Ethicalego SpeaksEthicalego (Kenneth Brooks) discusses current events from a critical thinking perspective rarely expressed elsewhere
Misunderstanding about Free Speech Rights By Kenneth Brooks 4/25/14
The
New York Civil Liberties Union (NYCLU) misinterpreted free speech
principles. St. Anthony High School in South Huntington, N.Y.
suspended two students for displaying the flag of the Southern
Confederacy at an after-hours school event according to CBS New York.
St. Anthony is a private school. Therefore, the First Amendment
prohibitions of federal government authority over speech do not apply
here.
Despite
the school's private status, NYCLU objected that, "All people
should be able to express their views freely, even the offensive
ones." "Our motto is more speech, not censorship, or
punishment," said NYCLU director Donna Lieberman. "Helping
children understand the impact of this patently offensive expressive
activity." Lieberman's illogical conclusion shows a
misunderstanding about speech rights."
The
ability to communicate is an inborn human trait of survival. However,
each person must exercise the ability responsibly or lose its
usefulness. The First Amendment to the Constitution denied government
authority over the people's speech to prevent its ability to censor
their speech about government operation. The First Amendment did not
create freedom of speech rights, as many Americans believe. Instead,
it protected existing free speech rights of the people from
government restrictions. Therefore, each person's right of free
speech includes the power to restrict offensive speech to him or her
in areas he or she controls. Illogically, Lieberman concludes that
people should surrender this personal component of their free speech
rights to provide forum for people with speech goals to offend them. |
Individuals,
family, friends, business associates, and strangers censor the speech
of one another all the time. They ignore or object to speech they
find offensive, uninteresting, or unworthy of their time. The power
of choice provides each person an independent vote which speech is
most valuable to him or her and to society. People harm themselves
and society if from ignorance they persistently provide a forum for
illogical, abusive, destructive, or vacuous speech. Each forum
allowed for vacuous or intentionally offensive speech displaces the
opportunity for positive speech and ideas. Therefore, nobody has a
duty to provide a forum and the use of his or her time for speech
designed to offend him or her.
Remarks
by St. Anthony officials and others presumed the students' display of
the rebel flag was mostly offensive to black-labeled Americans. It is
true that some descendants of Freed Americans believe they should
take special offense to displays of the Rebel flag. However, the flag
represents the poorly reasoned plan of some slave states to withdraw
from the Union and establish a slave nation. It represents the
crushing and humiliating defeat the Union Army of free white-labeled
and black-labeled Americans and escaped slaves inflicted on the
Rebels. No doubt, this Rebel plan and defeat at Civil War advanced
approval of the 13th Amendment and ending of slavery in the United
States by a century or more. Therefore, descendants of Freed
Americans have reason to cheer displays of the rebel flag symbolizing
those events and their ancestors' role in them.
On
the other hand, all Americans should disapprove any current support
for the traitorous rebels that killed around three-hundred thousand
Union soldiers. Nevertheless, we should respond to this type
provocation with care and restraint. St. Anthony school officials
overreacted to the students' conduct by assigning indefinite
suspensions. This overreaction suggests that those children had power
and influence over targeted people to devastate them emotionally
merely by displaying the Rebel flag. If so, then the people that feel
especially victimized need to evaluate their values and self-worth.
Society
must stop overreacting to antisocial conduct by young people seeking
attention by offensive conduct. This is true whether they display the
flag of the defeated Rebel cause at inappropriate times or places or
they spew self-belittling racist slurs and degrading sexist language
in music. We should discipline them for disruptive conduct, if it is
disruptive, and move on. St. Anthony High officials should assign
those two students the task of writing an essay comparing the living
conditions of free workers in the rebel states before, doing and
after the Civil War with those of wealthy slave and property owners
in those states during those same periods. This will teach them about
the inappropriate timing and location of their speech while educating
them of the true circumstances of conditions symbolized by the Rebel
flag. |