Pubdate: Mon, 09 Jul 2007 Source: Tomah Journal, The (WI) Copyright: 2007 The Tomah Journal Contact: http://www.tomahjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4120 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Bong+Hits+4+Jesus (Bong Hits 4 Jesus) SUPREME COURT PROTECTS MEGAPHONE, DENIES PROTECTION TO SPEECH ITSELF "Speech with which this court agrees must be afforded the highest level of protection." That exact phrase wasn't used in either free speech ruling handed down by the U.S. Supreme Court last month, but it summarizes the majority opinions. On the same day, the court upheld the business transactions that amplify speech but ratified censorship of free speech itself. The two cases -- Morse v. Frederick and Federal Elections Commission v. Wisconsin Right to Life -- exposed a court that appears more eager to defend political constituencies than a coherent view of the First Amendment. In Morse v. Frederick, the court upheld a suspension of Joseph Frederick, an 18-year-old Alaska high school student who unfurled a banner that read "BONG HiTS 4 JESUS" while standing on a public sidewalk during a parade for the 2002 Winter Olympics (students were allowed to leave class to watch the parade). The principal confiscated the banner and suspended him for 10 days. The court ruled the banner advocated illegal drug use and was disruptive, but Justice John Paul Stevens' dissent noted that the principal practiced blatant viewpoint discrimination. "The principal has unabashedly acknowledged that she disciplined Frederick because she disagreed with the pro-drug viewpoint she ascribed to the message on the banner," Stevens said. Meanwhile, the court used the Wisconsin Right to Life case to uphold the right of corporations to make unlimited contributions to political campaigns. At issue wasn't WRTL's right to broadcast issue ads -- WRTL could form a political action committee and say whatever it wanted about any candidate anytime in any election cycle. Instead, the question was whether WRTL could accept unlimited contributions from corporations to broadcast television commercials and if Congress could subject WRTL to the same fund-raising and disclosure limits imposed on candidates themselves. Chief Justice John Roberts, author of the majority opinion, offered the following rationale: "When it comes to defining what speech qualifies as the functional equivalent of expressed advocacy ... we give the benefit of the doubt to speech, not censorship." There you have it -- WRTL gets the benefit of the doubt, an 18-year-old high school student does not. There is, however, a thread of consistency in the court's decisions. WRTL advocated a conservative position of ratifying President Bush's judicial nominees. Frederick advocated a liberal position in favor of relaxed penalties for marijuana use. These days, the Supreme Court breaks ties in favor of conservative speech. Such is the new paradigm of judicial restraint. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek