It has often been said that the true test of free speech is whether you protect the speech you disagree with. Popular speech does not need protection. Dissent does.
David French is a senior writer at the National Review and a military veteran. He wrote this article for The New York Times. It is titled “Conservatives Fail the NFL’s Free Speech Test.”
I love this article.
The United States is in the grips of a free-speech paradox. At the same time that the law provides more protection to personal expression than at any time in the nation’s history, large numbers of Americans feel less free to speak. The culprit isn’t government censorship but instead corporate, community and peer intimidation.
Conservatives can recite the names of the publicly shamed from memory. There was Brendan Eich, hounded out of Mozilla for donating to a California ballot initiative that defined marriage as the union of a man and woman. There was James Damore, abruptly terminated from Google after he wrote an essay attributing the company’s difficulty in attracting female software engineers more to biology and free choice than to systemic discrimination. On campus, the list is as long and grows longer every semester.
It is right to decry this culture of intolerance and advocate for civility and engagement instead of boycotts and reprisals. The cure for bad speech is better speech — not censorship. Take that message to the heartland, and conservatives cheer.
Until, that is, Colin Kaepernick chose to kneel. Until, that is, the president demanded that the N.F.L. fire the other players who picked up on his protest after he was essentially banished from the league.
That was when the conservative mob called for heads to roll. Conform or face the consequences.
On Wednesday, the mob won. The N.F.L. announced its anthem rules for 2018, and the message was clear: Respect the flag by standing for the national anthem or stay in the locker room. If you break the rules and kneel, your team can be fined for your behavior.
This isn’t a “middle ground,” as the N.F.L. claims. It’s not a compromise. It’s corporate censorship backed up with a promise of corporate punishment. It’s every bit as oppressive as the campus or corporate attacks on expression that conservatives rightly decry.
But this is different, they say. This isn’t about politics. It’s about the flag.
I agree. It is different. Because it’s about the flag, the censorship is even worse.
One of the most compelling expressions of America’s constitutional values is contained in Justice Robert Jackson’s 1943 majority opinion in West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette. At the height of World War II, two sisters, both Jehovah’s Witnesses, challenged the state’s mandate that they salute the flag in school. America was locked in a struggle for its very existence. The outcome was in doubt. National unity was essential.
But even in the darkest days of war, the court wrote liberating words that echo in legal history: “If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.”
Make no mistake, I want football players to stand for the anthem. I want them to respect the flag. As a veteran of the war in Iraq, I’ve saluted that flag in foreign lands and deployed with it proudly on my uniform. But as much as I love the flag, I love liberty even more.
The N.F.L. isn’t the government. It has the ability to craft the speech rules its owners want. So does Google. So does Mozilla. So does Yale. American citizens can shame whomever they want to shame.
But what should they do? Should they use their liberty to punish dissent? Or should a free people protect a culture of freedom?
In our polarized times, I’ve adopted a simple standard, a civil liberties corollary to the golden rule: Fight for the rights of others that you would like to exercise yourself. Do you want corporations obliterating speech the state can’t touch? Do you want the price of participation in public debate to include the fear of lost livelihoods? Then, by all means, support the N.F.L. Cheer Silicon Valley’s terminations. Join the boycotts and shame campaigns. Watch this country’s culture of liberty wither in front of your eyes.
The vice president tweeted news of the N.F.L.’s new policy and called it “#Winning.” He’s dead wrong. It diminishes the marketplace of ideas. It mocks the convictions of his fellow citizens. And it divides in the name of a false, coerced uniformity. Writing in the Barnette decision, Justice Jackson wisely observed, “As governmental pressure toward unity becomes greater, so strife becomes more bitter as to whose unity it shall be.”
The N.F.L. should let players kneel. If it lets them kneel, it increases immeasurably the chances that when they do rise, they will rise with respect and joy, not fear and resentment. That’s the “winning” America needs.

“I am not going to stand up to show pride in a flag for a country that oppresses black people and people of color,” Kaepernick told NFL Media in an exclusive interview after the game. “To me, this is bigger than football and it would be selfish on my part to look the other way. There are bodies in the street and people getting paid leave and getting away with murder.”
How sad that protesting injustices is now considered an affront on the flag. Doesn’t every protest eventually become an affront to our ‘liberty’, ‘freedom’ or ‘patriotism’? Corporations and politicians will say and do anything. Morality has no place in a system that encourages discrimination and injustice.
Men should all be considered equal. We are all the same and should receive equal treatments by all governments. There should be no inequalities that downgrade humanity. This treatment of the afflicted is so unfair. Mankind has a long way to go before it reaches the level of humanity that is desired. That means justice for all and love of all who are hurting and suffering. Then, mankind will work to help all. There is a LONG way to go before justice comes to all.
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Right On!!! I am retired vet. Drafted in 1967. We all know what was going on in those days. We are now in our second or third Vet Nam with our military defending our liberties — the most sacred to me is the freedom of speech. I may not like what is said or done in the form of a personal freedom of speech.
Kneeling is not disrespecting the Flag of the United States. It is stating a person feeling, beliefs, and frustration with what is gong on in this Nation. Remember the sit-ins and marches in the South. Those were statements made in the forms of freedom of speech. So what is the difference now. None!
If I could I would knee right beside those players who are their rights under the Constitution of the United States.
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moeone2015: “Drafted in 1967.”
I went into the Peace Corps in Borneo in 1967. Glad you liked what I wrote.
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I was glad to hear that some owners are stepping up to pay the fines of their players. Trying to force players to yield is an authoritarian flex of power that is to be expected from #45. True democracy is respecting people’s rights to make a statement without trying to undermine the message or caste aspersions on the messenger.
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THIS is why we must fight like crazy to protect public education.
In the midst of poverty, racism, segregation, and every controversy out there – we must fight like crazy for public education to peretuate and protect this democracy. Or those other issues are never addressed.
We must teach history (how many knew of the court case cited in Mr. French’s article?).
We must teach balance of powers. Checks and balances. The Preamble. Comingling religion and government. And, we must teach critical thinking. Crap-detecting (Hemingway and Postman/Weingartner). Questionning government. Inquiry.
When one person/party is in power, controls the media, and CONTROLS WHAT IS TAUGHT IN SCHOOLS (textbooks come right after “liberal” university speakers) – then the scapegoating – the labeling – – and then … “are you now or have you ever… taught science, global warming, the truth …?”
this president is using well-documented tactics to gain distrust for the press, establish state controlled press (see NYTImes editorial Sunday “Trump’s Guide to Presidential Ettiquette,” to blame and label, gerrymander for clones in congress, and as in this case, shift the message.
One player… then more silent protest against injustices. The president frames it as anti-soldier, anti-veteran, anti-American. His base goes nuts. Owners bow to president.
WE taught that base in our public schools. They didn’t all go to all white private schools and segregated Jim Crow schools. WE taught them in our public schools and should have done more. WE need to fight for public education and teach government and history and thnking like our lives depended on it.
We should start with Mr. French’s column and have students unpack it, crtique it, debate it – with facts and most importantly understand it.
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I knew the case that he referred to, and every teacher SHOULD know that one, because children cannot be forced to pledge. I tell students that. That is one of the things that bothers me about this whole NFL issue. I know it’s a business (but it shouldn’t get charitable deductions) instead of a school, but with Barnette, it flies in the face of the First Amendment.
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And on this Memorial Day, let us remember the last lines of Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address……”that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain – that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom – – and that government of the people, by the people, for the people shall not perish from the earth.” From the American Revolution through the Civil War, and all the wars between and following, Americans have fought to preserve our country and her freedoms. No one, no person, no corporation, no foreign power, has the right to take those away from us.
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The flag is not what we should be saluting. In fact, I refuse to salute the flag and I’m a former U.S. Marine and Vietnam combat vet. I think that flag is stained by the lies of presidents and other elected officials, especially Donald Trump.
The flag is a piece of cloth designed to be a symbol of something else. In this case, a concept that is spelled out with words in the U.S. Constitution.
What we should support is the U.S. Constitution.
No one that joins the military takes an oath to the flag.
No one elected to public office takes an oath to the flag.
No one hired to a public position takes an oath to the flag.
All of those oaths are to the U.S. Constitution, and Trump broke the oath of office for the President of the United States the instant he took that oath.
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Lloyd: It is hard to envision someone worse than Trump. He lies repeatedly from his position of hate, bigotry and ignorance. He is NEVER wrong.
……..
NYTimes.com »
TOP STORIES
Analysis: President Trump’s unconfirmed “Spygate” claim shows how he uses conspiracy theories to erode the public’s trust in institutions
Monday, May 28, 2018 6:28 PM EST
Last week, Mr. Trump promoted new, unconfirmed accusations to suit his political narrative: that a “criminal deep state” element within President Barack Obama’s government planted a spy deep inside his presidential campaign to help his rival, Hillary Clinton, win — a scheme he branded “Spygate.”
It was the latest indication that a president who has for decades trafficked in conspiracy theories has brought them from the fringes of public discourse to the Oval Office…
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Just the thought that it would be possible that there is someone out there worse than Trump is a good reason to build a large, deep, bomb shelter in secret where you can escape when whoever is worse than Trump ends up in the White House.
On a scale of 1 to 10 with 10 being the worst person possible to become president of the United States, Trump is ranked 100 times worse than a 10. Imagine someone worse than that.
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Lloyd, thanks for the belly laugh! I needed that!
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My favorite Trump tweet of the week is the one where he calls on the public to “pressure Democrats” to reverse the terrible policy of separating parents from their children at the border. I was dumbstruck. I tweeted back that he is the President, he controls the Border Patrol, the Justice Department, his party controls both Houses of Congress. Why should anyone “pressure” Democrats when they are out of power in every branch of government? Why doesn’t he just change his own inhumane policy?
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Diane, children being separated from their parents has to be the Democrats’ fault. Trump is never wrong but he is always right. Hard to follow that trail. Changing his own inhumane policy isn’t possible under those conditions. [This makes just as much sense as he does.]
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Thank you, Lloyd.
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While I applaud Mr French’s sentiment and support his view that freedom of speech is under attack from corporate interests, I wonder where he has been all this divisive time I have lived through. When conservative politicians went after Kerry’s response to The Vietnam War when he was younger, that was suppression of ideas. When conservative candidates Willis Horton some supposed liberal, that is suppression of ideas. When corporate interests are allowed to buy the bully pulpit, corporations are acting as governmental entities.
Conservative support of the status of corporations as individuals, the base of Citizens United as I Understand it, has been that the corporation has the same rights as the individual. His is erroneous. Corporations are actually competing governments, and they should be regulated not as individual citizens are, but as foreign governments are. Thus a google who wants to fire an employee who tweets an unpopular idea should face sanctions just as a president who wants to play politics with free speech should face sanctions by an independent judiciary that protects our bill of rights, not just our second amendment.
French needs to return to classical liberalism, the idea of self government based on fundamental human freedoms. Then he will discover the Hobbes in his conservative self.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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As noted in other comments, I despair at how our schools are now training children to live under a totalitarian regime in the name of retaining the “rights” of gun advocates to purchase whatever weapons they wish to possess. I would hope that those who seek the liberty to own whatever weapons they desire would support those who seek the liberty to speak their minds openly about racism…. but I’m not holding my breath…
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“The cure for bad speech is better speech — not censorship.”
Here are examples of a good speech and a bad speech, or in this case, a bad Tweet. Trump simply can’t get over how great he is. Good grief, the GOP offered a 25% discount on official Trump campaign merchandise as a way to truly celebrate Memorial Day! Darn, I missed the sale! [I know just what I’d do with Trump’s campaign merchandise.]
………………………………..
Barack Obama’s statement this Memorial Day, “We can never truly repay the debt we owe our fallen heroes. But we can remember them, honor their sacrifice, and affirm in our own lives those enduring ideals of justice, equality, and opportunity for which generations of Americans have given that last full measure of full devotion.”.
A veterans group slammed President Donald Trump’s Memorial Day tweet…HuffPost
Trump’s Tweet: Happy Memorial Day! Those who died for our great country would be very happy and proud at how well our country is doing today. Best economy in decades, lowest unemployment numbers for Blacks and Hispanics EVER (& women in 18 years), rebuilding our Military and so much more. Nice!
A veterans group has slammed Donald Trump’s self-congratulatory tweet Monday as the “most inappropriate” Memorial Day comment ever made by an American president.
Trump boasted about unemployment rates and the economy in his tweet and said that dead veterans would be “very happy and proud” about what he considers his accomplishments. (Both the jobs numbers and the economy began markedly improving during the Obama administration.)
VoteVets, a group representing some 500,000 veterans and their families, bashed as “appalling” the president’s self-promotion as well as his decision to wish families of fallen veterans a “happy” day. The group was also furious at the Republican Party’s effort to essentially fundraise off Memorial Day by offering a 25 percent discount on official Trump campaign merchandise ― “Use Code: Remember.”…
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Great post; great comments. Thank you.
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Another “conservative” writer who is well worth reading is Andrew Bacevich, a retired military officer and military historian whose son was killed while on active duty in Iraq.
Bacevich writes erudite, insightful and accessible critiques of US foreign policy and the endless “War On Terror,” which has robbed us of our constitutional freedoms while setting large parts of the world on fire. Critiques like his have become harder and harder to find, even in ostensibly progressive publications.
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The NFL is basically a modern slave driving organization. Its back basically a plantation run by a bunch of rich white guys, most of (about 70%) whose labor is provided by a bunch of African Americans.
Sure, it pays it’s players lots of money for the few years they are able to work. But it treats them like slaves while they are under contract. It demands total control of players’ bodies and minds, with total disregard for their health and well being. For decades it completely ignored the toll that concussions and other injuries were having on players and has just recently started to acknowledge that toll after the crimes of the NFL were exposed.
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SDPoet: It isn’t just the football players who are being abused. Look at the mess cheerleaders are enduring. I also read somewhere that cheerleaders aren’t being paid very well.
……
Former Dolphins cheerleader talks about mistreatment she experienced in emotional video
…In the video, Ware, who was a cheerleader for the Dolphins for three seasons until 2017, talks about the allegations she made in the lawsuit she filed with the Florida Commission on Human Relations.
She says when fans touched her inappropriately, they were taught to just smile and let it go.
“I think about this: If I would’ve come on the team at 18 years old, and that’s what I was being taught on how to handle sexual harassment, you’re teaching me my voice doesn’t matter,” Ware says.
She also recalls being told to not to talk about her virginity and her Christian faith, and she says the Dolphins told the cheerleaders that they were being weak when they injured themselves. Ware claims that at the end of her career she had four broken bones, two sprained MCLs and two sprained menisci.
“It’s going to take a village,” Ware says. “It’s going to take a group of women to make a difference in the NFL. We know our self worth. We know our self value. We respect ourselves more. This needs to stop. Intimidation needs to stop. The silence needs to stop, and we need to speak up…
https://usat.ly/2G7FHtK
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The NFL is just a bad organization all around.
The whole premise upon which it is based — profit from organized violence and sexual exploitation (in the case of cheerleaders) — is grotesque.
Little better than the gladiator “games” that the Romans held in the Coliseum. In fact, the similarities are quite striking.
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Militarism, glorification of violence, extorting tax dollars to pay for their stadiums, patriotism for hire – the Pentagon pays the NFL millions for its grotesque patriotic spectacles as a marketing and recruitment tool – and the disposing of their mostly Black gladiators when their bodies have been used up… yes, the NFL is an ethical cesspool, no matter how you look at it.
The good news, however, is that the League as we’ve known it is probably doomed, since TV ratings have been declining for years, more and more parents sensibly refuse to let their sons play the game, and the prohibitive costs of fielding high schools teams will eventually lead to its disappearance in many/most school districts.
Good riddance.
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http://www.newsweek.com/jehovahs-witnesses-939860
Where is the Suport ? Freedom of Religion if my Daughter was mocked by his Fe abd I was told extremist by those who abused of my Childrens at Hiealeah Education Academy. Inc . I was warned by a Trespass Warning . I never seen something like that , the police are supporting the abusers and violated our rights, by the way I don’t support Charters schools. Why because I have my heart brouke is hard to tell the truth over and over and the problem it’s getting as snow ball , the only thing I did was stand up and expose the true . I’m not a prominent person as well of OF you , I’m telling that it’s unfair that if I have done a lot to protect students , why people don’t do anything ?
Thanks God Worldpress it’s not named because I’m don’t trust anymore in not other wed or blog .
Thanks and I hope you understand
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I stand with the players. They have the right to protest the injustices that have been put upon the black community. Trump is just proving how bigoted he is.
How the NFL Players’ Union Can Block the League’s New Ban on Protests
WRITTEN BY
Kathy Wilkes , In These Times
PUBLISHED
June 2, 2018
…Yet, when it comes to a professional football league that is 70 percent African American, Trump has persistently condemned the players’ peaceful and silent protests. He has demanded their termination and most recently suggested that they “shouldn’t be in the country.”…
On Thursday, NBC Sports and other outlets reported on the testimony of Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones in Kaepernick case. Jones claimed that Trump pressed him on the protest controversy, telling him: “This is a very winning, strong issue for me. Tell everybody, you can’t win this one. This one lifts me.”…
Up until last week when the NFL reversed course, the league and the union had repeatedly affirmed players’ First Amendment rights, and the person who had openly tried to suppress those rights is the President of the United States.
Perhaps the most full-throated legal opinion in favor of the players to date comes from Benjamin Sachs, professor of labor and industry at Harvard Law School. Writing for Vox, he offered multiple reasons why, as the headline states, “The NFL’s ‘take a knee’ ban is flatly illegal.”…
Absent a change of heart by the league, the union response could be to resort to the CBA’s grievance procedures, but there is also compelling labor law that could bring a complaint directly to the National Labor Relations Board. As Sachs points out:
The clearest illegality derives from the fact that the league adopted its new policy without bargaining with the players union. When employees, including football players, are represented by a union, the employer—including a football league—can’t change the terms of employment without discussing the change with the union. Doing so is a flagrant violation of the employer’s duty to bargain in good faith…
Check out this article: https://truthout.org/articles/how-the-nfl-players-union-can-block-the-leagues-new-ban-on-protests/?utm_source=sharebuttons&utm_medium=mashshare&utm_campaign=mashshare
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