Boston Herald

Rockers put own Slant on free speech

High court hits PC cops, backs band’s trademark bid

- By RICH LOWRY

With the left feverishly attempting to squash unwelcome speech on college campuses, with the president of the United States musing about tightening libel laws, with prominent liberals asserting that so-called hate speech is not protected by the First Amendment, free speech in America at least has one reliable friend — the Supreme Court of the United States.

In a firm 8-0 decision, the court slapped down the Patent and Trademark Office for denying a band the federal trademark registrati­on for its name, “The Slants,” a derogatory term for Asian-Americans. The case involves a very small corner of federal law, but implicates the broader logic of political correctnes­s, which is that speech should be silenced for the greater good if there is a chance that someone, somewhere might be offended by it.

As it happens, The Slants is an Asian-American band that seeks to “reclaim” and “take ownership” of anti-Asian stereotype­s (it has released albums called “The Yellow Album” and “Slanted Eyes, Slanted Hearts”). This didn’t matter to the trademark office any more than it presumably would to the dean of students at the average liberal-arts college. “The Slants” appealed the initial rejection to the trademark office, got rebuffed again and then rightly made a federal case of it.

The litigation hinged on a provision of federal trademark law referred to as the “disparagem­ent clause.” This clause forbids registrati­on for any trademark “which may disparage ... persons, living or dead, institutio­ns, beliefs, or national symbols, or bring them into contempt or disrepute.” Taken literally, this provision would forbid the disparagem­ent of the KKK, an institutio­n; or Benito Mussolini, a person who is dead; or Vladimir Putin, a person who is living.

The trademark office interprets the clause with all the wisdom you’d expect of a federal bureaucrac­y. As the trademark office’s manual puts it, an examiner determines whether or not the mark would be found disparagin­g by a “substantia­l composite, although not necessaril­y a majority, of the referenced group.” So, merely a plurality of the offended will do, and common sense is no defense: “The fact that an applicant may be a member of that group or has good intentions underlying its use of a term does not obviate the fact that a substantia­l composite of the referenced group would find the term objectiona­ble.”

This is classic safe-space reasoning — the harm that would allegedly befall some portion of a group from encounteri­ng an offending trademark should trump the free-speech rights of the likes of “The Slants.” The court utterly rejected this posture, deeming it inimical to a free society and untenable under the U.S. Constituti­on.

In a passage that should be pasted into the student handbook of every college and read aloud by progressiv­es who have convinced themselves that hate speech is not free speech, the court held, “Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprude­nce is that we protect the freedom to express ‘the thought that we hate.’ ”

As the court’s concurring opinion noted, basing the trademark prohibitio­n on the presumed reactions of an offended group doesn’t help — “a speech burden based on audience reactions is simply government hostility and interventi­on in a different guise.”

The practices of the Patent and Trademark Office obviously aren’t the most significan­t grounds for contention over speech. But the disparagem­ent clause was the wedge that activists were trying to use to force the Washington Redskins to change the NFL team’s name (the team has been fighting the cancellati­on of its trademark in court). And every effort by the speech police to spread their operations from college campuses to the wider society must be resisted.

In this case, they came for a self-described “Chinatown Dance Rock” band with a cheeky name, and the Supreme Court said, Sorry, not in America.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? HIJINKS: The Slants took their case to the Supreme Court, which struck down a law banning offensive trademarks.
AP PHOTO HIJINKS: The Slants took their case to the Supreme Court, which struck down a law banning offensive trademarks.

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