In addressing this issue’s theme—“the changing notions of free speech in our society”—I will explore whether and how notions of free speech actually have been changing. To start, a couple of important such notions have not notably changed for many decades.
Unchanging Support for Two Important, Inconsistent Notions of Free Speech
Notwithstanding recent alarmist headlines on the subject, public opinion surveys and other data, going back to the mid-twentieth century, consistently demonstrate that most people simultaneously hold two inconsistent notions of free speech. On the one hand, when asked about freedom of speech in the abstract, most people are supportive. After all, freedom of speech is a cherished national value “as American as apple pie.” On the other hand, when asked about freedom of speech for particular controversial views, many of the very same people favor censorship.
Many members of the public, as well as officials, from across the political spectrum have supported suppressing a range of controversial expression at particular points in the recent past—from flag burning to media violence. Furthermore, as far back as the data extends, there has been one particular unpopular message that solid majorities have steadfastly supported stifling: “hate speech,” or speech conveying hateful, discriminatory views on bases such as race, religion, gender, and sexual orientation. Hence, we should not be shocked by the recent Gallup/Knight Foundation poll reporting that 64 percent of college students oppose constitutional protection for such speech. Their responses mirror those of all adults throughout recent history.
There is abounding evidence of the unchanging notions of free speech in our society as excluding controversial messages, in particular, hateful speech. One piece of evidence is a trend analysis of the First Amendment Center’s annual surveys about free speech attitudes, between 1997 and 2004, by Princeton University’s Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies. It found that in each of these years, while respondents overwhelmingly expressed support for free speech, “a substantial number of respondents (sometimes even a majority) did not support the right to express specific types of potentially offensive opinions.”
Surveys further show that majorities of respondents consistently oppose free speech rights for hateful speech in particular. For example, let me cite a historic survey conducted by the very organization that publishes this magazine: the American Bar Association (ABA). In 1991, to mark the 200th anniversary of the Bill of Rights, the ABA released a survey revealing that 51 percent of adult Americans believed thatgovernment should ban hate speech. Also pertinent are the First Amendment Center’s annual free speech surveys, noted above. In every such survey from 1997 to 2008, majorities of respondents either strongly disagreed or mildly disagreed with the proposition that “people should be allowed to use words in public that might be offensive to racial groups.” Throughout that period, the lowest percentage of respondents who either strongly or mildly disagreed with this core free speech principle was 53 percent (in 2005), while the highest such percentage was 78 percent (in 1999).
These polling results are bolstered by other evidence. One potent example involves the iconic “Skokie case”: the 1977–1978 litigation arising from the attempts to bar a proposed demonstration by neo-Nazis in Skokie, Illinois, a Chicago suburb that had a large Jewish population, including many Holocaust survivors. When the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) defended the fundamental free speech principles at stake, it resoundingly won in the courts of law. In contrast, though, the ACLU did not fare so well in the court of public opinion. In fact, even many ACLU members—who were generally diehard free speech champions—supported censoring the Nazis; remarkably, a full 15 percent of the ACLU’s members resigned from the organization in protest.
Likewise, when the ACLU (successfully) defended free speech rights for alt-right demonstrators in Charlottesville, Virginia, in 2017, about 200 ACLU staff members (out of 1,300) objected. In sum, even many ACLU insiders, who are surely among the staunchest supporters of free speech in general, nonetheless object to freedom for racist views. This underscores the prevalent, longstanding disconnect between our society’s support for free speech in general, while not supporting freedom for hateful speech in particular.
The Supreme Court’s Changing Notions of Free Speech
Although the public’s notions of free speech have not been changing, insofar as many people have consistently sought to suppress hateful speech, fortunately, the Supreme Court’s pertinent notions have been changing—in a speech-protective direction. From the mid-twentieth century onward, with support from justices across a broad ideological spectrum, the Court has been evolving toward more and more protection of more and more speech purveying controversial views, including hate speech.
The Viewpoint Neutrality Principle
The Court has increasingly strongly enforced the “viewpoint neutrality” principle, which it has hailed as “the bedrock principle” securing our free speech rights: that government may not punish speech solely because its viewpoint or content is deemed hateful by the majority of the community—even if it is deeply loathed by the vast majority of the community. Ideologically diverse justices long have been united in supporting that fundamental notion of free speech, including when the hated viewpoint is a racist or other hateful one. For example, just last year, the Court unanimously reaffirmed this principle when it upheld freedom of speech for a term (“slants”) that traditionally has been used as an ethnic slur against Asian Americans. As the majority opinion declared, quoting a famous phrase that Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes had penned in a 1929 dissent:
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.’
Similarly, in a 1964 case, the Court explained that even when people “speak out of hatred,” their “utterances . . . contribute to the free interchange of ideas and the ascertainment of truth.”
The Emergency Principle
To be sure, if a hateful message (or any other message) is conveyed in a specific context that poses “a clear and present danger” of directly causing certain specific, imminent, serious harm—such as violence—which cannot be averted through any other means, then government may suppress the speech. Short of such an emergency situation, though, the Court has insisted that the answer to hateful, hated ideas is “more speech,” not suppression.
The Court has acknowledged that even hateful speech that does not satisfy the emergency test may potentially have other adverse impacts. For example, it might indirectly contribute to a more speculative potential harm—including violence—at some indefinite future time. Or it might contribute to emotional or psychic harm, which the Court has held cannot justify punishing any speech about matters of public concern—including hateful speech—because that would silence too much speech that is crucial in our democracy.
Before the Court’s changing notions of free speech embraced the viewpoint neutrality and emergency principles, it had permitted government to silence speech based on the speech’s potential emotional harm, and also based on a more speculative feared connection between the speech and potential violence. Predictably, this broad power was used disproportionately to silence views that were critical of government officials or policies, or that advocated reforms, including racial justice and other human rights causes. For this reason, many human rights activists, including leaders of the twentieth century civil rights movement, have opposed hate speech laws.
Let me quote a 2011 Supreme Court decision on point. Upholding the right of individuals to picket outside the funerals of military veterans with signs conveying hateful views about military personnel, Catholics, the pope, and gay men and lesbians, the Court explained (over only one dissenting vote):
Speech is powerful. It can stir people to action, move them to tears of both joy and sorrow, and—as it did here—inflict great pain. [W]e cannot react to that pain by punishing the speaker. As a Nation we have chosen a different course—to protect even hurtful speech on public issues to ensure that we do not stifle public debate.
Extending Protection to New Media
The Court not only has enforced the speech-protective viewpoint neutrality principle to protect a growing array of hateful and hated messages; it also has enforced that principle to protect expression in an expanded array of media. This constitutes another noteworthy respect in which free speech notions have been changing.
For example, in the 1978 case of FCC v. Pacifica, the Court stated: “We have long recognized that each medium of expression presents special First Amendment problems.” Accordingly, the Pacifica decision permitted the federal government to bar certain words from radio and television broadcasts solely because the government deemed the words to be “indecent” or “patently offensive.” Under this dramatic departure from the viewpoint neutrality principle, the Court upheld a ban on comedian George Carlin’s famous, satirical “Seven Dirty Words” monologue.
In contrast, in subsequent cases that reviewed the “special First Amendment problems” presented by other, newer media, the Court’s free speech notions evolved toward strict enforcement of the viewpoint neutrality principle. Accordingly, it struck down restrictions on “indecent” and “patently offensive” expression in those new media. This was true, for instance, of the Court’s opinions concerning such expression conveyed by telephones (in 1989), cable TV (in 1996), and the Internet (in 1997). Most recently, in its 2017 opinion that focused on yet another new “medium of expression”—online social media—the Roberts Court unanimously extended strong First Amendment protection to such expression.