The First Amendment
to the Constitution prohibits the government from infringing upon
the freedom of speech, the freedom of association and the freedom
to petition the government for a redress of grievances. Speech is
language and other forms of expression; and association and petition
connote physical presence in reasonable proximity to those of like
mind and to government officials, so as to make your opinions known
to them.
The Declaration
of Independence recognizes all three freedoms as stemming from our
humanity. So, what happens if you can speak freely, but the government
officials at whom your speech is aimed refuse to hear you? And what
happens if your right to associate and to petition the government
is confined to areas where those of like mind and the government
are not present? This is coming to a street corner near you.
Certain rights,
like thought and privacy and travel, can be exercised on their own.
You don't need the government to cooperate with you; you just need
to be left alone. Other rights, like those intended to influence
the political process, require that the government not resist your
exercise of them. Remember the old one-liner from Philosophy 101:
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is there, does it make any
noise? Here's the contemporary version of that: If you can criticize
the government, but it refuses to hear you, does your exercise of
the freedom of speech have any value?
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When the Framers
of the Constitution wrote the First Amendment, they lived in a society
in which anyone could walk up to George Washington or John Adams
or Thomas Jefferson on a public street and say directly to them
whatever one wished. They never dreamed of a regal-like force of
armed agents keeping public officials away from the public, as we
have today. And they never imagined that it could be a felony for
anyone to congregate in public within earshot or eyesight of certain
government officials. And yet, today in America, it is.
Last week,
President Obama signed into law the Federal Restricted Buildings
and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011. This law permits Secret Service
agents to designate any place they wish as a place where free speech,
association and petition of the government are prohibited. And it
permits the Secret Service to make these determinations based on
the content of speech.
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Thus, federal
agents whose work is to protect public officials and their friends
may prohibit the speech and the gatherings of folks who disagree
with those officials or permit the speech and the gatherings of
those who would praise them, even though the First Amendment condemns
content-based speech discrimination by the government. The new law
also provides that anyone who gathers in a "restricted" area may
be prosecuted. And because the statute does not require the government
to prove intent, a person accidentally in a restricted area can
be charged and prosecuted, as well.
Permitting
people to express publicly their opinions to the president only
at a time and in a place and manner such that he cannot hear them
violates the First Amendment because it guarantees the right to
useful speech; and unheard political speech is politically useless.
The same may be said of the rights to associate and to petition.
If peaceful public assembly and public expression of political demands
on the government can be restricted to places where government officials
cannot be confronted, then those rights, too, have been neutered.
Political speech
is in the highest category of protected speech. This is not about
drowning out the president in the Oval Office. This is about letting
him know what we think of his work when he leaves the White House.
This is speech intended to influence the political process.
This abominable
legislation enjoyed overwhelming support from both political parties
in Congress because the establishment loves power, fears dissent
and hates inconvenience, and it doesn't give a damn about the Constitution.
It passed the Senate by unanimous consent, and only three members
of the House voted against it. And the president signed it in secret.
It is more typical of contemporary China than America. It is more
George III than George Washington.
The whole purpose
of the First Amendment is to assure open, wide, robust, uninhibited
political debate, debate that can be seen and heard by those it
seeks to challenge and influence, whether it is convenient for them
or not. Anything short of that turns the First Amendment into a
mirage.
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