Unprotected Speech (Content Based) Flashcards
1
Q
What are the types of Unprotected Speech?
A
- Incitement
- Fighting Words
- Hostile Audience
- True Threats
- Obscenity
- Child Pornography
2
Q
- Incitement
A
- Speech that is used to convince people to break the law.*
- Speech that is directed to inciting imminent lawless action and is likely to incite such actio
3
Q
Brandenburg Test and its Elements
A
Mere advocacy of the use of force or violence does not remove speech from protection of the 1st amendment
Factors:
- Imminent Harm
- A likelihood of producing illegal action; and
- An intent to cause imminent illegality
4
Q
- Fighting Words- dont focus to much
A
- (1)Likely to cause / provoke a violent response against the speaker and (2)it is an insult likely to inflict immediate emotional harm.
:
5
Q
- Hostile Audience: 1 v. Entire Crowd
A
1.Speech not directed specifically at listener.
- Content of the message is more important than how it is said.
- Content will incite violence from the audience to attack the speaker.
- Government must show that the speech created a clear and present danger of serious substantive evil beyond crowd annoyance.
- Where a speaker passes the bounds of argument or persuasion and undertakes incitement to a riot the police may arrest him to prevent breach of the peace.
6
Q
- True Threats 1 v. 1
A
- They are statements made where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an unlawful act of violence to a specific person or particular group.
- Reckless disregard is the standard needed that the object of the threat will perceive it as a threat.
example: intimidation; speaker directs a threat to a person or group of persons with intent of placing the victim in fear of bodily harm or death
7
Q
- Obscenity
A
- Sexually oriented speech. Material which deals with sex in a manner appealing to a depraved interest.
- Stanley v . Georgia: Can possess obscene material in one’s own home
- Apply the 3-part Miller Test
8
Q
The Miller Test to see if obscenity can be banned
A
- Whether the average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find that the work taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest;
- Whether the words/ pictures depicts (in a patently offensive way) sexual conduct defined in an applicable state statute? (Look to see if unconstitutional)
- Whether the work taken as a whole lacks serious literary, artistic, political or scientific value.
9
Q
- Child Pornography
A
- DOES NOT need to pass the Miller Test because is not obscenity. It is sexual conduct that falls short of obscenity.
2.Government interest is safeguarding children.
- Irrelevant whether the material has a literacy artistic, political or social value
- Do not extend to computer generated images of child porn and adults who look like children.
- Government prohibits the sale, distribution, exhibition and of child porn.