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  2. Hate speech in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech_in_the_United...

    Hate speech in the United States cannot be directly regulated by the government due to the fundamental right to freedom of speech protected by the Constitution. [1] While "hate speech" is not a legal term in the United States, the U.S. Supreme Court has repeatedly ruled that most of what would qualify as hate speech in other western countries is legally protected speech under the First Amendment.

  3. United States free speech exceptions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_free_speech...

    The government is not permitted to fire an employee based on the employee's speech if three criteria are met: the speech addresses a matter of public concern; the speech is not made pursuant to the employee's job duties, but rather the speech is made in the employee's capacity as a citizen; [47] and the damage inflicted on the government by the ...

  4. Hate speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech

    Political philosopher Jeffrey W. Howard considers the popular framing of hate speech as "free speech vs. other political values" as a mischaracterization. He refers to this as the "balancing model", and says it seeks to weigh the benefit of free speech against other values such as dignity and equality for historically marginalized groups.

  5. Hate crime or free speech? Pro-Palestine protesters say they ...

    www.aol.com/hate-crime-free-speech-pro-080000812...

    In it police define hate crimes and state that free speech provides a right to express ideas without government censorship. ... and reckoned with questions over whether certain speech should be ...

  6. Freedom of speech in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freedom_of_speech_in_the...

    During colonial times, English speech regulations were rather restrictive.The English criminal common law of seditious libel made criticizing the government a crime. Lord Chief Justice John Holt, writing in 1704–1705, explained the rationale for the prohibition: "For it is very necessary for all governments that the people should have a good opinion of it."

  7. What Today’s University Presidents Can Learn From the First ...

    www.aol.com/today-university-presidents-learn...

    This was the conception of free speech employed at Brown University in 1990, when, for the first time, a modern university expelled a student for a violation of a "hate speech code.”

  8. Opinion: When ‘free speech’ becomes a bully’s free pass

    www.aol.com/opinion-going-wrong-direction-online...

    The Supreme Court’s recent ruling that makes it harder to hold people responsible for harassment online could send a troubling symbolic message about free speech to institutions other than ...

  9. Hate speech laws by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_speech_laws_by_country

    At the same time, the Norwegian Constitution guarantees the right to free speech, and there has been an ongoing public and judicial debate over where the right balance between the ban against hate speech and the right to free speech lies. Norwegian courts have been restrictive in the use of the hate speech law and only a few persons have been ...