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Justice Jackson’s Comment About Free Speech ‘Hamstringing’ The Government Wasn’t Her Worst
Federalist ^ | MARCH 20, 2024 | Margot Cleveland

Posted on 03/21/2024 12:58:14 PM PDT by george76

Murthy v. Missouri perfectly illustrates the dangers of censorship, but Justice Jackson still thinks the government’s ‘perspective’ of ‘threatening circumstances’ should matter..

Following Monday’s Supreme Court oral argument in the social media censorship case Murthy v. Missouri, outraged free-speech advocates rightfully excoriated Justice Kentanji Brown Jackson for worrying that the First Amendment will “hamstring[] the government in significant ways in the most important time periods.”

Given that “hamstringing” the federal government was precisely the purpose of the Bill of Rights, Justice Jackson’s comment laid bare the fundamental disdain she and other politically liberal justices hold for the classically liberal freedoms our Constitution protects.

But even worse than Jackson’s “hamstring” comment was something she said a half-dozen sentences later.

“So can you help me? Because I’m really — I’m really worried about that because you’ve got the First Amendment operating in an environment of threatening circumstances from the government’s perspective,” Justice Jackson said to Louisiana Solicitor General Benjamin Aguiñaga. Why couldn’t the government communicate with social media companies then? Jackson queried.

Aguiñaga, on behalf of the respondents, the states of Louisiana and Missouri, and several individual plaintiffs who had been censored on social media, countered that the government could communicate with tech companies and share truthful information with them. But in doing so, the government must comply with the First Amendment, which means federal officials cannot ask Big Tech to censor third parties.

Lost in this exchange, however, was the horror of Justice Jackson’s premise — that the government outreaches would depend on federal officials’ “perspective” of “threatening circumstances.”

Five years ago, that proposition might not have seemed so shocking because Americans hadn’t yet lived through the dual outrage of near-universal capitulation to the government’s requests for censorship and the wrongheadedness of the federal government’s “perspective” of “threatening circumstances.” Absent that lived experience, it might have been possible to imagine the government would only solicit Big Tech’s cooperation when truly faced with “threatening circumstances,” or that the social media companies would refuse to remove third parties’ posts, absent a sincere danger.

However, the 20,000-plus-page record in the Murthy v. Missouri case revealed that the government’s “perspective” of “threatening circumstances” can be both dangerously wrong and politically motivated.

For instance, the federal government viewed anything prompting “vaccine hesitancy” as threatening public health. It also maintained that masking and school closures were necessary to protect Americans against Covid. These “perspectives” of “threatening circumstances” flowing from the pandemic led the government to demand that social media companies block users and posts discussing adverse effects of Covid shots or arguing against masking and school closures.

But the government was wrong about all of it, and those censored were right. Had the government not successfully silenced such speech, Americans would have been better armed with facts to make important health and public policy decisions.

Unlike the censorship of Covid-related information, the blocking of the New York Post and articles and posts about the Hunter Biden laptop story flowed not from the government’s supposed perception of “threatening circumstances” — although some federal officials likely also saw Trump’s reelection as threatening — but from political motives.

Once again, the banned speech was true, and Americans were prevented from learning vital information before the election due to the government’s efforts to persuade Big Tech to block supposed “hack or leak” material. (Turns out, the Hunter Biden laptop was no such material.)

It’s shocking that Justice Jackson could posit the government’s “perspective” of “threatening circumstances” should matter, given that the facts underlying Murthy v. Missouri perfectly illustrate the dangers of censorship.

Sadly, she was not alone in suggesting the government could ask, encourage, and even persuade social media companies to silence third parties’ legal speech, so long as there was no “coercion.” The word “coercion” appears nowhere in the First Amendment, however, with the framers instead prohibiting the “abridgment” of free speech.

The Louisianna solicitor general reminded the Supreme Court of that reality several times during his Monday argument, which led to another horrifying exchange with Justice Jackson: After noting that the “top-line question” is whether “the government set out to abridge the freedom of speech,” Justice Jackson countered, “But that’s not the test for First Amendment violations.”

“This flows from the plain text of the First Amendment,” Aguiñaga stressed.

“But we have a — we have a test,” Justice Jackson replied.

Therein we saw the fundamental problem with Monday’s argument, as Jackson and several of her colleagues became too buried in First Amendment jurisprudence to bother returning to first principles and the actual text of the amendment. The abridgment language is controlling and, if applied, provides the plaintiffs with an easy win.

Whether a majority of the justices will apply that textually based standard, as opposed to one of the several judge-made tests, however, remains to be seen.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: 1stamendment; censorship; civilrights; dissent; firstamendment; freespeech; government; hamstringing; jackson; kentanji; kentanjibrownjackson; kentanjijackson; speech

1 posted on 03/21/2024 12:58:14 PM PDT by george76
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To: george76

These are not Supreme Court Justices - they are activists in black robes. They do not interpret the Constitution. They shredded it long ago. It is a meaningless document to them. They are team tyranny and will do anything and everything to destroy the Republic.


2 posted on 03/21/2024 1:08:26 PM PDT by missnry (The truth will set you free ... and drive liberals crazy!)
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To: george76

What that idiot doesn’t understand is that free speech is SUPPOSED to hamstring the government.


3 posted on 03/21/2024 1:13:50 PM PDT by RobertoinAL
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To: george76

In her defense she is only repeating other sources in government. It’s all she knows.


4 posted on 03/21/2024 1:20:46 PM PDT by blackdog ((Z28.310) Be careful what you say. Your refrigerator may be listening & reporting you.)
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To: missnry

I don’t think it’s disdain, I think it’s pure ignorance. She’s a dolt who shouldn’t be anywhere near the Supreme Court. Putting her on the bench is like putting a 5 year old at the wheel of the space shuttle.


5 posted on 03/21/2024 1:43:30 PM PDT by Rdct29 (The Democrats Are The New Nazi Party )
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To: george76

I read the article.

It is a shame that no one that I am aware of pointed out that our Constitution enumerates our government’s powers.

We the People never granted any authority to censor the media, restrict the press or speech.

Don’t even need the 1st Amendment.


6 posted on 03/21/2024 2:01:37 PM PDT by Jacquerie (ArticleVBlog.com)
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To: george76
Jackson and several of her colleagues became too buried in First Amendment jurisprudence to bother returning to first principles and the actual text of the amendment.

There is no clearer test of whether a judge/justice is truly committed to their oath of office - which requires them to comply with the Constitution - than their position on precedent versus actual text.

And the absolutely horrifying thing is that even 'conservative' justices like Antonin Scalia were perfectly committed to following precedent. But precedent is judge-made law, and Congress "shall have the sole power to make law."

"Interpreting" the law is fine for judges, but that interpretation *must* fall the minute someone points out a conflict between precedent ("interpretation") and written statute. That's why they call the judge's decisions 'opinion' because they are no more than that. It's useful for a compelling 'opinion' to provide a consistent 'interpretation' of law so that citizens can get on with their businesses and lives. But only within the context of written statute - of which the superseding primary is the US Constitution.
7 posted on 03/21/2024 2:09:28 PM PDT by Phlyer
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To: RobertoinAL

THE WHOLE DAMN CONSTITUTION IS WRITTEN TO HAMSTRING GOVERNMENT!


8 posted on 03/21/2024 2:12:05 PM PDT by Free Louie
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To: george76

I remember Obama calling them, “negative rights”.


9 posted on 03/21/2024 2:12:45 PM PDT by aimhigh (1 John 3:23 "And THIS is His commandment . . . . ")
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To: george76

Oppressors are hamstrung by freedom


10 posted on 03/21/2024 2:54:56 PM PDT by NWFree (Sigma male 🤪)
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To: george76

.


11 posted on 03/21/2024 3:02:36 PM PDT by sauropod (Ne supra crepidam.)
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To: RobertoinAL

Understatement of the Year - so far.


12 posted on 03/21/2024 3:10:25 PM PDT by Ahithophel (Communication is an art form susceptible to sudden technical failure)
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To: george76

Another Anti-American Domestic Enemy, installed by Anti-American Domestic
Enemies, comfortably sitting on the nation’s highest court.


13 posted on 03/21/2024 3:17:17 PM PDT by EasySt (Say not this is the truth, but so it seems to me to be, as I see this thing I think I see. #MAGA-A)
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To: george76

Proving yet again, that to a liberal “Justice” the strength of any right is inversely proportional to the specificity by which it is guaranteed in the Constitution.


14 posted on 03/21/2024 5:40:19 PM PDT by csn vinnie
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To: csn vinnie

The “progressives” think the Bill of Rights is right wing extremist hate speech.


15 posted on 03/21/2024 5:43:48 PM PDT by cgbg ("Our democracy" = Their Kleptocracy)
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