Philly Can't Turn Entire Airport Into Emotional Safe Space, Say Judges In NAACP-Ad Case
The NAACP just won a years-long First-Amendment fight with the city of Philadelphia.


Philadelphia officials can't ban political or religious speech at the airport just because it might make some visitors uncomfortable, says the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit. The decision is a victory for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), which had been told that city policies prohibited its ads from appearing at the Philadelphia International Airport.
The trouble started in 2011, when the NAACP attempted to run an ad on airport-display monitors that said, "Welcome to America, home to 5% of the world's people & 25% of the world's prisoners. Let's build a better America together. NAACP.org/smartandsafe." But city officials declined the ad, citing an informal Philly policy that prevents airport-advertising with noncommercial messages.
In 2012, Philadelphia passed a formal policy stating that ads not proposing "a commercial transaction" were forbidden at the airport (as were ads relating to alcohol or tobacco products, sexually oriented businesses, and political campaigns). Noncommercial ads promoting Philly tourism, transport, and government-initiatives were exempted.
The city justified this policy by citing a desire to avoid controversy and to maximize ad revenue. City lawyers argued that controversial political or religious messages in some airport ads could jeopardize the impact of nearby commercial ads, thereby leading to an overall decline in willing advertisers. They also claimed that even if revenue wasn't affected, the ban would be justifiable to keep visitors from feeling offended.
Not good enough, said the circuit court. "No matter the type of forum, restrictions on speech on government property must be reasonable. The city's ban on noncommercial ads at the airport is unreasonable because it is not supported by the record or by common-sense inferences," wrote Circuit Judge Thomas L. Ambro in a decision cosigned by Chief Judge Theodore McKee.
Third Circuit Judge Thomas Hardiman, however, dissented, writing that the city should be able to regulate speech in order to create a "comfortable environment" for travelers. "It still seems reasonable to think that disallowing controversial advertisements on the airport's more than 100 monitors will have a positive impact on travelers' experiences by removing some stress or controversy from their journeys," Hardiman wrote.
That does indeed seem reasonable—and also irrelevant. The role of government regulations on speech shouldn't be to maximize profits for commercial enterprises or protect the delicate sensibilities of passersby.
Luckily, Judges Ambro and McKee seem to believe that the First Amendment trumps turning Philly's airport into one big safe-space from emotional discomfort. "Because the ban [on noncommercial airport-advertising] is unreasonable, it violates the First Amendment and cannot be enforced as written," their opinion stated.
The judges also noted that the city's claims about ad revenue and offense-taking may merely be a cover for its "viewpoint discriminatory" speech policy—that is, that Philly's official reasons for rejecting the NAACP ad could have been concocted after-the-fact to conceal a simple dislike for its message. The city conceded as much was possible in court, admitting that its argued reasons might be "strictly in the realm of lawyer argumentation." The court points out that, "asked if the City can invent justifications when writing its appellate briefs, counsel for the City answered yes" and that "the City further conceded the possibility that its actual intent might have been to suppress viewpoints that cast Philadelphia or the region in a negative light."
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Never visit Filthydumpinya, people. Don't do it.
Visit? I live here!
My thoughts and prayers are with you.
I feel for you since I'm from there. At least we got rid of Bradford.
So the NAACP, 5% and 25% they are talking about the airport itself right? I have never left on time in that forsaken place.
I sometimes have to connect in Philly.
"Connect". Is that what they're calling it these days?
How else would you describe "spacedocking"?
The Skinny H? The Petronas Towers?
What if it's a "Connect 4"?
I hear they do that.
You people...
[Whistles hall monitor whistle at Tonio's apparent dog whistle]
I believe the term is "Harambe whistle".
What do you mean "you people"?
Et tu, Crusty? I though this was Fist's shibboleth.
It should be everyone's!
Dude, nobody wants to look at your shibboleth. Put it away.
OK. That means smaller crowds and more food and beer at this fine establishment for me.
"Welcome to America, home to a small percentage of the world's socialists & $19 Trillion in national debt. Let's build a better America together.
Why in the hell do they have ads on monitors? That's for flight info.
Posters in the tunnel next to the people mover? Fine. But monitors? Of course they're inviting trouble.
As soon as I have a high enough resolution camera, I'm going to take a pic of my next corn shit and run it all over that airport. With Crusty's phone number.
Whatever you do, don't google TV-B-Gone. It's a remote that sends out every known power-off code for TVs.
While it's fun to use one of these in Best Buy, the Drs Office (with the obnoxious, preachy health channel) or a bar, it's probably a felony to tamper with "airport equipment."
All those flat screen TV's have USB ports - your dream is a flash drive away.
"No matter the type of forum, restrictions on speech on government property must be reasonable."
I imagine if you put up something anti-Palestinian or possibly a Trump ad it would be considered reasonable to restrict.
I wish I could go back in time and tell the people writing the constitution to squeeze in a, "NO means NO; it doesn't mean "unless reasonable" or "as long as there's a compelling interest." It just fucking means NO." onto the end of the Bill of Rights.
"p.s. Fuck bitches, make money; dolla dolla billz ya'll! -B. Frank"
That, and maybe add something about people who claim the right to free speech doesn't cover speech that's objectionable for one reason or another automatically lose their American citizenship. Not only does the right to free speech cover objectionable speech, that's all it covers. The whole freaking point of protecting free speech is that you're protecting the right to express objectionable opinions. Nobody objects to your expressing opinions nobody objects to - so who or what would unobjectionable speech need protection from?
Obligatory
Good ol' Judo Gene Lebell! Looks like he did a good job teaching Robert Stack, even if it was just for that scene.
Just like they can't ban assholes from the airport in an effort to make visitors comfortable, as that would effectively purge all Philadelphians from the facility. Come to think of it, that's not a bad idea.
Welcome to America, home to 5% of the world's people & 25% of the world's prisoners.
Well, if we started executing as many people as the competition does, the prison population would decline dramatically.
Are you sure this wasn't a Trump ad designed to frighten undesirables to get the hell back on the plane and go back to where they came from?
Meh, it's not as if they would privatize the airport and be done with the whole concept of "public space."
^^^ What the other Jerry said.
Wait, am I the other Jerry?
We're all Tulpa, so it's not like it matters.
i don't think the original "Kevin" is around anymore. This is confusing.
Hey, if you didn't want the restrictions on the restrictions on free speech that apply to public places to apply to you, you shouldn't have been a public place.
I find references to "brotherly love" problematic. To whom do I address my complaints?
just step into this booth with the hole in the wall.
"American Air, now with 15% less minorities!"
"American Air, now with 15% less minorities!"
Yeah, ads that one will get you banned from the airport in a heartbeat, and rightfully so.
"Fewer" minorities, not "less".
Wouldn't that ad also have worked for Air America?
No alt-text this time?
I really thought it was a good opportunity to label the picture "bully-proof windows".
So, why doesn't the city just turn to using the same patently unconstitutional reason they use to bad ads on alcohol and cigarettes?
Safe Space Hardiman was appointed to the court by George W. Bush.
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"They also claimed that even if revenue wasn't affected, the ban would be justifiable to keep visitors from feeling offended"
Ads promoting tourism offend me. Take them down immediately.
Unless I have no standing, because I do not go to places where the constitution has been suspended. (Airports, Washington D.C., courthouses, etc)