The Mercury News

First Amendment meaningles­s unless everyone agrees to it

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Miami Herald columnist. © 2020, Miami Herald. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Those words have no meaning.

Not until or unless you and I agree they do. After all, neither the parchment on which the promises are written nor the Supreme Court that interprets them has any means to compel our obeisance. The words have force because we choose to be bound by them.

That’s the basis of a free society. A traffic cop has power to tell us when to go and when to stop because we agree he or she does; if every driver refused to obey, what could they do? A piece of paper with Abraham Lincoln’s picture on it can be exchanged for a 12-pack of Coke or two gallons of gas, because we agree that it can; but if ever we don’t, the paper is worthless.

When people cease abiding by the unspoken pacts that bind us, a free society cannot function. That’s what a riot is — a mass of people rescinding their agreement to obey the laws. For all its fire and fury, though, a riot is a localized affair that eventually exhausts itself.

A far more ominous and farreachin­g withdrawal from our social covenant has come in response to that unrest. Meaning the 138 police attacks, most of them deliberate, that had occurred as of Wednesday against reporters reporting on the uprising. We are indebted to Nick Waters of Bellingcat, an investigat­ive journalism website, for keeping track.

The victims include a reporter in Louisville, Kentucky, who was targeted with pepper bullets, and a CBS News audio engineer in Minneapoli­s shot with rubber bullets. A photograph­er in Minneapoli­s, who may or may not have been deliberate­ly targeted, was shot and blinded in one eye. And an Australian news crew was roughed up outside the White House as government goons — the descriptio­n is apt — wielded gas, flash-bangs and rubber bullets against protesters so that Donald Trump could shamble up to a church he has seldom attended and hold up a book — the Bible — he has almost certainly never read. In so doing, they shredded four of the five guarantees in the First Amendment quoted above.

You can lay much of the blame for this squarely at Trump’s feet. His nonstop demonizing of journalist­s — his “fake news” and “enemy of the people” mantras — has certainly exacerbate­d and emboldened this misconduct.

Not to imply a journalist’s bruises are more important than a welder’s or a teacher’s. They aren’t. But the willingnes­s of police to stomp on the First Amendment while dealing with someone who has a platform and visibility, sometimes live on the air, should raise an obvious question. If that’s how they treat a journalist with the world watching, how do you imagine they treat the welder or the teacher when the world is not?

After things quiet down, there will likely be apologies for all this, civil suits, and court rulings affirming that this has been a monstrous breach of the First Amendment. To be sanguine about that is to miss the point.

If some cop denies you a constituti­onal right, what’s your immediate recourse? Truth is, you have none. The Constituti­on is just a 233-year-old piece of parchment whose words have no meaning until or unless we give it. And too many police feel far too free to decline. Yes, it’s well and good to have your freedoms vindicated after the fact.

But if you don’t have your rights in the moment you need them, it’s fair to say you don’t have them at all.

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishm­ent of religion, or prohibitin­g the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” —The First Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on

 ?? KEREM YUCEL — GETTY IMAGES ?? Protesters are trapped between police and other protesters who gathered outside a Minneapoli­s police precinct on May 27 to protest the killing of George Floyd on May 25. Police fired rubber bullets and used tear gas to try to break up the protest.
KEREM YUCEL — GETTY IMAGES Protesters are trapped between police and other protesters who gathered outside a Minneapoli­s police precinct on May 27 to protest the killing of George Floyd on May 25. Police fired rubber bullets and used tear gas to try to break up the protest.

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