litigation in at least three jurisdictions, where well-meaning transit officials attempted to prevent the ads' placement. Interdisciplinary in its orientation, this Article first contemplates anti-Muslim sentiment in the United States more than a decade following the tragic events surrounding 9/11. Then, it describes three variant strands of the hate ads after identifying the anti-Muslim activists responsible for them. The Article thereafter engages in a comparative analysis of the First Amendment litigation that followed upon the heels of seemingly well-intentioned government censorship of the odious speech in New York, Detroit and Washington, D.C. These vignettes are woven together with a singular analytic thread: the effectiveness of counterspeech by officials and private entities as the preferred self-help remedy of first instance. Ultimately, the Article illustrates that while counterspeech is admittedly not without flaw, it nevertheless represents an effective non-judicial means for empowering individuals, educating communities, and undermining harmful or threatening expression, including the anti-Muslim hate speech here.
Full Article: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm ... id=2264791
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:40 am

Speech Beyond Borders: Extraterritoriality and the First Amendment

Anna Su

67 Vand. L. Rev. 1373 (Oct. 2014)

ABSTRACT
Does the First Amendment follow the flag? In Boumediene v. Bush, the Supreme Court categorically rejected the claim that constitutional rights do not apply at all to governmental actions taken against aliens located abroad. Instead, the Court made the application of such rights, the First Amendment presumably included, contingent on “objective factors and practical concerns.” In addition, by affirming previous decisions, Boumediene also extended its functional test to cover even U.S. citizens, leaving them in a situation where they might be without any constitutional recourse for violations of their First Amendment rights. But lower courts have found in the recent case of USAID v. Alliance for Open Society (“USAID”) an implication that free speech rights exist abroad, at least by U.S. registered entities or U.S. citizens.

This Article resolves this doctrinal ambiguity, arguing courts should recognize that the First Amendment covers speech made beyond U.S. borders. It situates existing First Amendment precedents within the broader framework set by decisions pertaining to the Constitution’s extraterritorial application and extends First Amendment coverage to both citizen and alien speech in cases where either speech has been subject to government regulation outside traditional national borders. Both conceptions of the First Amendment—either as a right that accrues to the individual or as a structural limitation against the government—support such an interpretation. But what are the implications of recognizing an extraterritorial First Amendment? In the last part of the Article, I compare and contrast the decisions in USAID and Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project to show the judicial weight given to the foreign policy considerations of the government.
http://www.vanderbiltlawreview.org/2014 ... amendment/
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:41 am

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Facebook Threats Go to High Court in Hip-Hop Free-Speech Case

David McLaughlin - Nov 26, 2014 Bloomberg
Anthony Elonis went to prison after writing Facebook messages suggesting he might kill his wife. Now his case is before the U.S. Supreme Court, which will consider for the first time how free-speech rights apply on social media.

Elonis, who cites singer Eminem as an inspiration, says his messages were rap lyrics that weren’t intended as threats and deserve protection as speech. Among his posts: “I’m not gonna rest until your body is a mess.” Another envisioned his wife’s “head on a stick.”

The court on Dec. 1 will consider overturning Elonis’s conviction for threatening his wife, local school children and an FBI agent. At stake, he says, is how much freedom users of social media have to express themselves.

“It would be very chilling on communications” if the verdict against Elonis is upheld, said John Elwood, his lawyer. “It would sweep in too much protected speech, and it’s just too lax a basis to go to jail.”

The dispute pits free-speech defenders worried about the criminalization of online communications against advocates for crime victims who fear the court could erect barriers to prosecuting stalkers.

“This case is just about threatening speech,” lawyers for the National Network to End Domestic Violence wrote in court papers. “Advances in technology give perpetrators of intimate partner violence an ever-increasing array of tools to threaten their victims.”

Halloween Message

The case stems from Facebook posts Elonis made after his wife left him in 2010 with their two children and he was fired from his job at Dorney Park and Wildwater Kingdom, an amusement park in Pennsylvania.

Before Halloween, he wrote that his son’s costume should be “matricide” and include his wife’s “head on a stick.” He later posted on the site: “There’s one way to love ya but a thousand ways to kill ya/ And I’m not gonna rest until your body is a mess.”

Elonis’s wife obtained a restraining order, saying she had seen the Facebook posts and found them threatening. He responded by writing that she should fold up the protection order and “put it in your pocket/ Is it thick enough to stop a bullet?”

Elonis, who’s now 31, wrote under the hip-hop pseudonym “Tone Dougie” -- a play on his first and middle names. He claims his posts were a form of rap lyrics inspired by musicians like Eminem, whose songs include references to violent acts against his mother and ex-wife. Elonis included disclaimers that he was writing lyrics as an “aspiring rapper” and included links to news stories about First Amendment cases.

FBI Visit

After writing that there were enough elementary schools around “to initiate the most heinous school shooting ever imagined,” two Federal Bureau of Investigation agents visited Elonis at home.

He followed up with a Facebook post: “Little Agent Lady stood so close/ Took all the strength I had not to turn the b--- - ghost/ Pull my knife, flick my wrist, and slit her throat.”

Elonis argued at trial that the government had to prove that he intended to communicate a true threat. The judge instead instructed the jury that the standard is how a reasonable person would interpret the remarks. Elonis was convicted on four of five counts and sentenced to 44 months in prison.

Requiring prosecutors to prove that a defendant intended to threaten someone would create insurmountable burdens for victims and prosecutors, said Rebecca Roe, a lawyer who wrote a brief for the National Center for Victims of Crime.

‘No Recourse’

That’s particularly true in cases of domestic violence because threats tend to be more oblique than what Elonis wrote on Facebook, Roe said in an interview.

“You’re leaving victims out there with no recourse at the same time technology is giving perpetrators all kinds of new tools,” she said.

Some free-speech advocates support Elonis. Upholding his conviction would restrict expression because much of what is written online is open to multiple interpretations, according to the American Civil Liberties Union. Also, people would have the burden of anticipating potential reactions, the group says.

The Supreme Court could stop short of deciding on the free-speech issue and instead say the federal statute covering threats requires that prosecutors show intent.

Rap music is a new topic for the justices, whose tastes lean more toward opera. That lack of familiarity explains an unusual brief filed by two scholars seeking to explain the music and its conventions to the court.

Considered Dangerous

The scholars, Professors Erik Nielson of the University of Richmond and Charis Kubrin of the University of California at Irvine, said rap is particularly susceptible to misunderstanding and is often seen as dangerous. If a speaker’s intent isn’t considered, a juror with negative stereotypes about the genre could interpret rap lyrics as a threat of violence, they said.

Without reversal, Elonis says unfamiliar, minority viewpoints would be discriminated against. Anyone who seems different from jurors is more likely to seem threatening than people who look, speak and think like they do, he argues.

“There are all types of different speech that are different from what we might be used to and what jurors might be used to,” said Elwood, his lawyer. “He meant this as a way of working through all of the stress that he was under and all the bad things that had happened.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-11-2 ... -case.html
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:41 am

Convicted sex offenders, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and the First Amendment

By David Post - The Volokh Conspiracy - November 19, 2014
Yesterday the 9th Circuit issued its decision striking down California’s CASE (Californians Against Sexual Exploitation) Act as violative of the First Amendment.  The Act required previously-convicted sex offenders to provide “[a] list of any and all Internet identifiers established or used,” a “list of any and all Internet service providers used,” and to send written notice to law enforcement within 24 hours of adding or changing an Internet identifier or an account with an Internet service provider; it also provided for fairly severe criminal penalties for non-compliance.

This is the latest in what is becoming a large series of cases involving First Amendment challenges to state sex offender registration statutes. There have been cases like this one in Nebraska, Indiana, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, to name a few.   I’ve blogged about some of them before – e.g., here and here – and (full disclosure) I’ve been involved in several of them (including this California case) as an expert testifying on behalf of the challengers.

The court’s opinion here – at least to someone on the side of the fence that I’m on – has a terrific analysis of the First Amendment issues at stake, and some strong First-Amendment-protective language that will, I promise you, come in very, very handy in future battles – the ones that are coming that will not involve just convicted sex offenders.  The court struck down the statute on the grounds that it “unnecessarily chills protected speech” in three ways: the” Act does not make clear what it is that sex offenders are required to report, there are insufficient safeguards preventing the public release of the information sex offenders do report, and the 24-hour reporting requirement is onerous and overbroad.”  There is, in particular, some very forceful language about the right, under the First Amendment, to speak anonymously – an issue that, as I keep harping on, is going to be a major First Amendment battleground during the the next decade or so.    The court wrote:
Although this is not what some might call the classic anonymous-speech case, where speakers allege they are required to disclose their identities directly to their audience, we conclude that the Act nevertheless chills anonymous speech because it too freely allows law enforcement to disclose sex offenders’ Internet identifying information to the public. . . . We agree with the district court that the standards for releasing Internet identifying information to the public are inadequate to constrain the discretion of law enforcement agencies and that, as a result, registered sex offenders are unnecessarily deterred from engaging in anonymous online speech.

ex offenders’ fear of disclosure in and of itself chills their speech. If their identity is exposed, their speech, even on topics of public importance, could subject them to harassment, retaliation, and intimidation. See McIntyre, 514 U.S. at 341–42 (“The decision in favor of anonymity may be motivated by fear of economic or official retaliation, by concern about social ostracism, or merely by a desire to preserve as much of one’s privacy as possible.”); Brown v. Socialist Workers ’74 Campaign Comm. (Ohio), 459 U.S. 87, 100 (1982) (holding that disclosure requirements may subject unpopular minority groups to “threats, harassment, and reprisals”). Anonymity may also be important to sex offenders engaged in protected speech because it “provides a way for a writer who may be personally unpopular to ensure that readers will not prejudge her message simply because they do not like its proponent.”


http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volo ... amendment/
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Re: 1st Amendment Thread

Post by de officiis » Sat Dec 03, 2016 7:42 am

COURT TO REVIEW CONFEDERATE FLAG ON LICENSE PLATES

Mark Sherman - AP
The Supreme Court is taking on a free speech case over a proposed license plate in Texas that would feature the Confederate battle flag.

The case involves the government's ability to choose among the political messages it allows drivers to display on state-issued license plates.

The justices said Friday they will review a lower court ruling in favor of the Texas Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. The group is seeking a specialty plate with its logo bearing the battle flag, similar to plates issued by several other states that were part of the Confederacy.

The case will be argued in March.

A state motor vehicle board rejected the application because of concerns the Confederate flag would offend many Texans who believe the flag is a racially charged symbol of repression. But a panel of federal appeals court judges ruled that the board's decision violated the group's First Amendment rights.

Texas offers more than 350 specialty plates, the group said in its court filing. They include plates that say "Choose Life," "God Bless Texas," "Fight Terrorism," as well as others in support of Boy Scouts, Mothers Against Drunk Driving, blood donations, pro sports teams and colleges.

The state said in its Supreme Court appeal that the decision to reject the Sons of Confederate Veterans' license plate was not discrimination because the motor vehicle board had not approved a license plate expressing any view about the Confederacy or the battle flag.

Other federal appeals courts have come to differing conclusions on the issue, the state said.

A separate issue concerns whether state-issued licensed plates amount to government speech. The First Amendment applies when governments try to regulate the speech of others, but not when governments are doing the talking.
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/ ... TE=DEFAULT
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