1st Amendment

2 posts

Teabagging=Protected Speech

The Supreme Court has ruled [pdf] against the state of California in Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Association, striking down AB 1179 as an unconstitutionally vague restriction on free speech.

The law at hand provides for a fine of $1000 to be levied against retailers who sell or rent violent video games to minors. Using a modified version of the Miller test, the state would determine which games contained the necessary quotient of violence to qualify.  The majority opinion of the Court states that California’s law does not address a “compelling” interest, and thus does not meet strict scrutiny.

Rejecting the notion that depictions of violence in video games are more vivid or dangerous than those in literature, Justice Scalia writes:

Reading Dante is unquestionably more cultured and intellectually edifying than playing Mortal Kombat. But these cultural and intellectual differences are not constitutional ones. Crudely violent video games, tawdry TV shows, and cheap novels and magazines are no less forms of speech than The Divine Comedy, and restrictions upon them must survive strict scrutiny-a question to which we devote our attention in Part III, infra.

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H.R. 5175

H.R. 5175, also known as the DISCLOSE Act, passed the House 219-206 yesterday.  The NRA exemption is still intact, but this will affect a large spectrum of political groups.

It’s unlikely it will be heard by the Senate before recess next week, but they will push for passage afterwards.  Chambliss and Isakson have both assured me that they will be voting against it, but anyone outside of Georgia needs to get in touch with their Senators immediately regarding this.

Georgia Representatives who voted for the Act were Hank Johnson, John Lewis and David Scott.  I find it inconceivable that we have nobody in those districts who would be opposed to the Act, yet my understanding from one Representative is that I was one of only three people to contact him regarding it.

For all the chest-beating and screaming about it, nobody’s actually doing anything.  Given all the “I’m not going to take it any more” slogans I get chanted at me all day, it’s blatantly obvious that most of these people can’t even get off the couch to call their Congressmen.

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