Wednesday, March 25, 2020
First Amendment Essays (1494 words) - , Term Papers
  First Amendment  In the First Amendment, it is stated that: 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 to  peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of  grievances. These aforementioned statements ratified by our forefathers are  commonly referred to as the freedom of expression. The freedom of expression is  not only limited to speech; it refers to all forms of exchanging ideas:  religion, press, assembly, petition, etc. In Alan M. Dershowitz's essay,  "Shouting Fire!", he boldly claims that Justice Holmes' analogy of  "shouting 'Fire!' in a crowded theater" to circulating pamphlets to  the public during wartime that contain political ideas against the draft is both  "self-deceptive or self-serving" (Dershowitz, 328). However, shouting  "Fire!" in a crowded theater does not only refer to the freedom of  speech, but to freedom of expression implied by the First Amendment. By shouting  "Fire!", an individual is implying alarm, and the indication of alarm  will ultmately cause chaos. There is no way that a shout of "Fire!" in  a crowded theater, a form of "decontextualized information" (Postman,    8), is the same as the circulation of waritme pamphlets. The idea of  "speech" is not specifically defined in the First Amendment. Due to  the absence of the authors' intention in using the word, "speech," we  are then forced to speculate on the meaning of this nebulous word. In Webster's    New World Dictionary, one will find the following: speech (spech) n. [* OE  sprecan, speak] 1 the act of speaking 2 the power to speak 3 that which is  spoken; utterance, remark, etc. 4 a talk given to an audience 5 the language of  certain people Let us interpret "speech" according to the definition  given by Webster's New World Dictionary, then "speech" should only  constitute audible sound and not also the ideas that may result from the act of  speaking. According to this theory, we are then allowed to freely say anything  that please us, including the act of shouting "Fire!" in a crowded  theater. However, we can clearly see that this is not the intention of the First    Amendment from historical evidence. It does not seem that the Supreme Court and  the public view only the act of "speaking" to be protected by the    First Amendment, for it is the act of expressing ideas that concerns them. Even    Justice Holmes announced that "[t]he most stringent protection of free  speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theater, and  causing a panic. It does not even protect a man from injunction against uttering  words that may have all the effect of force" (Dershowitz, 325). Which then  leads us to believe that it is the expression of ideas that leads "directly  to serious harm" (Dershowitz, 328) to the public that acts as a violation  of the First Amendment. However, each individual's interpretation of what may  lead directly to serious harm may be different. Some individuals'  interpretations of what cause serious harm are more liberal, while others are  more conservative: I may find the circulation of pamphlets containing radical  political views to be quite detrimental to wartime effort, while others may find  that to be virtually harmless. In recognizing that the government does indeed  have the right to censor "expressions [that] may lead directly to serious  harm" (Dershowitz, 328), Dershowitz implies that there is a hidden status  quo, or norm, that individuals within an interpretive community use as a  guideline to determine what constitutes extreme disorder. It is then left up to  the Supreme Court to act as the absolute authority to set these guidelines for  the members of the interpretive community. In order for chaos to occur, there  must be people to interpret and interact with ideas that are proposed. If one  were to shout "Fire!" in an empty theater, then there would be no  chaos resulting from that action; no one would be there to interpret the shout  of "Fire!" as a potential alarm. As Justice Holmes pointed out in    Schenck v. United States, "the character of every act depends upon the  circumstances in which it is done" (Dershowitz, 325). However, it was most  unfortunate for Schenck to be imprisoned for distributing his political  pamphlets, for it was not the intention of these pamphlets to cause chaos:  "nothing in the pamphlet suggested that the draftees should use unlawful or  violent means to oppose conscription" (Dershowitz, 324). Although the    Schenck pamphlets did not directly cause chaos, it was its potential    
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