DMac
26th June 2010, 07:43 AM
Details:
Supreme Court Ruling Criminalizes Speech in Material Support Law Case (http://ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-releases/supreme-court-ruling-criminalizes-speech-material-support-law-case)
The Court rejected the government’s argument that the statute, when applied to plaintiffs’ proposed speech, regulated not speech but conduct, and therefore needed to meet only a low standard – “intermediate scrutiny†– to survive. Instead, the Court found that the statute did criminalize speech on the basis of its content, but then found that the government’s interest in delegitimizing groups on the designated "terrorist organization" list was sufficiently great to overcome the heightened level of scrutiny. This one of a very few times that the Supreme Court has upheld a criminal prohibition of speech under strict scrutiny, and the first time it has permitted the government to make it a crime to advocate lawful, nonviolent activity.
Commentary:
Guest Post: Is the U.S. a Fascist Police-State? (http://www.zerohedge.com/article/guest-post-us-fascist-police-state)
Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project is not about limiting free speechâ€â€it's about the state expanding it power to repress. The decision limits free speech in passing, because what it is really doing is expanding the state’s power to repress whomever it unilaterally determines is a terrorist.
In the decision, the Court explicitly ruled that “Congress and the Executive are uniquely positioned to make principled distinctions between activities that will further terrorist conduct and undermine United States foreign policy, and those that will not.†In other words, the Court makes it clear that Congress and/or the Executive can solely and unilaterally determine who is a “terrorist threatâ€Â, and who is notâ€â€without recourse to judicial review of this decision. And if the Executive and/or Congress determines that this group here or that group there is a “terrorist organizationâ€Â, then their free speech is curtailedâ€â€as is the free speech of anyone associating with them, no matter how demonstrably peaceful that speech or interaction is.
For example, if the Executiveâ€â€in the form of the Secretary of Stateâ€â€decides that, say, WikiLeaks or Amnesty International is a terrorist organization, well then by golly, it is a terrorist organization. It no longer has any right to free speechâ€â€nor can anyone else speak to them or associate with them, for risk of being charged with providing “material support†to this heinous terrorist organization known as Amnesty International.
This is bad news.
Supreme Court Ruling Criminalizes Speech in Material Support Law Case (http://ccrjustice.org/newsroom/press-releases/supreme-court-ruling-criminalizes-speech-material-support-law-case)
The Court rejected the government’s argument that the statute, when applied to plaintiffs’ proposed speech, regulated not speech but conduct, and therefore needed to meet only a low standard – “intermediate scrutiny†– to survive. Instead, the Court found that the statute did criminalize speech on the basis of its content, but then found that the government’s interest in delegitimizing groups on the designated "terrorist organization" list was sufficiently great to overcome the heightened level of scrutiny. This one of a very few times that the Supreme Court has upheld a criminal prohibition of speech under strict scrutiny, and the first time it has permitted the government to make it a crime to advocate lawful, nonviolent activity.
Commentary:
Guest Post: Is the U.S. a Fascist Police-State? (http://www.zerohedge.com/article/guest-post-us-fascist-police-state)
Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project is not about limiting free speechâ€â€it's about the state expanding it power to repress. The decision limits free speech in passing, because what it is really doing is expanding the state’s power to repress whomever it unilaterally determines is a terrorist.
In the decision, the Court explicitly ruled that “Congress and the Executive are uniquely positioned to make principled distinctions between activities that will further terrorist conduct and undermine United States foreign policy, and those that will not.†In other words, the Court makes it clear that Congress and/or the Executive can solely and unilaterally determine who is a “terrorist threatâ€Â, and who is notâ€â€without recourse to judicial review of this decision. And if the Executive and/or Congress determines that this group here or that group there is a “terrorist organizationâ€Â, then their free speech is curtailedâ€â€as is the free speech of anyone associating with them, no matter how demonstrably peaceful that speech or interaction is.
For example, if the Executiveâ€â€in the form of the Secretary of Stateâ€â€decides that, say, WikiLeaks or Amnesty International is a terrorist organization, well then by golly, it is a terrorist organization. It no longer has any right to free speechâ€â€nor can anyone else speak to them or associate with them, for risk of being charged with providing “material support†to this heinous terrorist organization known as Amnesty International.
This is bad news.