Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Supreme Court gives mixed signals on free speech case

- Susa■ Shelley Columnist Write Susan@SusanShell­ey. com and follow her on Twitter @Susan_Shelley

Without exaggerati­on, we are heartbeats away from losing freedom in this country, and as President Ronald Reagan said, if we lose it here there is nowhere else to go.

Freedom of speech, the most fundamenta­l of freedoms, has a very simple meaning. It means the government may not infringe your freedom to speak, to express your views and ideas, and to be heard in public.

Laws prohibitin­g specific types of speech such as libel and incitement to violence must be narrowly tailored. A broad, government-directed censorship of speech to prevent unspecifie­d potential harm is what the First Amendment makes impossible. If it doesn't, it might as well be in a landfill.

Garbage trucks are standing by. A majority of the justices on the U.S. Supreme Court have just granted the government's request to “stay” (undo) a lower court's order requiring the government to immediatel­y stop the conduct which prompted the lawsuit previously called Missouri v. Biden and now known as Murthy v. Missouri.

Justice Samuel Alito, joined by Justices Clarence Thomas and Neil Gorsuch, disagreed with the majority's decision. They do not think the court should have allowed the government to continue “what two lower courts found to be a `coordinate­d campaign' by high-level federal officials to suppress the expression of disfavored views on important public issues.”

The Supreme Court majority did this “without undertakin­g a full review of the record and without any explanatio­n,” Alito wrote.

That record includes 82 pages of “findings of fact” by the U.S. District Court. The injunction ordered by Judge Terry Doughty found that the plaintiffs were likely to prevail and that they would suffer irreparabl­e harm if the government was allowed to continue what the Court of Appeals agreed was “unrelentin­g pressure” from certain government officials that likely “had the intended result of suppressin­g millions of protected free speech postings by American citizens.”

While the injunction allowed the government to take actions in narrow categories of national security and criminal investigat­ion, it prohibited the White House and multiple government department­s and agencies from “any manner” of “urging, encouragin­g, pressuring or inducing” social media companies to engage in the “removal, deletion, suppressio­n or reduction of content containing protected free speech.” The judge said that means no flagging, no forwarding, and no pressuring the companies to “change their guidelines.” Further, no meetings, calls, letters, or texts, and no “following up” or “requesting content reports” to document “actions taken to remove, delete, suppress or reduce content containing protected free speech.”

If that sounds like it couldn't possibly be real in the United States of America and must be some fevered nightmare of paranoid “extremists on the right,” consider this: the Biden administra­tion immediatel­y appealed the injunction, insisting that it must continue all these practices for the good of the nation while the case proceeds to trial.

It is this appeal of the district court's order that ultimately went to the U.S. Supreme Court and has now found favor with a majority of justices on the nation's highest court. This is the branch of the United States government that is ultimately responsibl­e for safeguardi­ng your freedom by telling the rest of the government that the Constituti­on means there are some things the government simply cannot do to people.

Without that, you might as well be in California. Courts here routinely ignore the plain language of the state constituti­on and make up new rules to allow local government­s to disregard plain-language constituti­onal provisions. As one example, Propositio­n 13 required local taxes to receive a two-thirds vote of the electorate, but courts have carved costly loopholes.

For now, the U.S. Supreme Court will allow the government to continue its coercive censorship-by-proxy. However, the justices agreed to consider the merits of the case and issue a decision, likely by June.

If the justices rule for the government and against the people who were censored and deplatform­ed, the loss of freedom of speech will only accelerate in years to come. Government­s don't ever give up their coercive powers voluntaril­y.

Be alarmed that a majority of the justices presently on the court thought it was okay for these coercive activities to continue, even temporaril­y. Pray for the health of the ones who didn't.

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of the Supreme Court, seen in 2022, will take up a freedom of speech case involving the Biden Administra­tion and social media platforms. The case is slated to be heard in June.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of the Supreme Court, seen in 2022, will take up a freedom of speech case involving the Biden Administra­tion and social media platforms. The case is slated to be heard in June.
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