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tag 标签: 言论自由

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版块 作者 回复/查看 最后发表
言论自由和谣言 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-6-2 145 17108 bbceve 2014-6-10 20:29
五角大楼文件案 史笔新阁 Dracula 2014-6-3 33 9436 Dracula 2014-9-24 02:36
西弗吉尼亚州教育委员会诉巴内特 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-6-3 59 8730 知行行知 2015-3-6 04:08
再聊聊言论自由 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-6-6 64 14278 dynthia 2019-3-6 20:13
从Schenck到Brandenburg,美国言论自由标准的演变(一) digest 史笔新阁 Dracula 2014-6-12 20 9068 烟波钓徒 2014-6-16 11:50
美国言论自由标准演变外一篇,Mollie Steimer小传 史笔新阁 Dracula 2014-6-13 16 4150 Dracula 2014-6-14 17:06
竞选中说谎受言论自由保护吗? 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-6-17 13 4356 空山小径 2016-3-2 19:30
美国言论自由标准的演变(二):两次世界大战之间 digest 史笔新阁 Dracula 2014-6-19 1 3179 一身轻松 2014-6-29 15:51
美国言论自由标准演变外二篇,William Dudley Pelley 小传 史笔新阁 Dracula 2014-7-26 35 5584 南京老萝卜 2019-3-8 11:02
美国最高法院新的一年 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-10-3 17 3640 龙血树 2014-12-4 04:32
金钱政治或言论自由,谈谈Citizens United(上) 日志随笔 Dracula 2014-10-6 7 2633 tanis 2014-11-9 00:37
征求意见稿——Holder v. HLP的前前后后 日志随笔 dynthia 2016-1-29 9 1888 五月 2016-1-30 00:12
美国言论自由标准的演变: 麦卡锡主义时期 attach_img 酒庄 Dracula 2016-4-27 24 284 关中农民 2019-2-16 07:51
“犯罪手册”与言论自由 社会杂谈 dynthia 2016-12-2 15 2971 猫元帅 2016-12-4 03:33

相关日志

分享 这民主自由是越来越普及了哈
热度 12 四处乱晃 2014-11-21 13:25
今天反对建输油管线的人在大温的Burnaby阻止一个民调公司在那里做关于建输油管线的民意调查。连让人说话的机会都要封锁,言论自由呢? 没有底线的鼓吹民主自由的恶果不仅在颜色革命中发挥作用,也在西方社会发挥作用。现在的民主自由是“我有言论自由,你不能有!!!”
556 次阅读|3 个评论
分享 ZT: Latest Supreme Court Decision On Abortion and Free Speech
热度 3 Dracula 2014-6-27 01:35
The Last Person You See Before Getting an Abortion The Supreme Court struck down a Massachusetts law creating a 35-foot buffer zone around abortion clinics. It's a narrow decision that says a lot about free speech. EMMA GREENJUN 26 2014, 1:08 PM ET http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/06/the-last-person-you-see-before-getting-an-abortion/373526/ In a unanimous decision on Thursday, the Supreme Court struck down a Massachusetts law that prevented anyone from standing within a 35-foot buffer zone outside of abortion clinics. The law was intended to prevent abortion opponents from blocking women's access to the facilities; local law-enforcement officials testified that significant clashes frequently occurred just outside clinics' doors. Before this buffer zone was established in 2007, a slightly milder, fuzzier statute prohibited people from getting within six feet of someone “for the purpose of passing a leaflet or handbill to, displaying a sign to, or engaging in oral protest, education, or counseling" within 18 feet of the driveways or doorways of clinics. But, as Boston Police Captain William B. Evans testified to the Massachusetts legislature in 2007, this wasn't enough: Some of these buffer zones got so crowded that they looked like "a goalie's crease." Fixed buffer zones, he said, would "make our job so much easier." "Of course they would. But that is not enough to satisfy the First Amendment," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts for the Court. "A painted line on the sidewalk is easy to enforce, but the prime objective of the First Amendment is not efficiency." The Court suggested a number of alternative measures that could be used by towns that frequently have to deal with intense clashes, like specifically tailored court orders. But really, Roberts wrote, it's not clear that these kinds of clashes are actually happening. He pointed to Evans's testimony that his officers had made “no more than five or so arrests” at Boston's Planned Parenthood; even in those cases, there were no successful prosecutions. "Far from being 'widespread,' the problem appears from the record to be limited principally to the Boston clinic on Saturday mornings," the chief justice observed. Indeed, the facts of the case suggest that something more interesting than scream-filled protests was happening at these clinics: People have been trying to persuade others to change their minds about having an abortion. The decision described interactions between women and protesters like Eleanor McCullen, for whom the case is named, like this: will typically initiate a conversation this way: "Good morning, may I give you my literature? Is there anything I can do for you? I’m available if you have any questions." If woman seems receptive, McCullen will provide additional information. McCullen and the other petitioners consider it essential to maintain a caring demeanor, a calm tone of voice, and direct eye contact during these exchanges. Such interactions, petitioners believe, are a much more effective means of dissuading women from having abortions than confrontational methods such as shouting or brandishing signs, which in petitioners’ view tend only to antagonize their intended audience. Justice Antonin Scalia reflected on this in a concurrence. "Is it harassment, one wonders, for Eleanor McCullen to ask a woman, quietly and politely, two times, whether she will take literature or whether she has any questions?" he asked. Even though these direct, personal interactions may make some women uncomfortable, Scalia wrote, that's what the First Amendment is all about: allowing people to speak their mind and try to persuade others to see things the same way. This is especially true in politically charged public spaces, like the streets outside abortion clinics (emphasis added): It blinks reality to say, as the majority does, that a blanket prohibition on the use of s treets and sidewalks where speech on only one politically controversial topic is likely to occur—and where that speech can most effectively be communicated —is not content-based. Would the Court exempt from strict scrutiny a law banning access to the streets and sidewalks surrounding the site of the Republican National Convention? Or those used annually to commemorate the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights marches? Or those outside the Internal Revenue Service? Surely not. Of course, conversations outside of abortion clinics are very different from casual chats on any other street. Even if they're polite, these interactions may still feel coercive. Getting an abortion is a big choice, freighted with emotion; it's naïve to imagine this experience as a potential exercise in sterile, civil discourse. But that doesn't make free speech any less important, the justices ruled. As Tom Goldstein writes at SCOTUSblog, the decision in McCullen is pretty narrow—don't expect widespread changes to protections for women who want to get abortions to follow from this ruling. The upshot of today's ruling is that an abortion clinic buffer zone is presumptively unconstitutional. Instead, a state has to more narrowly target clinic obstructions. For example, the police can tell protesters to move aside to let a woman through to the clinic. But it cannot prohibit protesters from being on the sidewalks in the first instance. As a defense of free speech, though, this ruling is remarkable, not least because it suggests that persuasion really can work. "In unrefuted testimony," the decision reads, "petitioners say they have collectively persuaded hundreds of women to forgo abortions."
780 次阅读|14 个评论
分享 美国人真敢说,也真可以随便说。
热度 23 agenda21 2013-9-16 04:31
看到一段视频。 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T32pdiXc7j8 在俄罗斯,如果有人敢用同样的口气和方式评论普京,他或她可能不久以后,就要在监狱里住一阵子了。 这倒不是说普京这样要求过,或者普京这么暗示过。这很可能是那些手里有点权力,又十分爱戴国家领袖尊严的,政府职员们的自主行为。在他们的意识中,领袖代表国家,而国家必须要有尊严,因此,对领袖不尊,就是对国家不尊。 怎样才算是尊重领袖呢?诚心实意地赞扬和歌颂,肯定属于尊重领袖的正确行为,而批评领袖讽刺领袖的决定和行为,以及开领袖玩笑的行为,可能就算不上是尊重领袖了。 看完这段视频,我反对普京的说法:美国人的确是一个特殊的群体。这个群体中的任何一个个体都有胆量批评领袖和讽刺领袖的决定与行为,以及开国家领袖的玩笑。 当然,我是不敢批评自己的国家的领袖,即使把我移民到美国,因为我的胆量从我上小学的时候开始,就让老师们一点一点地切除了。等到走出大学校门时,我曾认为,我天生就有缺陷,从来就没有过胆量的。我还曾隐隐约约地感觉到,我没胆量的原因很可能是我父母的过失,也更有可能跟我的祖宗有关。再后来,我被告知,这是遗传基因在作怪,而基因是不可以改变的,否则我就不再属于这个群体了。 问题很严重。
320 次阅读|16 个评论
分享 言论自由的边界
热度 6 code_abc 2013-5-24 08:02
言论自由有边界吗?这要看场合。就像和老婆啪啪一样,在自己家里怎么啪没人管。但晒出来吸引关注性质就不一样了。如何还涉及金钱交易的话......一开始看到还会令人兴奋,期数多了就看出不专业的地方了。
个人分类: 胡思乱想|827 次阅读|1 个评论

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