-Caveat Lector-

>From UCLA Law School
http://www.law.ucla.edu/faculty/volokh/tension.htm

"" Note the recurring theme:  It is true that the Constitution protects
freedom of speech.  But the Constitution also embodies other, equally
important, values -- that the government be a government of laws, that it
be able to wage wars effectively, that it be changed only through peaceful
means.  When speech detracts from these ends, the free speech guarantee may
have to yield to the needs of the rest of the constitutional structure. ""

Freedom of Speech and the
Constitutional Tension Method

Prof. Eugene Volokh, UCLA Law School *

              In his 1925 dissent in Gitlow v New York, Justice Holmes
wrote:  If in the long run the beliefs expressed in proletarian
dictatorship are destined to be accepted by the dominant forces of the
community, the only meaning of free speech is that they should be given
their chance and have their way. 1

              This is a remarkable thing to say.  To borrow a phrase from
Catharine MacKinnon, ours is a "country that is supposedly not
constitutionally neutral" with regard to matters such as proletarian
dictatorship. 2  People who advocate dictatorship are seeking to subvert
the foundations of our Constitution, the very Constitution they invoke as
their shield.

              The Constitution is aimed at protecting and furthering
certain values.  Free speech is one of them, but so too are democracy,
private property, equality, religious tolerance, and the power of the
federal government to wage war effectively.  For each of these values, one
can reasonably ask:  When the exercise of one constitutional right --
freedom of speech -- threatens to harm another constitutional value, why
should freedom of speech necessarily prevail? Why, for instance, should the
right of Communists to speak trump the preservation of the many values,
including the freedom of speech itself, that Communists would surely
destroy if they came to power? 3

              I call this mode of argument -- identifying certain values
that the Constitution protects and suggesting that the Constitution's free
speech guarantee must sometimes yield to these values -- the constitutional
tension method.  It's not the approach the Supreme Court generally uses
today, 4 but it's one that comes naturally when interpreting a constitution
such as ours.  In fact, it has been applied many times in our history by
adherents of very different judicial movements. 5  The modern arguments
that the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection guarantee justifies
restrictions of bigoted and pornographic speech are the most recent
examples of this approach; 6 but the constitutional tension method has a
distinguished history dating back to the founding of our nation, and
numbering among its adherents such luminaries as Justices Frankfurter and
Jackson.

              In this article, I intend to briefly sketch the history of
the constitutional tension method and the results that judges have reached
with it.  Based on that history, I'll try to respond to those who call for
a renewed focus on the supposed tension between free speech and other
constitutional provisions, especially the Equal Protection Clause. 7

              One can argue long and hard about the theoretical merits of
the constitutional tension method in general, or of any proposal, such as
the proposals to restrict bigoted speech, in particular.  Others have
already done so, at least with regard to the hate speech debate, and I
don't want to repeat their arguments here. 8  Ultimately, however, many
people make up their minds such matters not on the level of constitutional
theory, but in response to the likely practical results.  Cautious people
contemplating the proposals for balancing equality concerns with speech
concerns -- even those who sympathize in principle with these proposals --
may well wonder what the proposals' long-term implications will be.  If
courts adopt a constitutional tension approach, will they stop at racist,
sexist, and religiously bigoted speech? Or is it more likely that they'll
take the approach further? 9

              Any answer to these questions will always be speculative, but
history can inform our speculation.  The constitutional tension method has
a track record.  Judges have used it for over two hundred years in
grappling with speech that endangers constitutional values.  It might be
helpful to look back on the results they reached, and to think about what
would happen if the method were endorsed by courts today.  If one believes,
as I do, that the past record of the constitutional tension method is
unfortunate, then perhaps we should think twice about resurrecting it for
the future.

I.  The Constitutional Tension Method in its Infancy

              The earliest reported federal free speech case is Case of
Fries, 10 a 1799 district court case in which Supreme Court Justice Iredell
presided over a prosecution under the now notorious Alien and Sedition
Acts.  The defendant had led a tax rebellion in western Pennsylvania.  At
the time of the rebellion, the nation was only fifteen years old, and the
Constitution was in its first decade.  Even small revolts can be serious
threats to young nations, but the rebellion was suppressed and Fries was
tried for treason and, most relevant to our discussion, for sedition -- for
allegedly spreading falsehoods that disparaged the federal government.

             "The liberty of the press," Justice Iredell instructed the
jury, "is indeed, valuable -- long may it preserve its lustre!" 11  But
"falsehoods . . . which are intended to destroy confidence in government,
and thus induce disobedience to every act of it" necessarily have to be
punishable. 12  The nation's short history had shown as much:

[T]he government had been vilely misrepresented, and made to appear to [the
people] in a character directly the reverse of what they deserved.  In
consequence of such misrepresentations, a civil war had nearly desolated
our country, and a certain expense of near two millions of dollars was
actually incurred, which might be deemed the price of libels. 13

              Moreover, Iredell continued, these libels subverted the very
constitutional structure of the republic:

The necessity [of punishing libels in a republic is], I conceive [,]
greater [than in a monarchy] because in a republic more is dependent on the
good opinion of the people for its support, as they are, directly or
indirectly, the origin of all authority, which of course must receive its
bias from them.  Take away from a republic the confidence of the people,
and the whole fabric crumbles into dust. 14

Improper speech endangered even the freedom of speech itself by creating
pressure for censorship:  "[T]o censure the licentiousness is to maintain
the liberty of the press." 15  It therefore had to be the case that "the
disseminating, or making public, of bad sentiments, destructive of the ends
of society" could legitimately be made a crime. 16

              The structure of Iredell's argument is noteworthy.  Important
as freedom of speech was, he argued, surely it couldn't extend to speech
that caused real danger to the paramount constitutional value of republican
government. 17  The exemption of such speech from the constitutional
guarantee wasn't mere formalism.  Rather, the exemption reflected a
judgment that while freedom of speech is a valuable protection of free
government, certain kinds of speech were themselves subversive of free
government. 18

              This approach of balancing free speech against other
constitutional values can be found in other opinions throughout the 1800s
and early 1900s.  In State ex rel. Liversey v Judge of Civ. Dist. Ct., 19
for instance, the Louisiana Supreme Court concluded that the Louisiana
Constitution's free press clause prevented courts from enjoining libels.
The dissent disagreed:

Provisions of equal sacredness and magnitude [to the free press provision]
loudly proclaim that all courts shall be open, that every person shall be
entitled to claim protection for life, liberty, property, reputation and
for all rights, and shall have adequate remedy by due process of law, and
justice administered without denial or unreasonable delay.  A suppression
of either of those inalienable rights, would be an arrogation of powers
intentionally denied and withheld, and a despotic annihilation of the
palladium of American security and independence. 20

              Likewise, in Dailey v Superior Court, 21 a majority of the
California Supreme Court annulled an order enjoining the performance of a
play based on a pending criminal case.  The dissent, however, argued that
protecting free speech here would undermine other values of constitutional
dimension:

All the provisions of the constitution must be construed together, and
effect given, when possible, to each.  The [state free speech clause] is to
be construed in view of that large and important part of the constitution
by which a judicial department of the government is created, and all the
usual and necessary powers of courts given to the tribunals established
under it.  One of the most essential of these powers of a court is to
protect itself against unlawful intrusion upon its orderly conduct of
business, and to insure litigants in a pending proceeding the free and
unembarrassed administration of justice. 22

              Thus, when the United States Supreme Court first started
hearing a substantial number of free speech cases in the 1910s and early
1920s, it was natural for the constitutional tension method to appear there
too.  The first free speech case in which Holmes and Brandeis dissented,
Toledo Newspaper Co. v United States, is a good example. 23  In 1913,
Toledo enacted an ordinance limiting fares on the city-franchised railway
to three cents.  The railway's creditors sued in federal court, claiming
the law was confiscatory.  While the case was pending, the Toledo News-Bee
published articles backing the ordinance and casting aspersions on the
judge's neutrality.  The judge held the newspaper in contempt, on the
theory that the articles would lead the public to doubt the court's
impartiality and would ultimately induce people to disregard any order the
court might render.

              The Supreme Court upheld the contempt citation.  The argument
that the newspaper was protected by the Free Press Clause, the Court said,
"involves . . . the contention that the freedom of the press is the freedom
to do wrong with impunity and implies the right to frustrate and defeat the
discharge of those governmental duties upon the performance of which the
freedom of all, including that of the press, depends." 24  The News-Bee's
free press claim wasn't just in tension with significant government
interests; it also conflicted with the foundations of the Free Press Clause
itself.  "The safeguarding and fructification of free and constitutional
institutions is the very basis and mainstay upon which the freedom of the
press rests, and that freedom, therefore, does not and cannot be held to
include the right virtually to destroy such institutions." 25

              The Court continued to use this approach in the World War I
cases that followed.  In Schaefer v United States, a 1918 case involving a
newspaper that allegedly printed false war reports, the Court marveled at
the "curious spectacle . . . presented" by a First Amendment challenge to
the Espionage Act. 26  Under the newspaper's argument, the Court said, the
Constitution, "that great ordinance of government and orderly liberty[,]
was invoked to justify the activities of anarchy or of the enemies of the
United States, and by a strange perversion of its precepts it was adduced
against itself." 27  The Constitution "empowered Congress to declare war
and war is waged with armies." 28  Surely it was senseless to argue that
under the same Constitution "their [the armies'] formation [recruiting or
enlisting] could be prevented or impeded, and the morale of the armies when
formed could be weakened or debased by question or calumny of the motives
of authority." 29  The Court repeated this argument in 1920 in Gilbert v
Minnesota, 30 and in 1931 in United States v Macintosh. 31

              In a similar vein, the Court in United States ex rel.
Milwaukee Social Democratic Pub. Co. v Burleson, again rebuffed a
constitutional challenge by appealing to the constitutional structure:

Freedom of the press may protect criticism and agitation for modification
or repeal of laws, but it does not extend to protection of him who counsels
and encourages the violation of the law as it exists.  The Consti tution
was adopted to preserve our Government, not to serve as a protecting screen
for those who while claiming its privileges seek to destroy it. 32

And Gitlow v New York made the same point:  Statements which "necessarily
imply the use of force and violence" are "in their essential nature . . .
inherently unlawful in a constitutional government of law and order." 33
"[T]he punishment of those who publish articles which tend to destroy
organized society [is] essential to the security of freedom and the
stability of the state." 34

              Note the recurring theme:  It is true that the Constitution
protects freedom of speech.  But the Constitution also embodies other,
equally important, values -- that the government be a government of laws,
that it be able to wage wars effectively, that it be changed only through
peaceful means.  When speech detracts from these ends, the free speech
guarantee may have to yield to the needs of the rest of the constitutional
structure.

              It's easy, of course, to disagree with the specific results
reached in these cases.  Indeed, Holmes and Brandeis persuasively argued
that, in at least some of the cases, the possible harm caused by the speech
was at most speculative. 35  Holmes and Brandeis may also have been right
to suggest that some of the values the majority opinions stressed might
suffer more from suppression of speech than they would from toleration of
speech.

              But the Holmes and Brandeis positions on this weren't
unassailable.  Even if the harm threatened by the speech was uncertain and
remote, there's nothing obviously illegitimate about protecting against
remote harms as well as against clear and present ones.  Outside the free
speech context, legislatures protect against remote harms all the time.  As
the Gitlow majority put it, the danger of speech that "threaten[s] breaches
of the peace and ultimate revolution" is still "real and substantial" even
though "the effect of a given utterance cannot be accurately foreseen." 36
"A single revolutionary spark may kindle a fire that, smoldering for a
time, may burst into a sweeping and destructive conflagration." 37  Why is
it unreasonable for a state to "seek [] to extinguish the spark without
waiting until it has enkindled the flame," to "suppress the threatened
danger in its incipiency"? 38

              Holmes and Brandeis's arguments are ultimately not attempts
to pragmatically balance the important interest in free speech against the
equally important interest in avoiding revolution.  They don't rest on
provable factual assertions about the likely effectiveness or
ineffectiveness of subversive advocacy.  Rather, they are based on a
judgment about, in Holmes's words, "the theory of our Constitution":  That
even speech which might risk endangering our most basic values is entitled
to be heard, and even to be considered as a possible truth. 39

              The Holmes and Brandeis dissents make sense only if one
rejects the premises of the constitutional tension method.  Within the
method, it is definitely not the meaning of free speech that advocacy of
dictatorship should "be given [its] chance and have [its] way." 40  Nor is
it necessary to test thoughts subversive of the constitutional structure
"in the competition of the market." 41  Under the constitutional tension
vision, the government -- to bor row another point from Professor MacKinnon
-- may legitimately "assume that the idea of [liberal democracy] is true.
The [Constitution] has already decided that." 42  Giving people a chance to
accept proletarian dictatorship would just risk a sacrifice of all
constitutional values in order to further a single one.  If one accepts the
constitutional tension method, then the worst one can say about the 1910s
and 1920s majorities is that they misguessed just how dangerous the speech
involved was.

II.  The Method in Maturity:  Frankfurter and Jackson

              The 1930s and the 1940s saw the Court's general rejection of
the earlier majority opinions and acceptance of the Holmes and Brandeis
dissents.  Even speech that, if believed, might tend to undermine other
aspects of the constitutional structure became protected.  But as the Court
became more aggressive in striking down laws on free speech grounds, the
constitutional tension method reawakened and acquired two of its most
distinguished advocates, Justices Frankfurter and Jackson. 43

              A good example of this is Frankfurter's dissent in Bridges v
California, 44 where the Court held that courts generally may not hold
speakers in contempt for commenting on pending litigation.  Frankfurter
disagreed:

Free speech is not so absolute or irrational a conception as to imply
paralysis of the means for effective protection of all the freedoms secured
by the Bill of Rights.  In the cases before us, the claims on behalf of
freedom of speech and of the press encounter claims on behalf of liber ties
no less precious. 45

"A trial is not a `free trade in ideas,"� Frankfurter argued, "nor is the
best test of truth in a courtroom `the power of the thought to get itself
accepted in the competition of the market."� 46 "Freedom of expression can
hardly carry implications that nullify the [Constitutional] guarantees of
impartial trials," guarantees which Frankfurter saw as central to
constitutional democracy. 47

              Likewise, Jackson's dissent in Terminiello v City of Chicago,
48 which Frankfurter endorsed, 49 argued that the government must be
allowed to restrict speech that could lead to mob violence, even when the
speaker isn't intentionally trying to incite the violence.  Without such a
power, not only order, but constitutional liberties -- including the
freedom of speech -- would suffer:

In the long run, maintenance of free speech will be more endangered if the
population can have no protection from the abuses which lead to violence .
. . .  We must not forget that it is the free democratic communities that
ask us to trust them to maintain peace with liberty and that the factions
engaged in this battle [Fascists and Communists] are not interested
permanently in either. 50

              Shortly afterwards, in Kunz v New York, Jackson, dissenting
alone, suggested that religious freedom concerns should also be weighed
against the free speech interest. 51  The government, Jackson argued, must
have the power to repress public attacks on Catholicism and Judaism:

Is official action the only source of interference with religious freedom?
Does the Jew, for example, have the benefit of these freedoms when,
lawfully going about, he and his children are pointed out as
"Christ-killers" to gatherings on public property by a religious sectarian
sponsored by a police bodyguard? We should weigh the value of insulting
speech against its potentiality for harm.  Is the Court, when declaring
Kunz has the right he asserts, serving the great end for which the First
Amendment stands? 52

              Moreover, as the Kunz dissent showed, Jackson was willing to
consider private action, including private speech, as a potential
interference with others' constitutional rights.  Under this view, people
on the street corner who insult religion do more than just interfere with
public order or offend passers-by; they "interfer[e] with [the
pedestrians'] religious freedom." 53  Jehovah's Witnesses, who proselytize
door-to-door, often stridently condemning Catholicism, do not merely
intrude on householders' privacy, but also tread on the householders'
"religious liberty." 54  As Jackson said a year after Kunz, in American
Comm. Ass'n v Douds, "[a] catalogue of rights was placed in our
Constitution . . . to protect the individual in his individuality, and
neither statutes which put those rights at the mercy of officials nor
judicial decisions which put them at the mercy of the mob are consistent
with its text or its spirit." 55

              Frankfurter's and Jackson's views were thus already well
developed when they wrote their concurrences in Dennis v United States. 56
Dennis involved the prosecution of various Communist Party leaders for
conspiring to advocate the overthrow of the United States government.  The
defendants weren't charged with violent conduct or with an attempt to
overthrow the government. 57  Nor were they charged with conspiring to do
violent acts. 58  They were accused of advocating, teaching, and organizing
a group intended to advocate and teach a particular, singularly repugnant,
philosophy. 59

              All three of the opinions favoring affirmance -- the
plurality opinion, Frankfurter's concurrence and Jackson's concurrence --
stressed the danger of Communist advocacy of violent revolution.  This
wasn't a hard danger to show.  The late 1940s saw Communism take over China
and Eastern Europe.  Much of the cause in Eastern Europe was the presence
of the Soviet Army, but, as Justice Jackson pointed out, Communists also
took advantage of existing democratic structures.  In Czechoslovakia, for
instance, "the Communist Party during its preparatory stage claimed and
received protection for its freedoms of speech, press, and assembly," but
used these freedoms to subvert the political system and usher in a
dictatorship. 60 And even in the Western democracies, Communist Party
members were being used as tools of the Soviet Union. 61

              Communism didn't seem likely to prevail in the United States,
but, as the plurality pointed out, even unsuccessful attempts at revolution
or at inciting revolution can cause grave harm. 62  "[T]he inflammable
nature of world conditions, similar uprisings in other countries, and the
touch-and-go nature of our relations with countries with whom petitioners
were in the very least ideologically attuned" exacerbated the danger. 63
"If the ingredients of the reaction are present, we cannot bind the
Government to wait until the catalyst is added." 64

              And, as Frankfurter noted, the interests jeopardized by
Communist advocacy were not simply compelling; they were constitutional in
dimension.  "[T]he plain fact" was "that the interest in speech, profoundly
important as it is, is no more conclusive . . . than other attributes of
democracy." 65  Jackson also took care to repeat his position that even
private advocacy can interfere with individuals' constitutional rights:

When our constitutional provisions were written, the chief forces
recognized as antagonists in the struggle between authority and liberty
were the Government on the one hand and the individual citizen on the
other.  It was thought that if the state could be kept in its place the
individual could take care of himself.  [But today,] [t]otalitarian groups
. . . [have] perfected the technique of creating private paramilitary
organizations to coerce [through speech] both the public government and its
citizens. 66

              Finally, Frankfurter added one more ingredient:  "Not every
type of speech occupies the same position on the scale of values." 67  Just
as obscenity, profanity, libel, and fighting words are not entitled to
First Amendment protection, "[o]n any scale of values which we have
hitherto recognized" advocacy of forcible and violent overthrow of the
government "ranks low." 68

              True, Frankfurter admitted, some speech not far removed from
advocacy of overthrow -- exchange of ideas about Communism, rather than
advocacy of revolution -- is more valuable; 69 and, "[s]uppressing
advocates of overthrow inevitably will also silence critics who do not
advocate overthrow but fear that their criticism may be so construed." 70
But that the distinction between unprotected advocacy and protected
exchange of ideas "could be used unreasonably by those in power against
hostile or unorthodox views does not negate the fact that it may be used
reasonably against an organization wielding the power of the centrally
controlled international Communist movement." 71

III.  The Method in Decline

              This, then, was the constitutional tension vision at its
zenith.  Suppressing speech jeopardizes constitutional values; but allowing
certain kinds of speech jeopardizes other constitutional values --
democracy, effective waging of war, fair administration of justice, free
exercise of religion, even free speech itself.  Only a "careful weighing of
conflicting interests" 72 can decide the case.  And because the interests
involved are all of constitutional dimension, and thus of equal dignity,
there's no reason why the freedom of speech should always [or even usually]
prevail.

              But reasonable as the constitutional tension approach may be,
it isn't ineluctably mandated by the constitutional structure.  One doesn't
have to read the various constitutional provisions as setting up abstract
values, values which may be in tension with one another.

              Instead, one can read them -- and the constitutional text
seems to support this reading -- as simply creating particular government
powers or disabilities.  And while speech can undermine broadly defined
constitutional values, it can't literally take away government power, or an
immunity from government action.  Antiwar advocacy may make it harder to
wage war, but it doesn't actually contradict Congress's war power, or the
President's position as Commander-in- Chief.  Insulting Catholicism on the
streetcorner may run contrary to the spirit of religious freedom, but it
isn't the government "mak[ing a] law . . . prohibiting the free exercise
[of religion]." 73

              If we accept this approach, then there is no constitutional
tension.  We can obey the Free Speech Clause without being untrue to any
other constitutional provision.  This doesn't mean protection for speech
must be absolute; we can still conclude that some forms of speech are so
dangerous that they have to be punished.  But because we are no longer
balancing constitutional interests of equal stature, we can set the
threshold of harm (or of its imminence) at a higher level.

              This scheme is the basis of today's First Amendment
jurisprudence, under which content-based speech restrictions -- even
restrictions on speech that genuinely harms important interests -- are
generally unconstitutional. 74  Dennis proved to be the high-water mark of
the constitutional tension approach -- as Laurence Tribe put it, "the
temporary eclipse" of the more speech- protective Holmes/Brandeis
tradition. 75  The Court ultimately sided with Holmes and Brandeis rather
than Frankfurter and Jackson.  Agreeing with Holmes, the Court concluded
that the "theory of our Constitution" 76 is that the government must be
agnostic as to political truth. 77  With Holmes, it accepted that even "the
beliefs expressed in proletarian dictatorship" 78 are entitled to compete
in the marketplace of ideas. 79

              The constitutional tension position is that the Constitution
itself defines certain kinds of political truth, and that speech which
interferes with the implementation of this truth may be suppressed; that
Communist speech, which is profoundly inconsistent with democracy, private
property, and individual liberty -- all crucial constitutional values --
has no rights in our national marketplace.  The Court has rejected this
view. 80  This rejection is what keeps the government from banning
Communist advocacy, expression of support for draft resisters, 81 and the
rap star Ice-T's controversial song Cop Killer. 82  And it's also what
keeps the government from banning advocacy of racism, sexism, and the like.


IV.  The Method Rediscovered

              Recent years have seen many arguments that free speech rights
must sometimes yield to the equality values embodied in the Fourteenth
Amendment. 83  These arguments often make powerful, common-sense points.
They persuasively show that bigoted speech can indeed cause substantial
harm to important interests.  They show that these interests, especially
the interest in equality, are themselves rooted in the Constitution.  They
forcefully suggest that bigoted speech itself interferes with people's
constitutional rights:  When speech helps construct a bigoted society, they
argue, it interferes with individual rights to equal protection; 84 when
bigoted speech causes people to fall silent or devalues their voices in the
marketplace of ideas, it interferes with its victims' own free speech
rights. 85  They point out that bigoted ideas are evil.  And they ask why,
when values of constitutional magnitude collide, free speech should always
prevail.

              This approach -- consideration of other constitutional
values, a stress on the fact that our nation "is supposedly not
constitutionally neutral" with regard to the goals that some speakers
advocate, 86 and the assertion that some ideologies are therefore of lower
value than others -- is quintessentially the constitutional tension
approach.  Its reasoning tracks the reasoning of past constitutional
tension opinions, and indeed its results mirror those that Justices
Frankfurter and Jackson urged in the past. 87  And both its reasoning and
its results radically diverge from those of the Black/Douglas/Brennan
method, which the Court has largely adopted today:  A method that renounces
the valuing of ideas, and insists on protecting even speech which can cause
grievous harm to interests of constitutional magnitude.

              Of course, one can't hold those who employ the constitutional
tension method today responsible for the views of those who employed the
method in the past.  But when one listens to today's proposals for the
balancing of free speech against other constitutional values, or to any
proposals for allowing more speech restrictions, one should ask what such
proposals will lead to.  If a court accepts this approach in one case, what
will happen in the cases to follow?

              If we want to know the answer to this question, past
constitutional tension opinions may give us valuable clues.  The Court,
after all, isn't staffed with Matsudas or Lawrences or MacKinnons.  A
majority of the Justices today seem closer in outlook to Frankfurter or
Jackson, and perhaps even to some of the Justices in the 1910s and 1920s
majorities.  And there's no reason to think this will change radically any
time soon.

              One might argue, of course, that the Court should apply the
constitutional tension approach only to the narrow area of bigoted speech,
and keep a more speech-protective scheme for other areas, such as televised
violence, apologism for rioters and looters, 88 or songs that seem to
advocate the killing of police men. 89  But the logic of the constitutional
tension approach would apply equally to all speech.  Equality is an
important constitutional value, but there are other values "no less
precious." 90  I can't see why the Court would, or logically could, draw a
line at speech which disserves equality and not, say, speech which
disserves democracy.

              The possible limiting principles some have suggested strike
me as thin reeds.  Professor Matsuda, for example, suggests that her
approach should only be followed for speech that "human experience, our
only source of collective knowledge," has condemned as wrong. 91  She
argues that "the wrongness of the doctrine of racial supremacy" is
universally accepted. 92  In her view, "[t]here is no nation left on this
planet that submits as its national self- expression the view that Hitler
was right." 93  "Marxist speech, however, is not universally condemned. . .
.  [I]t is impossible to achieve world consensus either for or against this
political view.  Marxists teach in universities." 94

              But it may be worth noting here that Professor Matsuda's
article was printed in August 1989, shortly before the fall of Communism in
Europe and Soviet Asia.  Today, the list of countries that accept Communism
as their "national self-expression" is down to Communist China, North
Korea, Vietnam, Cuba, and perhaps a few others. 95  And in any event, it
seems odd to care what tyrannical regimes accept as their self-expression.
Is it really national self-expression or just the self-expression of the
ruling junta? If one focuses on the self-expression of the countries whose
citizens actually are permitted to express their political preferences,
then Communism has been condemned by our collective knowledge for many
decades -- far longer than racism.

              The suggestion that the free speech principle should be
trumped by the equality guarantee only when the speech "is directed against
the least powerful segments of our community," and not when it
"criticiz[es] the powerful institutions that govern our lives," seems to me
equally unpromising. 96  I suppose one could argue that, as a moral
principle, the First Amendment should be read as giving extra protection to
groups that seem to need protection most. 97  But will our political and
judicial systems really be willing to use this as a stopping point?

              Protecting the least powerful segments of our community is
clearly an important goal.  But so are protecting police officers' rights
to life and merchants' rights not to have their stores looted and burned by
rioters or revolutionaries.  I find it hard to imagine a Supreme Court --
again, not a court filled with Matsudas -- that will allow speech
restrictions aimed at preventing the subordination of minorities, but
disallow speech restrictions aimed at preventing the murder of policemen.

              Neither, in my view, is bigoted speech distinguishable from
other forms of speech on the grounds that it silences people, discredits
speakers that deserve to be heard, or somehow injures the marketplace of
ideas. 98  Lots of speech has these effects.  For example, public demands
for the resignation of television who say offensive things are actually
intended to silence people, but surely such demands are nonetheless
constitutionally protected. 99  Likewise, lots of speech discredits worthy
speakers, and virtually every form of advocacy will be seen by some as
polluting the marketplace of ideas with pernicious falsehoods.

              Perhaps these effects should indeed be weighed in the balance
for all forms of speech.  Under the constitutional tension method, this
might in fact happen.  My only concern is that once we begin considering
these factors, the constitutional tension opinions of the past may turn
into accurate predictors of what the law could become.

Conclusion:  Judging the Method Today

              "There is in every constitutional doctrine we devise,"
Professor Matsuda says, "the danger of misuse." 100  But, she suggests,
this ought not paralyze us.  "We owe [those harmed by bigoted speech] a
more thoughtful analysis than absolutism.  At the least, before we abandon
the task of devising a legal response to racist speech, we should consider
concretely the options available to us." 101  Professor MacKinnon goes
further:  The slippery slope concern is "a largely phony scruple." 102

              Of course, I can't object to a call for more thoughtful
analysis, and it's certainly easy to overstate the slipperiness of slopes.
Constitutional law is full of slippery slopes down which we, fortunately,
haven't slipped.  Maybe we should have more faith in the sound discretion
of the judiciary.  To quote the Court in Douds, the first case in which the
Court upheld a restriction on Communist advocacy, the answer to
slippery-slope arguments -- if you lose one protection, others will follow
-- may just be that "that result does not follow `while this Court sits."�
103 And perhaps Frankfurter was right in his opinion the following year in
Dennis, when he said that "[t]he demands of free speech in a democratic
society," as well as the demands of countervailing constitution al values,
"are better served by candid and informed weighing of the competing
interests . . . than by announcing dogmas too inflexible for the
non-Euclidian problems to be solved." 104

              But remembering the track record of the constitutional
tension tradition is an indispensable part of "consider[ing] concretely the
options available." 105  The past is certainly not a perfect predictor of
the future, but it's one of the few we have.

              The basic method at the heart of the proposals I've discussed
has been tried before.  If we want to consider the method seriously, we
should ask ourselves what we think of the results it led to.  And, if we
conclude, as I do, that the results were unsatisfactory, that they allowed
far too much suppression of speech, then we should think twice about
implementing a similar approach today.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    *    I would like to thank Akhil Amar, Julian Eule, Ken Karst, and Bob
Meister for their help.

    1.    268 US 652, 673 (1925).

    2.    Catharine A. MacKinnon, Only Words 86 (Harvard, 1993).  MacKinnon
was writing about equality, but her argument seems equally applicable to
democracy, a value that's of at least the same constitutional standing as
equality.

    3.    Carl A. Auerbach, The Communist Control Act of 1954: A Proposed
Legal-Political Theory of Free Speech, 23 U Chi L Rev 173, 186-89 (1956).
See also Robert H. Bork, Neutral Principles and Some First Amendment
Problems, 47 Ind L J 1, 31 (1971).  The existence of alternatives to
punishing speech -- punishing bad conduct or responding with counterspeech
-- doesn't answer this question.  These alternatives may diminish the harm
the speech inflicts, but they don't eliminate it.  If, for example, I argue
to people that bombing draft offices (or abortion clinics) is good
behavior, and 90% of those people hear your urgings to the contrary and
refuse to adopt my views, that still leaves the 10% as potential bombers.
Similarly, even if Communist advocacy won't lead to a successful
revolution, but only occasional riots or terrorism, isn't that harm enough?
The same goes for speech that interferes with the war effort.  In the words
of Judge Learned Hand, "[D]issension within a country is a high source of
comfort and assistance to its enemies; the least intimation of it they
seize upon with jubilation.  There cannot be the slightest question of the
mischievous effects of such agitation upon the success of the national
project." Masses Pub. Co. v Patten, 244 F 535, 539 (S D NY 1917).

    4.    See text accompanying note 74; but see also note 80, describing a
few recent Supreme Court decisions that seem to, in narrow contexts, use
constitutional tension reasoning.

    5.    For an excellent discussion of past academic commentary which
applied the same method, see Mark A. Graber, Old Wine in New Bottles: The
Constitutional Status of Unconstitutional Speech, 48 Vand L Rev 349, 366-72
(1995).  Some of Professor Graber's points are similar to mine; I first saw
a draft of that article shortly after I finished writing this one (in late
1994).

    6.    Not all the advocates of banning hate speech use constitutional
tension arguments, and those who do make other arguments in addition.  This
article focuses only on constitutional tension arguments, and leaves the
other points to others.  See, for example, the sources cited in note 8.

    7.    My argument would apply equally to those who justify speech
restrictions by reference to the Sixth Amendment, to the Due Process Clause
right to abortion, or to other provisions.  I focus on the equality
arguments largely because they are the ones most commonly made in recent
years.

    8.    See, for example, Nicholas Wolfson, Free Speech Theory and
Hateful Words, 60 U Cin L Rev 1 (1991); Nadine Strossen, Regulating Racist
Speech on Campus: A Modest Proposal?, 1990 Duke L J 484, 498; Michael Kent
Curtis, Critics of "Free Speech" and the Uses of the Past, 12 Const Comm 29
(1995).  Professor Curtis's article, like this one, takes a historical view
more than a theoretical one, focusing on past free speech controversies as
one place to look for guidance about the practical consequences of various
constitutional approaches.  In some sense, Professor Curtis's article,
Professor Graber's, cited in note 5, and mine are all parts of this larger
project.

    9.    Compare Alex Kozinski and Eugene Volokh, A Penumbra Too Far, 106
Harv L Rev 1639, 1653-56 (1993); Eugene Volokh, How Harassment Law
Restricts Speech, 47 Rutgers L Rev 563, 575-76 (1995).

    10.    9 F Cas 826 (D Penn 1799).

    11.    Fries, 9 F Cas at 838.

    12.    Id at 839.

    13.    Id at 838.

    14.    Id at 839.

    15.    Id at 838.

    16.    Id at 839.

    17.    Following modern usage, I use "freedom of speech" as shorthand
for both the freedom of speech and the freedom of the press.

    18.    Likewise, the court in Respublica v Dennie, 4 Yeates 267, 271
(Penn 1805), concluded that speech which is "aimed at the independence of
the United States, the constitution thereof, or of this state" was
unprotected.  Speech that was "deliberately designed to unloosen the social
band of union, totally to unhinge the minds of the citizens, and to produce
popular discontent with the exercise of power, by the known constituted
authorities," the court argued, was outside the state free speech guarantee
because it was "subversive of all government and good order" and tended to
lead to "anarchy, sedition, and civil war." Id at 270.  The speech at issue
was, curiously, a diatribe criticizing democracy.

    19.    34 La Ann 741 (1882).

    20.    Liversey, 34 La Ann at 750 (Bermudez dissenting).  See also
Fisher v Patterson, 14 Ohio 418, 426-27 (1846), where the court argued that
"juries should rightly regard such abuse of the press [defamation] as
endangering our free institutions" because, "[w]hen defamation shall become
so common that men cease to be sensitive of character, it will be evidence
of that insensibility which precedes the dissolution of the social tie."
Leaving libels unpunished, the court concluded, "will cast a dark shade
over the blessed principle of self-government."

    21.    112 Cal 94, 44 P 458 (1896).

    22.    Dailey, 44 P at 460 (McFarland dissenting).  See also Cooper v
People ex rel. Wyatt, 13 Colo 337, 366, 22 P 790, 799 (1889), in which,
affirming a contempt conviction for publishing matter relating to pending
prosecution, the court reasoned:  "Parties have a constitutional right to
have their causes tried fairly in court, by an impartial tribunal,
uninfluenced by newspaper dictation or popular clamor.  What would become
of this right if the press may use language in reference to a pending cause
calculated to intimidate or unduly influence and control judicial action?"

    23.    247 US 402 (1918).  Holmes and Brandeis dissented in this case,
as they did in Abrams v United States, 250 US 616 (1919), on statutory
grounds rather than constitutional ones, but as in Abrams, their reading of
the statute seems to reflect a greater solicitude for free speech than the
Court's reading.

    24.    Toledo Newspaper, 247 US at 419.

    25.    Id.

    26.    251 US 466, 477 (1920).

    27.    Schaefer, 251 US at 477.

    28.    Id.

    29.    Id.

    30.    254 US 325, 333 (1920) (Discouraging enlistment in World War I
"was not an advocacy of policies or a censure of actions that a citizen had
the right to make.  The war was flagrant; it had been declared by the power
constituted by the Constitution to declare it, and in the manner provided
for by the Constitution.").

    31.    283 US 605, 622 (1931) (stressing that the Constitution itself
creates Congress' war power, and therefore "[t]o the end that war may not
result in defeat, freedom of speech may, by act of Congress, be curtailed
or denied so that the morale of the people and the spirit of the army may
not be broken by seditious utterances").

    32.    255 US 407, 414 (1921).

    33.    268 US 652, 666 (1925).

    34.    Gitlow, 268 US at 668.

    35.    See Abrams, 250 US at 629 (Holmes dissenting); Schaefer, 251 US
at 486 (Brandeis dissenting).

    36.    Gitlow, 268 US at 669.

    37.    Id.

    38.    Id.  See also John H. Wigmore, Abrams v. U.S.: Freedom of Speech
and Freedom of Thuggery in War-Time and Peace-Time, 14 Ill L Rev 539
(1920).

    39.    Abrams, 250 US at 630 (Holmes dissenting).

    40.    Gitlow, 268 US at 673.

    41.    Abrams, 250 US at 630 (Holmes dissenting).

    42.    MacKinnon, Only Words at 107 (cited in note 2).  Again, the
original quote refers to the idea of equality rather than of liberal
democracy and the legal equality guarantee rather than the Constitution as
a whole, but MacKinnon's argument applies as well to democracy as it does
to equality.

    43.    I speak throughout of a constitutional tension method, not a
constitutional tension school.  Frankfurter and Jackson probably didn't set
out to follow the earlier cases, and the body of their First Amendment
opinions includes many arguments besides the constitutional tension
arguments.  My claim is simply that they used the constitutional tension
style of argumentation and seemed to be swayed by constitutional tension
considerations.

    44.    314 US 252 (1941).

    45.    Bridges, 314 US at 282 (Frankfurter dissenting) (citation
omitted).

    46.    Id at 283 (Frankfurter dissenting).

    47.    Id at 284 (Frankfurter dissenting).  See also Pennekamp v
Florida, 328 US 331, 353, 355 (1946) (Frankfurter concurring):

[The exercise of free speech] must be compatible with the preservation of
other freedoms essential to a democracy and guaranteed by our Constitution.
 When those other attributes of a democracy are threatened by speech, the
Constitution does not deny power to the States to curb it . . . .  The
independence of the judiciary is no less a means to the end of a free
society [than is the freedom of the press], and the proper functioning of
an independent judiciary puts the freedom of the press in its proper
perspective.



    48.    337 US 1, 13 (1949).

    49.    Terminiello, 337 US at 12 (Frankfurter dissenting).

    50.    Id at 36-37 (Jackson dissenting).

    51.    340 US 290, 295 (1951) (Jackson dissenting).

    52.    Kunz, 340 US at 302 (Jackson dissenting) (emphasis in original).


    53.    Id.

    54.    Douglas v City of Jeannette, 319 US 157, 181-82 (1943) (Jackson
dissenting); id at 177 (Jackson dissenting) (describing the Witnesses'
conduct as an interference with the householders' "exercise of their own
faith in peace"); see also id at 180 (stressing that the proselytizers were
insulting Catholicism); American Comm.  Ass'n v Douds, 339 US 382, 444
(1950) (Jackson concurring in part and dissenting in part) ("I have pointed
out (in Douglas) that men cannot enjoy their right to personal freedom if
fanatical masses, whatever their mission, can strangle individual thoughts
and invade personal privacy").

    55.    Douds, 339 US at 444 (Jackson concurring in part and dissenting
in part).

    56.    341 US 494 (1951); 341 US 494, 517 (1951) (Frankfurter
concurring); 341 US 494, 561 (1951) (Jackson concurring).

    57.    Dennis, 341 US at 561 (Jackson concurring).

    58.    Id.

    59.    Id.

    60.    Id at 566 (Jackson concurring).

    61.    Id at 548 (Frankfurter concurring).

    62.    Dennis, 341 US at 509.

    63.    Id at 511.

    64.    Id.

    65.    Id at 544 (Frankfurter concurring).

    66.    Id at 577 (Jackson concurring).

    67.    Id at 544 (Frankfurter concurring).

    68.    Id at 545 (Frankfurter concurring).

    69.    Id.

    70.    Id at 549 (Frankfurter concurring).

    71.    Id at 546 (Frankfurter concurring).

    72.    Dennis, 341 US at 542 (Frankfurter concurring).

    73.    Id at 520 (Frankfurter concurring).

    74.    See, for example, Brandenburg v Ohio, 395 US 444, 447 (1969)
(per curiam) (striking down law which forbade advocacy and assembly for the
purpose of advocacy of violence as a means of accomplishing industrial or
political reform).

    75.    Laurence Tribe, American Constitutional Law 846 (Foundation, 2d
ed 1988).  In 1957, the Court reinterpreted Dennis as applying only to
incitement to action.  The Smith Act, the Court held, does not "prohibit
advocacy and teaching of forcible overthrow as an abstract principle,"
regardless of whether it undermines democratic institutions.  Yates v
United States, 354 US 298, 318 (1957).  Prosecutions of Communist Party
officials continued, as did other disabilities imposed on Communists, but
the Court, with Chief Justice Warren and Justice Brennan joining Justices
Black and Douglas, continued to chip away at the Communist advocacy
exception.  The Dennis rule was at most maintained, sometimes contracted,
but never expanded.

    76.    Abrams, 250 US at 630 (Holmes dissenting).

    77.    Compare Police Department v Mosley, 408 US 92, 95 (1972);
Brandenburg, 395 US at 447-48.

    78.    Gitlow, 268 US at 673 (Holmes dissenting).

    79.    Compare Lamont v Postmaster General, 381 US 301 (1965).

    80.    In a few very narrow contexts, modern Court decisions have used
constitutional tension reasoning (in my view, unsoundly):  1.  In Nebraska
Press Ass'n v Stuart, 427 US 539 (1976), the Court held that the Sixth
Amendment fair trial guarantee could sometimes justify restrictions on
press reports about a criminal case.  Nonetheless, though the Court pointed
to the tension between the two constitutional clauses, see id at 547, 551,
561, it's hard to say that it genuinely balanced the two interests.  To the
extent any balancing took place, it was distinctly with a thumb on the
First Amendment side of the scales; in Laurence Tribe's words, the case
"announced a virtual bar to prior restraints on reporting of news about
crime." Tribe, Constitutional Law at 858-59 (cited in note 75).  This seems
also to have been the view of Justice White, who provided the fifth vote
for the majority, but who concluded "that for the reasons which the Court
itself canvasses there is grave doubt in my mind whether orders with
respect to the press such as were entered in this case would ever be
justifiable." Stuart, 427 US at 570-71 (White concurring).  See also id at
571 (Powell concur ring) (stressing "the unique burden that rests upon the
party . . . who undertakes to show the necessity for prior restraint on
pretrial publicity").  2.  The plurality opinion in Burson v Freeman, 112 S
Ct 1846, 1858 (1992), upheld a ban on political speech within 100 feet of
polling places, in part on the grounds that "the exercise of free speech
rights (near polling places) conflicts with another fundamental right, the
right to cast a ballot in an election free from the taint of intimidation
and fraud." See also Simon & Schuster, Inc.  v New York Crime Victims Bd.,
112 S Ct 501, 514 (1992) (Kennedy concurring) (suggesting an absolute bar
on content-based speech restrictions except in cases where another
constitutional right must be accommodated).  The opinion commanded only
four votes (including Justice Kennedy's).  3.  Several cases involving
religious speech on government property have said that "compliance with the
Establishment Clause is a state interest sufficiently compelling to justify
content-based restrictions on speech." See Capitol Square Review and
Advisory Board v Pinette, 115 S Ct 2440, 2446 (1995); Rosenberger v
University of Virginia, 115 S Ct 2510, 2522-23 (1995); Lamb's Chapel v
Center Moriches Union Free School Dist., 113 S Ct 2141, 2148 (1993); Widmar
v Vincent, 454 US 263, 271 (1981).  All these cases have struck down the
speech restrictions, concluding that the speech in question was genuinely
private and didn't actually violate the Establishment Clause.  In Pinette,
however, the concurring opinions suggested that in some narrow situations
even private religious speech in public places might be restricted because
of Establishment Clause concerns.  Pinette, 115 S Ct at 2459 (Souter
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment); id at 2454 (O'Connor
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment).  Only a four-Justice
plurality would have held that the Free Speech Clause can't be trumped by
the Establishment Clause.  Id at 2448-49.  It's far from clear to me that
the Free Speech Clause and the Establishment Clause are ever actually in
conflict, and it's also far from clear why, in such a conflict, the Free
Speech Clause must give way to the Establishment Clause and not vice-versa.
 But in any event, as with the jury trial-free speech tension, the asserted
tension between free speech and the Establishment Clause covers an
extremely narrow area.  Certainly it's never been suggested that all speech
which tends to undercut Establishment Clause values -- for instance, speech
that condemns atheists or condemns certain religions or even urges
religious discrimination -- should be prohibitable on Establishment Clause
grounds.  My colleague Julian Eule has thoughtfully argued that Austin v
Michigan Chamber of Commerce, 494 US 652 (1990), can also be seen as a
constitutional tension case:  "[T]he Court now seems prepared to recognize
that when government seeks to promote speaker diversity there are First
Amendment values on both sides of the equation." Julian N. Eule, Promoting
Speaker Diversity:  Austin and Metro Broadcasting, 1990 Sup Ct Rev 105, 130
(emphasis in original); see also First Natl Bank of Boston v Bellotti, 435
US 765, 803-04 (1978) (White dissenting).  The Court, however, didn't
explicitly endorse this position, and for the reasons I give in the text,
I'm happy that it didn't.

    81.    Compare Bond v Floyd, 385 US 116 (1966) with Gilbert, 254 US 325
and Debs v United States, 249 US 211 (1919).

    82.    But see David Crump, Camouflaged Incitement, 29 Ga L Rev 1,
76-78 (1994) (suggesting that songs like Cop Killer should be unprotected);
Chuck Philips, North Steamed at Ice T; He Wants Time Warner to Face
Sedition Charges Over Rap Song, LA Times D1 (July 2, 1992) (describing Lt.
Col. Oliver North's suggestions to the same effect).

    83.    See, for example, Mari J. Matsuda, Public Response to Racist
Speech:  Considering the Victim's Story, in Mari J. Matsuda, et al, Words
That Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive Speech, and the First
Amendment 17, 24-25 (Westview, 1993) (harm caused by speech is of
"constitutional dimensions"); Charles R. Lawrence III, If He Hollers Let
Him Go: Regulating Racist Speech on Campus, in Matsuda, et al, Words That
Wound 53, 61 (When "individual racist acts (are viewed) as part of a
totality . . . white supremacists' conduct or speech is forbidden by the
equal protection clause."); MacKinnon, Only Words at 71 (cited in note 2)
("The upheaval that produced the Reconstruction Amendments . . . move(d)
the ground under the expressive freedom, setting new limits and mandating
new extensions."); Richard Delgado, Campus Antiracism Rules:
Constitutional Narratives in Collision, 85 Nw U L Rev 343, 346 (1991)
(suggesting that one may ask whether speech may be restricted "to protect
core values emanating from the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments"); Mary
Ellen Gale, Reimagining the First Amendment:  Racist Speech and Equal
Liberty, 65 St John's L Rev 119, 162 (1991) (A proposed "equality-based
theory of the first amendment (which) permits government regulation of some
categories of racist speech . . . is strengthened and sharpened by the
Fourteenth Amendment's protection of equality."); Brian Owsley, Racist
Speech and "Reasonable People": A Proposal for a Tort Remedy, 24 Colum Hum
Rts L Rev 323, 324 (1993) ("The Fourteenth Amendment must be used to
counteract the existing disproportionate emphasis on the First
Amendment.").

    84.    Lawrence, If He Hollers Let Him Go, at 72-76 (cited in note 83);
MacKinnon, Only Words at 85 (cited in note 2).

    85.    Lawrence, If He Hollers Let Him Go, at 76-79 (cited in note 83);
MacKinnon, Only Words at 9 (cited in note 2).

    86.    MacKinnon, Only Words at 86 (cited in note 2).  MacKinnon made
this observation while criticizing the Court for applying the same rules to
Brandenburg, 395 US 444, which involved speech by the Ku Klux Klan, and
NAACP v Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 US 886 (1982), which involved speech by
the NAACP.  "Suppressed entirely in the piously evenhanded treatment of the
Klan and the boycotters . . . was the fact that the Klan was promoting
inequality and the civil rights leaders were resisting it, in a country
that is supposedly not constitutionally neutral on the subject."

    87.    Justice Frankfurter, after all, wrote the majority opinion in
Beauharnais v Illinois, 343 US 250 (1952), which upheld a law barring
certain statements hostile to a race or a religion; and though Justice
Jackson dissented in Beauharnais, he agreed that some such laws could be
constitutional.  Id at 299 (Jackson dissenting).  Beauharnais is now widely
regarded as no longer being good law.  See Tribe, American Constitutional
Law at 926 (cited in note 75).  And both MacKinnon and Matsuda quote
approvingly from Jackson's dissent in Kunz v New York.  See MacKinnon, Only
Words at 83 (cited in note 2); Matsuda, Public Response to Racist Speech,
at 46 n 61 (cited in note 83).

    88.    See Thomas D.  Elias, TV and Radio Stations Should Be Stripped
of Their Licenses If They Aren't More Responsible in Covering Civil Unrest,
LA Daily J at 6 (Jan 26, 1993) (analogizing "irresponsible" coverage of the
L.A.  riots to "shouting `fire� in a crowded theater"); see also Susan
Carpenter McMillan, Both Pro-Life and Pro-Choice Bear Responsibility, LA
Times B7 (Jan 5, 1995) (arguing that "[t]he inexcusable tolerance of the
Los Angeles riots and constant threats of `no justice, no peace� may have
had a link to the beating of Reginald Denny").

    89.    See Crump, 29 Ga L Rev at 76-78 (cited in note 82); Philips, LA
Times at D1 (cited in note 82).

    90.    Bridges, 314 US at 282 (Frankfurter dissenting) (suggesting that
the right to a fair trial is "no less precious" than the right to free
speech).

    91.    Matsuda, Public Response to Racist Speech, at 37 (cited in note
83).

    92.    Id.

    93.    Id.

    94.    Id.

    95.    Of course, some countries might accept a very weak version of
Marxism, so under Matsuda's approach, advocacy of that version would remain
protected.  But so long as outright Communism is universally rejected,
Communist advocacy would remain restrictable.

    96.    Mari J.  Matsuda, et al, Introduction, in Matsuda, et al, Words
That Wound, 10 (cited in note 83).  Compare MacKinnon, Only Words at 103
(cited in note 2) (praising the Supreme Court of Canada's recognition that
a speech restriction "was not big bad state power jumping on poor powerless
individual citizen, but a law passed to stand behind a comparatively
powerless group in its social fight for equality against socially powerful
and exploitative groups").

    97.    There would, of course, be unpleasant judgment calls involved in
such a standard.  Say someone alleges that Hollywood disserves the country
because it's heavily influenced by Jews.  As a Jew, I'd hate to see the
case which decides whether Jews are among "the least powerful segments of
our community," or whether instead the speech must be protected because
Hollywood is a "powerful institutio(n) that govern(s) our lives." See
Matsuda, et al, Introduction, at 10 (cited in note 96).

    98.    Compare Lawrence, If He Hollers Let Him Go, at 77, 79 (cited in
note 83) (de scribing racist speech as "an epidemic that distorts the
marketplace of ideas and renders it dysfunctional," and arguing that it
"coercively silenc(es) members of those groups who are its targets").

    99.    See James Warren, Andy Rooney Suspended, But Denies Racist
Comment, Chi Trib Sec 1 at 3 (Feb 9, 1992) (describing CBS's suspension of
60 Minutes commentator Andy Rooney for allegedly making a racist comment);
Jerry Berger, Kennedy Decries Reagan Civil Rights Policies, UPI, Jan 18,
1988, available in LEXIS, News Library, UPI File (describing CBS's firing
of Jimmy "The Greek" Snyder on similar grounds).

    100.    Matsuda, Public Response to Racist Speech, at 50 (cited in note
83).

    101.    Id.  Compare Beauharnais, 343 US at 263 ("Every power may be
abused, but the possibility of abuse is a poor reason for denying Illinois
the power to adopt measures against criminal libels sanctioned by centuries
of Anglo- American law.  `While this Court sits' it retains and exercises
authority to nullify action which encroaches on freedom of utterance under
the guise of punishing libel.").

    102.    MacKinnon, Only Words at 102 (cited in note 2).  See also State
v Chandler, 2 Harr 553, 575 (Del 1837) (upholding a blasphemy law on the
grounds that blasphemy has a tendency to lead to breaches of the peace)
("But it has been said that it is dangerous to entrust any tribunal with
power to judge of the mere tendency of actors or words. . . .  We answer
that this argument proves merely that this, like all other human power, may
be abused.  But to prove that power may be abused, is not to prove that
power does not exist.  The same kind of reasoning would break down every
useful institution of man.").

    103.    339 US at 410 (quoting Panhandle Oil Co. v Mississippi ex rel.
Knox, 277 US 218, 223 (1928) (Holmes dissenting)).  But see Barenblatt v
United States, 360 US 109, 152-53 (1959) (Black dissenting) (suggesting
that the Court had indeed slipped far).

    104.    341 US at 524-25 (Frankfurter concurring).

    105.    Matsuda, Public Response to Racist Speech, at 50 (cited in note
83).


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