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CHAPTER 15 Order and Civil Liberties LEARNING OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter, students should be able to do the following: 1. Define the key terms at the end of the chapter 2. Distinguish between civil liberties and civil rights 3. Explain how the “establishment clause” of the First Amendment has been interpreted in cases involving aid to church-related schools, prayer in public schools, religious displays on public property, and the use of public school facilities by student religious groups 4. Show how the “free exercise clause” of the First Amendment has been applied to the issues of working on the Sabbath and the use of drugs as a sacrament 5. Describe the two approaches developed by the Supreme Court to deal with cases involving the free expression clause of the First Amendment 6. Outline the evolution of the clear and present danger test 7. List the major exceptions to the First Amendment’s protection of freedom of speech 8. Discuss prior restraint, libel, and censorship as possible limitations on press freedom in America 9. Explain the various challenges that the Internet poses to balancing freedom and order, both in the United States and around the world 10. Explain how the Fourteenth Amendment has been used to extend the protections of the Bill of Rights to citizens in cases involving the states, citing specific examples 11. Explain where the Supreme Court found the right to privacy in the Constitution and show how the right has been applied in cases involving abortion, birth control, and homosexuality CHAPTER SYNOPSIS The Bill of Rights of the Constitution gives individuals a wide range of civil liberties designed to protect them against the power of the state. The interpretation of how these civil liberties should be protected has involved a clash between government-imposed order and freedom. The courts, especially the Supreme Court, have the power to resolve societal controversies over values involving civil rights. However, government at all levels can, and does, create rights through laws written by legislatures and regulations issued by bureaucracies. The First Amendment of the Constitution protects individuals from government laws that interfere with the freedom of religion and freedom of expression. With respect to religion, government has set out to establish a wall of separation between church and state. The Supreme Court has interpreted the establishment clause in the First Amendment in such a way that government is prevented from giving assistance to religious institutions. Over the years, however, indirect and incidental assistance of parochial schools has been tolerated. Since the Supreme Court handed down its decision in Lemon v. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties 171 Kurtzman (1971), state funding of religious programs must pass a stringent test of noninterference with religion. The free exercise clause of the First Amendment protects religious beliefs, but not actions based on those beliefs. Thus, government is allowed to regulate antisocial behavior that stems from a constitutionally protected right. Freedom of expression is one of the vital characteristics of a democratic system. The freedom of expression clause of the First Amendment confers the right to unrestricted public discourse that does not threaten public order. The Supreme Court has defined the kinds of behavior that constitute a threat to public order through the clear and present danger test. Over the years, the Court has expanded the latitude of political expression that does not present real danger to society. Symbolic expression, such as wearing black armbands to protest the Vietnam War, has been protected by the Court. There are two noted exceptions to freedom of speech. “Fighting words” are defined as utterances designed to “inflict injury or [that] tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace” and are not subject to First Amendment protection. Obscenity is also excluded from constitutional protection. The First Amendment also guarantees that government will not interfere with the freedom of the press. There are limitations on this freedom. Public officials or public figures can institute a lawsuit against the press for libel. The Sullivan case, however, established that “actual malice” must be proved before libel can be upheld. Prior restraint, or censorship, by the government is permissible under exceptional circumstances that are not specified by the Court. Another limitation on freedom of the press exists in the conflict between the needs of law enforcement and those of a free press. Free speech issues have become increasingly complicatedand taken on a global dimensionwith the growth of the Internet. The Court tends to view the Internet as having the same privileges that are given to the press, but the transmission of hate speech and obscenity pose new questions, particularly because of their availability to minors. Only with the passing of the Fourteenth Amendment did the Bill of Rights become applicable to the states. The incorporation of the individual guarantees in the Bill of Rights under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment was a slow, painful process. The landmark decision in Palko v. Connecticut (1937) interpreted the due process clause to include only “fundamental” rights. In the thirty years after Palko, however, almost every aspect of the Bill of Rights was accepted as a fundamental right. The incorporation of constitutional procedural safeguards to be used by the states in criminal prosecution has dramatically changed the U.S. criminal justice system in the last thirty years. In several decisions, the Supreme Court required the states to provide trial by jury in criminal cases; a lawyer to criminal defendants; protection against self-incrimination, through the Miranda warnings; and freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, through the exclusionary rule. The Supreme Court has expanded the rights of individuals beyond those explicitly enumerated in the Constitution. For instance, the Court has asserted people’s right to privacy in making choices about contraception and reproduction. The protection of a woman’s decision to have an abortion during the first three months of pregnancy, granted by the Supreme Court in Roe v. Wade (1973), was the most controversial result of the extension of the right to privacy. Through Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (1989) and other recent decisions, the Court has moved down the road toward greater government control of abortion policy. In Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) the Court restricted the right of privacy to only heterosexual choices, thus placing homosexual choices outside constitutional protection. The Court reconsidered this decision in Lawrence and Garner v. Texas (2003), acknowledging that “an emerging awareness … gives substantial protection to adult persons in deciding how to conduct their private lives.” State-by-state efforts to give homosexual commitments the same status as heterosexual marriage have occurred, though current national legislation does not require states to honor non-heterosexual marriages. Cases like Roe and Griswold are disturbing to democratic theory: they remove policymaking from the legislative arena and place it in the hands of the courts, where the will of the people need not be taken Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 172 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties into consideration. Under the current system, though, the judicial branch will continue to play a major role in balancing freedom and order. PARALLEL LECTURE 15.1 I. II. The Bill of Rights A. The failure to include a bill of rights was the most important obstacle to the adoption of the Constitution. 1. Imposed limits on the national government, but not on the state governments 2. Adoption of Fourteenth Amendment (1868) began process of extending restraints to the states B. The Constitution guarantees Americans numerous liberties and rights. 1. Civil liberties: freedoms guaranteed to the individual. a) Declare what the government cannot do b) “Negative rights” 2. Civil rights: powers and privileges guaranteed to the individual and protected against arbitrary removal at the hands of government or individuals. a) Examples: right to vote, right to a jury trial b) “Positive rights” 3. “The rights and liberties of the Constitution”: the Bill of Rights and the first section of the Fourteenth Amendment. C. Additional distinctions 1. Persons possess rights. 2. Governments possess powers. 3. Privilege: a behavior that government may lawfully regulate. 4. No right is absolute. 5. Government limitations on rights require a higher burden of proof and must be minimal in scope. Freedom of religion A. The First Amendment prevents government from interfering with religion. 1. Establishment clause: the first clause in the First Amendment, which forbids government establishment of religion. 2. Free-exercise clause: the second clause in the First Amendment, which prevents the government from interfering with the exercise of religion. 3. Supreme Court has refused to interpret these causes definitively a) Freedom to believe is unlimited; freedom to practice a belief may be limited. b) Religion cannot benefit directly from government actions, but may benefit indirectly. B. The establishment clause 1. The Supreme Court has consistently held that the establishment clause requires government to maintain religious neutrality, but does not bar all assistance that incidentally aids religious institutions. 2. Government support of religion a) 1879: Court contended establishment clause erected “wall of separation between church and State” b) Wall breached (1947): Court upheld program that provided free transportation to parochial school students c) Further breach (1968): Court upheld program allowing parochial school students to borrow state-purchased textbooks d) Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) struck down state program to pay salaries of parochial school teachers teaching secular subjects. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties (1) C. 173 Three-pronged test for determining constitutionality under establishment clause: (a) Program must have a secular purpose (b) Primary effect should not be to advance or inhibit religion (c) Must not excessively entangle government and religion (2) Lemon test governed Court’s interpretation of such programs for twentyfive years e) Agostini v. Felton (1997) loosened application of the “Lemon Test.” (1) New York public school teachers could teach remedial education to disadvantaged students in New York parochial schools at taxpayer expense. (2) Only government neutrality toward religion was required. (3) Only excessive entanglements violated the establishment clause. f) Zelman v. Simmons-Harris (2002) upheld school voucher program in which secular and sectarian schools could participate. 3. Display of religious artifacts on public property a) Lynch v. Donnelly (1984) (1) Nativity scene displayed with commercial Christmas symbols had secular purpose: celebration of national holiday. (2) Display of nativity scene did not have primary effect of benefiting religion. (3) Display led to no excessive entanglement of religion and government. b) Proliferation of closely decided cases testing limits of government-sponsored religious displays since Lynch 4. School prayer a) Court has consistently equated prayer in public schools with government support of religion. b) Religious training as after-school activity now constitutional (2001) 5. The problem of the establishment clause a) Support for all religions come at the expense of nonreligion—but poses the least risk to social order. b) Tolerance of dominant religion at expense of other religions risks minority discontent. c) Support for no religion risks majority discontent. The free exercise clause 1. Inherent tension between establishment clause and free exercise clause a) Does the free exercise clause require government to grant exemptions from legal duties that conflict with religious obligations? b) Does the free exercise clause guarantee only that the law will be applicable to religious believers with discrimination or preference? 2. Justices have distinguished between religious beliefs and actions based on those beliefs. 3. Working on the Sabbath a) Sherbert v. Verner (1963): First Amendment protects religious observance as well as belief. b) Strict scrutiny: a standard used by the Supreme Court in deciding whether a law or policy is to be adjudged constitutional; the law or policy must be justified by a “compelling governmental interest,” as well as being the least restrictive means for achieving that interest. 4. Using drugs as sacraments a) Clash between religious freedom and social order b) Employment Division v. Smith (1990) (1) Change in reasoning from “compelling government interest” Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 174 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties Argued that Court has never held that an individual’s religious beliefs excuse him or her from compliance with an otherwise valid law prohibiting conduct that government is free to regulate (3) Rejected strict scrutiny standard (4) Only laws aimed at religious groups are constitutionally prohibited. c) Employment Davison v. Smith allowed for scores of government actions infringing on religious exercise. (1) Resulted in creation of a coalition of religious and non-religious groups to restore the strict scrutiny test (2) Group pressed for Religious Freedom Restoration Act (1994) that required state and local governments to satisfy strict scrutiny standards d) City of Boerne v. Flores (1997) (1) Declared federal enforcement of RFRA over state and local governments unconstitutional (2) RFRA still binding in federal law III. Freedom of expression A. Free expression clauses: the press and speech clauses of the First Amendment. 1. Dominant view: clauses confer a right to unrestricted discussion of public affairs. 2. Alternative views a) Few, if any, of the framers clearly understood the clauses. b) First Amendment does not rule out prosecution for seditious statements 3. Subtle restriction on the clauses: social pressure 4. Clauses bar prior restraint: censorship before publication 5. Approaches to resolution of claims based on free-expression clauses a) Government may only regulate or punish advocacy of ideas if it can prove an intent to promote lawless action and demonstrate a high probability that such action will occur. b) Government may impose reasonable restrictions on the means for communicating ideas that may incidentally discourage free expression. B. Freedom of speech 1. Clear and present danger test: a means by which the Supreme Court has distinguished between speech as the advocacy of ideas, which is protected by the First Amendment, and speech as incitement, which is not protected. a) Develop in Schenck v. United States (1919) b) Gitlow v. New York (1925): the Court assumed First Amendment speech and press provisions applied to the states through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. c) “Clear and present danger” broadened to “grave and probable danger” in 1951 d) Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969): the Court offered wider latitude for expression of political ideas by declaring that threatening speech is protected by the Constitution. 2. Symbolic expression a) Symbolic expression: nonverbal communication. b) Generally receives less protection than pure speech c) Courts have upheld certain types of symbolic expression d) Tinker v. Des Moines Independent County School District (1969) (1) Court overturned the suspension of three high school students (2) Principal failed to show how forbidden conduct would substantially interfere with school discipline 3. Order versus free speech: fighting words and threatening expression a) Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire (1942) (2) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties Chaplinsky convicted for calling a city marshal a “damned fascist”; Supreme Court upheld conviction (2) Fighting words: speech that is not protected by the First Amendment because it inflicts injury or tends to incite an immediate disturbance of the peace. b) Court narrowed definition of fighting words in Terminiello case (1949) c) Cohen v. California (1971) (1) Court recognized “one man’s vulgarity is another’s lyric” (2) Protected two elements of speech (a) Expression of emotion (b) Expression of ideas d) Free speech and the Web (1) Communications Decency Act (1996) (a) Made it a crime for person to circulate “patently offensive” sexual material to websites accessible to minors (b) Act was declared unconstitutional (2) Reno v. ACLU (1997) (a) Court argued that the Internet was more analogous to print media than to television (b) Deserved broad First Amendment protection 4. Free speech versus order: obscenity a) Obscene material is outside the bounds of constitutional protection. b) Difficulties arise in determining what is obscene. c) In Miller v. California (1973), the Court declared that a work is obscene if: (1) Taken as a whole, it appeals to prurient interest (2) It portrays sexual conduct in a patently offensive way (3) Taken as a whole, it lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value Freedom of the press 1. The First Amendment guarantees that government will not interfere with the freedom of the press. 2. Defamation of character a) Libel: written defamation of character. b) New York Times Co. v. Sullivan (1964) (1) Supreme Court declared that freedom of the press takes precedence over the rights of public officials suing for libel (2) First Amendment protects publication of all statements about the conduct of public officials, except statements made with actual malice 3. The Court has extended the concept of freedom of the press to protect publishers against suits from any public figures. a) Public figures: people who assume roles of prominence in society or thrust themselves to the forefront of public controversy. b) All public figures must show actual malice on the part of the publication. c) Free speech protects even outrageous and offensive criticism of public figures 4. Prior Restraint and the press a) Near v. Minnesota (1931) (1) Declared that prior restraint places unacceptable burden on free press (2) Acknowledged that prior restraint may be permissible in exceptional circumstances, but did not specify those circumstance b) New York Times v. United States (The Pentagon Papers) (1971) (1) C. 175 Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 176 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties (1) Daniel Ellsberg delivered portions of classified U.S. Department of Defense documents to the New York Times and the Washington Post. (2) Department of Justice sought to restrain publication (3) Court concluded that government had not met the burden of proving immediate, inevitable, and irreparable harm would follow publication of documents 5. Freedom of expression versus maintaining order a) Courts have consistently held that freedom of the press does not override the requirements of law enforcement. b) Educators may limit speech within the confines of the school curriculum if their actions serve any “valid educational purpose.” D. The rights to assemble peaceably and to petition the government 1. Framers meant that people have the right to assemble peacefully in order to petition the government 2. Government cannot prohibit peaceful political meetings. 3. Government cannot criminalize those who organize, lead, and attend peaceful political meetings. IV. The right to bear arms A. Based in the Second Amendment 1. Gun control advocates: amendment protects rights of states to maintain collective militias. 2. Gun use advocates: amendment protects the rights of individuals to own and use guns. B. Restrictions on gun ownership have passed constitutional muster. C. Prohibitions on gun ownership may infringe on the Second Amendment. V. Applying the Bill of Rights to the states A. Constitution as it was originally written prohibited both the national and the state governments from impinging on citizens’ rights in certain ways 1. Bill of attainder: law that makes an individual guilty of a crime without a trial. 2. Ex post facto law: declares an action a crime after it has been performed. 3. Obligation of contracts: obligation of the parties to a contract to carry out its terms; neither nation nor states may impair. B. Bill of Rights originally only limited national—not state—authority C. The Fourteenth Amendment: due process of law 1. The Supreme Court’s interpretation of the due process clause in the Fourteenth Amendment has allowed individuals to contest state violations of their liberties. 2. Clause has two meanings a) Requires government to adhere to appropriate procedures b) Forbids unreasonable government action D. The fundamental freedoms 1. 1897: the Supreme Court declared that states are subject to Fifth Amendment’s prohibition against taking private property without providing just compensation. 2. 1925: the Court assumed due process clause protected First Amendment speech and press liberties from impairment by states. 3. Palko v. Connecticut (1937): the Court determined that double jeopardy and trial by jury were not fundamental rights to be protected by the states. 4. By 1969 (when Palko was overturned) the Court had found that most of the guarantees in the Bill of Rights were indeed “fundamental.” E. Criminal procedure: the meaning of constitutional guarantees 1. Criminal procedural safeguards have been applied to the states in two stages: a) Judgment that a guarantee in the Bill of Rights also applies to the states Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties b) F. G. 177 National judiciary gives specific meaning to the guarantee (to insure some measure of uniformity) 2. Defendants’ right to a jury trial in criminal cases is “fundamental” a) Nothing regulates jury size (beyond a minimum of six jurors). b) Nothing regulates whether judgments should be unanimous. 3. Court left no room for variation in its definition of fundamental right to an attorney a) Gideon v. Wainwright (1963): the Supreme Court determined that defendants in criminal proceedings were entitled to a lawyer. b) Court subsequently specified at which point in criminal proceedings a defendant is entitled to a lawyer 4. Court also determined when suspects must be informed of their constitutional rights a) Miranda v. Arizona (1966): the Supreme Court instituted Miranda warnings to ensure protection against self-incrimination. b) Miranda warnings: statement concerning rights that police are required to make to a person before he or she is subjected to in-custody questioning. 5. Protection against unreasonable searches and seizures a) Wolf v. Colorado (1949) (1) Made Fourth Amendment applicable to states (2) Did not apply exclusionary rule to state courts (a) Exclusionary rule: the judicial rule that states that evidence obtained in an illegal search and seizure cannot be used in trial. (b) Allowed states to fashion their own rules of evidence b) Mapp v. Ohio (1961) (1) Supreme Court determined that the exclusionary rule applied to all levels of government (2) Rule appears to handicap to police and offer freedom to people whose guilt has been established by illegally-obtained evidence c) United States v. Leon (1984) (1) Supreme Court created the “good faith exception” to the exclusionary rule (a) Good faith exception: an exception to the Supreme Court exclusionary rule, holding that evidence seized on the basis of mistakenly issued search warrants can be introduced at trial if the mistake was made in good faith—that is, if all the parties involved had reason at the time to believe that the warrant was proper. (b) Exclusionary rule is not a right but a remedy against illegal police conduct. (2) Exclusionary rule is costly to society The USA-Patriot Act 1. Law expanded the ability of law enforcement and intelligence agencies to tap phones, monitor Internet traffic, and conduct other forms of surveillance 2. Shift toward order worries civil libertarians 3. Section 215 a) Rules for searching private records (e.g., library, video store, doctor’s office) b) Government need only certify without substantiation that search protects against terrorism c) Turns judicial oversight into a rubber stamp d) Gag order bars person turning over the records from disclosing the search to anyone Detainees and the war on terrorism 1. President maintained that detainees (“enemy combatants”) were not entitled to basic legal requirements and that presidential actions could not be reviewed in court. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 178 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties Court said detainees were entitled to challenge “enemy combatants” designation before a federal judge or other neutral decision maker 3. U.S. citizen detained as “enemy combatant” entitled by due process clause to a “meaningful opportunity” to contest basis for detention VI. The Ninth Amendment and personal autonomy A. Two different views of the Ninth Amendment 1. Amendment may protect rights that are not enumerated 2. Amendment may protect state governments against assumption by national government B. Controversy: from privacy to abortion 1. Griswold v. Connecticut (1965) a) Court struck down a seldom-enforced statute that made use of birth control devices a crime b) Court asserted that specific guarantees in the First, Third, Fourth, and Fifth Amendments create a “zone of privacy” (1) Zone of privacy is protected by the Ninth Amendment (2) Zone of privacy is applicable to the states by due process clause of Fourteenth Amendment c) Established principle that Bill of Rights as a whole creates a right to make certain intimate, personal choices 2. Roe v. Wade (1973) a) Declared unconstitutional a Texas law making it a crime to obtain an abortion b) Based decision on the right to privacy protected by the Fourteenth Amendment c) Dissenters argued that the majority opinion in Roe v. Wade had no basis in the Constitution. 3. Webster v. Reproductive Health Services (1989) a) Court upheld the constitutionality of a Missouri law that denied the use of public employees or facilities in the performance of an abortion unless the mother’s life was in danger b) No single position held a majority 4. Court has moved cautiously toward greater government control of abortion a) Court struck down state requirement that compelled unwed minors to notify both parents before having an abortion b) Court upheld state requirement that physician notify one parent of a pregnant minor of her intention to have an abortion 5. Court has cast the politically divisive issue into the state legislatures 6. Shifting balance on the Supreme Court will likely affect future decisions C. Personal autonomy and sexual orientation 1. Does the right to privacy embrace homosexual acts between consenting adults? 2. Bowers v. Hardwick (1986) a) State’s argument: “Constitutional law must not become an instrument for change in the social order.” b) Hardwick’s argument: case involves two freedoms (1) Right to engage in private sexual relations (2) Right to be free from government intrusion in one’s home c) Court held that Constitution does not protect homosexual relations between consenting adults 3. Lawrence and Garner v. Texas (2003) a) Voided Texas law criminalizing homosexual (but not heterosexual) sodomy b) Law furthered legitimate state interest but intruded into intimate personal choices of individuals 2. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties 179 c) d) 4. Explicitly stated that Bowers decision was wrong and should be overturned Scalia and members of the minority argued that decision took the issue out of the democratic process Issues around sexual orientation have shifted toward the states. a) Congress moved to bar the effects of state-approved same sex unions with the Defense of Marriage Act (1996). b) Thirty-five states now bar recognition of same-sex marriages. c) Eighteen states have state constitutional clauses banning gay marriage. d) Some states have been innovators in legitimizing homosexuality. (1) Vermont approved same-sex “unions” but not same-sex marriages. (2) Massachusetts (a) 2003: highest court mandated state legislature to acknowledge gay marriage as a fundamental right under the state constitution (b) 2006: court ruled that gay couples who live in states where marriages are prohibited cannot marry in Massachusetts FOCUS LECTURE 15.1 Obscenity: An Exception to Freedom of Speech Government restrictions on expression pit the value of order against the value of freedom. Government imposes restrictions on certain forms of artistic expression on the grounds that the material sought to be restricted is harmful. Opponents of such control argue that there is no evidence of the link between such material and the conduct that government seeks to prevent. In the absence of such proof, government control of expression is unwarranted. (Note: This material is particularly effective if you provide your students with examples of what has been considered obscene. This may include passages from selected books, clips from films, reproductions of art, and clips from magazines. It is in your best interest to warn your students that they may find some materials objectionable, and to provide them with an unobtrusive way to excuse themselves from the lecture if they do not wish to deal with such images. Depending on the climate at your institution, it may also be in your best interest to warn your department chair or section head that you plan to engage this material.) I. Obscene material is entirely excluded from constitutional protection. A. We associate obscene material with “dirty” words, books, magazines, films, and such. 1. Books once banned as obscene in the United States include a) Ulysses, by James Joyce b) From Here to Eternity, by James Jones c) Tropic of Cancer, by Henry Miller d) Memoirs of Hecate County, by Edmund Wilson 2. Films have also been banned as obscene, including these: a) Lady Chatterley’s Lover b) Carnal Knowledge c) Deep Throat 3. Obscenity is not confined to literature and film. a) When Dimitri Shostakovich’s opera Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk District was performed in Cleveland in 1935, some trombone notes so shocked certain ladies that many of them walked out of the performance. A substitute was called on to play the notes because the first trombone player refused. b) Gilbert and Sullivan wrote an obscene opera called The Sod’s Opera. Characters included Count Tostoff, the Brothers Bollox (a pair of hangers-on), and Scrotum Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 180 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties (a wrinkled old retainer). For many years, a copy of the opera was kept in the guardroom at St. James Palace. c) Robert Mapplethorpe was a critically acclaimed photographer who died in 1989. His subjects included celebrities, still lifes, nudes, children, and graphic sexual poses. The technique of the photographs was flawless. The content jarred and offended many viewers, who saw them as degrading, humiliating, and painful images. (Indeed, many of Mapplethorpe’s non-sexual workssuch as stills of flowershave been interpreted as obscene within the context of his collected works.) d) Americans are still debating the subject of obscenity today. In recent years a national debate has taken place over whether public monies should be used to support art that some find obscene. B. The Supreme Court has determined that obscene material is excluded from constitutional protection. 1. The Court maintained in 1957 that at the time of the Constitution’s adoption, obscene materials were not regarded as “speech” within the meaning of the First Amendment. 2. Hence, government can constrain and punish the dissemination of obscene material, because it is not protected speech. 3. Difficulties arise, however, in determining what is obscene and what is not. II. The problem of defining obscenity. At this point in the lecture, a scene from the film The People v. Larry Flynt (1996) works well. The clip begins at 30:31 and runs to 40:50. In it, the character of Larry Flynt (played by Woody Harrelson) is arrested on pornography and racketeering charges, and ends up being sent to jail. During these scenes, Flynt notably quips that he is being charged because his tastes differ from that of the establishment. How do we draw the line between obscenity and bad taste? That has been the task facing the Supreme Court. (Interesting note: the judge in this scene is the real Larry Flynt.) A. In 1957, Justice William J. Brennan, Jr., defined obscene material as that which “deals with sex in a manner appealing to the prurient interest.” Prurient is defined as obsessive interest in sexual matters. 1. A work could be saved from censorship if, taken as a whole, it offered redeeming social value. 2. Individuals—judges or community leaders—were required to apply community standards in the imposition of restrictions. B. The justices have struggled with the identity of obscenity. The definition lacks objectivity. C. Justice Potter Stewart will long be remembered for his solution to the problem of identifying obscene materials. He confessed that he could not define obscenity. “But,” he added, “I know it when I see it.” III. The historical setting for restrictions on expression dealing with sex A. Because obscene material is not protected speech, government can restrain and punish those who disseminate it. 1. Federal regulation of obscene material has a relatively short history. a) In 1873, a puritanical crusader named Anthony Comstock formed an organization called the Society for the Suppression of Vice. b) For forty years, Comstock urged federal legislation to combat obscenitywhich he originally defined as the publication of material advocating birth control. c) Congress enacted legislation in 1873 to punish the mailing of obscene material. (1) Harry Reems, an actor in the X-rated film Deep Throat, was one of nine persons convicted of a federal crime rooted in the Comstock era: conspiring to transport obscene material across state lines. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties 181 Reems’s conviction was overturned on appeal. But his codefendants served sentences of three to twelve months in jail and paid up to ten thousand dollars in fines. 2. State governments have also used the criminal law to thwart the distribution of obscenity. a) Larry Flynt, publisher of the “soft-core” magazine Hustler, was convicted in 1981 by an Atlanta jury on eleven counts of violating the city’s obscenity laws. b) Flynt appealed his conviction all the way to the Supreme Court, but to no avail. B. The Supreme Court’s approach to the obscenity issue initially lacked consistency. 1. The Court’s early efforts at obscenity definitions prompted challenges to state and local restrictions on expression. 2. The Court seemed to be deciding obscenity questions on a case-by-case basis. 3. By 1966, the justices were deeply divided on the meaning of obscenity and its application. a) In just three cases in 1966, seven of the justices authored a total of fourteen separate opinions to explain what each justice meant by legitimate restrictions on expression. IV. The Court has returned a measure of control to local communities. A. In 1973, the justices attempted again to provide a useful standard for identifying obscene material. A work is obscene and may be regulated by government if 1. It depicts or describes sexual contact 2. Taken as a whole, it appeals to a prurient interest in sex 3. It portrays sexual conduct in a patently offensive way 4. Taken as a whole, it does not have serious literary, artistic, or scientific value B. The Court also provided that local community standards were to be used in this fourpronged test for obscenity. 1. The local-control stipulation is an attempt by the Court to free itself from the nagging problem of reviewing state court obscenity findings. 2. Judicial review still remains available to prevent unbridled discretion in state obscenity determinations. 3. In short, the justices are unlikely to replace either prudish or exotic community standards with their own, but they have left the door ajar for intervention if it is needed. C. Sexual explicitness in recent American culture can be traced in part to the restrictions imposed by the Supreme Court on censors. The value of freedom has trumped the value of order in some communities, whereas the value of order has overridden the value of freedom in others. V. Can the value of equality outweigh the value of freedom? A. An interesting twist in the clash between freedom and equality arose in the early 1980s. Pornography opponents, led by feminist theorists, invoked equality principles to justify legislation restricting freedom of expression. B. Indianapolis enacted an ordinance based on the equality approach in 1984. 1. The law defined pornography as the graphic, sexually explicit subordination of women, in words or pictures, that satisfies one or more of the following criteria: a) It presents women as sexual objects who experience sexual pleasure in being raped. b) It presents women as sexual objects of domination, conquest, violation, exploitation, possession, or use, through postures or positions of servility, submission, or display. (2) Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 182 Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties 2. C. The law rested on the finding that pornography is a form of discrimination that denies equal opportunities in society and that it is central in creating and maintaining sex as a form of discrimination. (Federal and state laws forbid such discrimination.) 3. The law banned pornographic material according to the following argument: a) Government interest in civil rights outweighs any First Amendment interest in communication. b) Pornography affects thoughts; it works by socializing, by establishing the expected and permissible. (1) Depictions of subordination tend to perpetuate subordination. (2) This leads to affronts and the perpetuation of lower pay for women at work, to insult and injury at home, and to battery and rape on the streets. c) Hence pornography conditions society to subordinate women impermissibly. d) A law regulating expression will regulate and control the underlying unacceptable conduct. The Indianapolis ordinance was held unconstitutional. 1. District Court Judge Sarah Evans Barker rejected the city’s argument. a) The law suppressed otherwise protected expression while sweeping away unprotected expression (e.g., child pornography is unprotected). According to the ordinance, (1) Sexual encounters premised on equality would be lawful, no matter how sexually explicit. (2) Expression treating women in the disapproved way—as sexually submissive or as enjoying humiliation—would be unlawful, no matter how significant the literary, artistic, or political qualities of the work. 2. Judge Barker confronted the trade-off between equality and freedom in a pluralist democracy. a) Interest groups using the democratic process to carve exceptions to the First Amendment destroy everyone’s rights. b) Although efforts to restrict behavior that leads to humiliation and degradation of women may be desirable, “free speech, rather than being the enemy, is a longtested and worthy ally.” c) “To deny free speech in order to engineer social change in the name of accomplishing a greater good for one sector of our society erodes the freedom of all.” PROJECTS, ACTIVITIES, AND SMALL-GROUP ACTIVITIES 1. Many students may not have read a Supreme Court opinion on important issues such as the rights of criminals or abortion. Ask students to use the Supreme Court decisions online. (See the World Wide Web Resources at the end of Chapter 15.) Discuss in class their impressions of the decisionmaking process in the highest court of the land. 2. Freedom of the press is usually taken for granted in the United States. To give students a sense of the importance of unrestricted circulation of information and opinion about government, have them act out the following scenario. Randomly select a group of students to act as official censors of a hypothetical dictatorial government of the United States. Have them use the editorial page of a major daily newspaper and censor all information and opinions that negatively reflect on the government. Circulate copies of the censored editorial pages to the rest of the class. Discuss students’ reactions to this exercise. What potentially sensitive information about government was shielded from the public? Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Order and Civil Liberties 3. 183 There is a profusion of television shows depicting arrests of criminals and other offenders. Have students videotape a wide range of television “cop” shows. Ask students to analyze how these shows portray the execution of procedures designed to protect the rights of the accused. Focus on some of the following questions: Do television police officers always read the Miranda warning to arrestees? What are the attitudes expressed by television police regarding the rights of the accused? Are these views realistic? What are the substantial differences between the “reality” shows and the fictionalized police shows? Finally, you may discuss whether television shows depicting police work influence the way Americans perceive their system of justice. INTERNET RESOURCES The American Civil Liberties Union www.aclu.org/ Read reports on the status of civil liberties in various places around the United States. The Freedom Forum First Amendment Center www.freedomforum.org/ This nonpartisan organization is a forum for debate on free expression. Southern Poverty Law Center www.splcenter.org/ This nonprofit organization deals with prosecution of hate speech and discriminatory action. FAIR: Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting www.fair.org/ A national media watch center that offers criticism of media bias and censorship Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.