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First amendment mavens, what do you think about this case?
The father of a fallen Marine has won a multi-million dollar settlement against Fred Phelps and the Westboro church.
Yes, we all agree that the Westboro church is perfectly odious. Is their hateful picketing at funerals free speech?
I have always had tremendous respect for Becky Lourey, the former Minnesota State Senator. She was the only person to cast a dissenting vote when the State of Minnesota voted on H.F. 2985, making it unlawful to voice protest at funerals:
Yes, we all agree that the Westboro church is perfectly odious. Is their hateful picketing at funerals free speech?
I have always had tremendous respect for Becky Lourey, the former Minnesota State Senator. She was the only person to cast a dissenting vote when the State of Minnesota voted on H.F. 2985, making it unlawful to voice protest at funerals:
"As Americans, we stand proudly for freedom of expression; the right is unconditional. The behavior of Fred Phelps’ followers is indefensible. We must not give their actions the power to take away our rights. Our country was built on a foundation of constitutional rights – and one of the most important is the freedom of speech. I will never compromise my convictions for political expediency. I will always stand for freedom.What made Ms. Lourey's vote all the more remarkable was that she lost her own son, Matt Lourey, when his helicopter crashed in Iraq. See here.
"The hardest time to stand for freedom is in the face of overwhelming sentiment. This is when the defense of freedom is most important. I will never back down from a vote of conscience. We appear to be losing our ability to respect differences of opinion or have a civil dialogue. Legislating respectful behavior is not likely to help. In fact, more likely it will hurt."
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Perhaps I should clarify that I believe that "freedom of speech" means that you have the right to publicly assert your view on a matter, not that you have the right to disrupt people around you such that they are forced to pay attention to what you are saying. But I'm also not confident that the civil court system is the right place to clarify these issues.
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I suspect the case might have gone a different way if they hadn't chosen a death completely unrelated to their position to protest; some kind of protest relevant to a politician's actions in office might well be protected speech at that politician's funeral, even if in bad taste.
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Perhaps I should clarify that I believe that "freedom of speech" means that you have the right to publicly assert your view on a matter, not that you have the right to disrupt people around you such that they are forced to pay attention to what you are saying.
But I don't think it actually immunizes people against the civil consequences of their speech; certainly the 1st Amendment is not a protection against libel or slander (verbal speech in a public enough context can be libel).
This, and this exactly.
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However, take out the content of the speech, and you still have people shouting, cursing, using (tenuously, questionably) obscene speech or hate speech at a solemn ceremony against private individuals. That's harassment, that's intentional infliction of emotional distress, it may even be assault, but mostly it's a matter that can be handled between private individuals. Even the cemetery keepers themselves could get involved, I think.
There are criminal ways to handle it as well; back to that assault idea, back to trespassing and the like. But those I think are poorer ways to handle it because the church can call their people martyrs, and because it doesn't necessarily give redress to the victims themselves.
It's a complicated thing. Troubling when people use the letter to violate the spirit of the law.
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As noted by others, just because you have the absolute right to say your piece, you don't have the right to force your obnoxious behavior on everyone. The line between "peaceful protest" and "disruptive behavior" is not that thin, and getting in the face of mourners at a funeral is on the wrong side of it. The courts have to tread carefully on free speech issues, but they seem to have made a clearheaded decision in this case.
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Personally, I would go after them by picketing them on their home turf.
And I have no problem if the police/bylaw officers are particularly vigilant in enforcing parking regulations near funerals.
But the principle of free speech is important -- even for jerks.
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I can't argue for banning them from speaking at all because I do think that's a 1st amendment issue, but the first amendment doesn't protect all speech -- remember, shouting "fire" in a crowded building isn't considered protected speech either.
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Here, I'll just point out that the RNC is coming to town next year, and some of them might find it expedient to have hurt feelings, too.
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Phelps, much as it galls me to say this, does have the right to stage his protests at public events. I will defend his right to do so no matter how much I detest his views and actions.
I don't see where he has the right to stage them at private events.
When I reserve a public park for private events, like a family reunion, then I and my family's right to assemble in the park and conduct our reunion supersedes the rights of casual visitors to the park and to people wishing to disrupt our reunion through staged protests, shouting, and the waving of offensive signs. That's not suppressing freedom of speech, it's giving the right of assembly and speech to the people who lawfully reserved the place and time for their event first.
Phelps can't stage a protest until after he knows when and where the funeral will be held - which means the people who organized the funeral have the superior claim.
This is supposing that all funerals are public events.
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The ugliness of it all is so disheartening.