Your Local DMV May Have No Sense of Humor
Censorship of 2,872 Pennsylvania license plates raises free speech questions.

For the price of $77 to $224, Pennsylvania residents can get a personalized license plate that "contain[s] a combination of up to seven letters and/or numbers," per the state's Department of Transportation (PennDOT).
That is unless your application for a vanity plate is among the 2,872 rejected over the years.
The department keeps a "Do Not Issue" list, effectively banning thousands of "unacceptable configurations" that they interpret as euphemisms, epithets, or obstructions to law enforcement.
These restrictions are backed by PennDot's loosely defined list of 16 criteria, which the department's staff strictly adheres to, using internet slang dictionaries to check if the acronyms pass.
To be fair, it's not the entire list that raises eyebrows. Restrictions on libel or slander—as well as text that meddles with the license plates' primary purpose "to provide a State-issued, visible, and unique alpha-numeric identification mark for display in a uniform manner"—make sense.
But then you have "words which inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace." What does that include, exactly? It includes what the department staff says it includes.
Also not allowed are acronyms that suggest sexual innuendo, like BLOWME, or contain profane or obscene intent, like DZZNUTZ. Don't even think about references to excretory functions.
Pennsylvania is far from the only state that has banned acronyms from vanity plates. New York doesn't allow NOTPOLCE or, for whatever reason, AY000000. Tennessee banned ILVTOFU back in 2014 for a vegan application. In 2017, Georgia banned Donald Trump's infamous COVFEFE gaffe. Kentucky said no to KARMA.
The examples don't end there; a list of banned personalized plates is commonplace across the U.S. But the constitutionality of the matter is not necessarily settled.
In 2015, a Texas nonprofit argued that displaying the Confederate flag on the organization's special license plate was their First Amendment right. In a 5-4 vote, the court disagreed.
"In our view, specialty license plates issued pursuant to Texas's statutory scheme convey government speech," former Justice Stephen Breyer wrote for the majority. "Were the Free Speech Clause interpreted otherwise, government would not work."
The dissent argued that most people do not recognize speech on a license plate as government policy. "The Court's decision passes off private speech as government speech," wrote Justice Samuel Alito, "and, in doing so, establishes a precedent that threatens private speech that government finds displeasing."
The Court's ruling, however, applied to special plates with names and logos, not personalized plates. There is thus no official ruling at a national level as to whether vanity plates are private or government speech. This leaves plenty of room for state officials to interpret the propriety of applications for approval, and even to rescind vanity plates to address complaints.
Without an official distinction, however, there have been many instances of successful lawsuits to reverse rejections, from striking down Kentucky's rejection of IM GOD to stopping California's crackdown against messages "offensive to good taste and decency."
Eugene Volokh, a professor of law at the University of California Los Angeles School of Law, wrote that lower courts, upon petition, have typically recognized the design of the plate as government speech, but not the text itself. But until there's an official distinction by the Supreme Court, rejected applicants who are upset can try suing. Otherwise, the next-best option is taking it up to the department.
And though PennDOT is willing to discuss rejections with applicants, they have a disclaimer: "PennDOT reserves the right to limit or reject certain requests."
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"Censorship of 2,872 Pennsylvania license plates raises free speech questions."
Since when has there been free speech in the Union of Soviet Socialist Slaves States of Amerika?
Our obvious betters will tell what to say, when to say it, and to whom because they've all been well indoctrinated in our institutions of higher propaganda (read colleges and universities). So they know what they're doing when they tell what you can and cannot say, read or write.
So let's all be grateful we live in a socialist state where free speech is rightfully condemned and punished.
"Your Local DMV May Have No Sense of Humor"
Im OK with this if they could get even the slightest sense of urgency
"Moving parts in contact require lubrication to avoid excessive wear. Honorific and formal politeness provide lubrication where people rub together. Often. The very young, the unraveled, the naive, the unsophisticated deplore these formalities as empty, meaningless or dishonest and scorn to use them. No matter how pure their motives, they thereby throw sand into the machinery that does not too well, at best." - Robett Heinlein.
It seems that the motive behind such rules is keeping sand out of the machinery. Having rude jokes on license plates is a pleasure that can be foregone.
Maybe but if you value freedom of speech, government should not be in charge of enforcing that politeness. Other Heinlein writings make quite clear that government is the party least capable of enforcing such social rules fairly and without abuse.
Their intentions may be good but, as the saying goes, the road to Hell is paved with such intentions. If government wants to forego the rude jokes on license plates, they also have to forego the speech they like on license plates - which means foregoing the money from vanity plate programs altogether.
That really is the only free-speech-compatible choice - either allow anything on vanity plates or get out of the vanity plate business.
How about if government simply imposes a 500% surcharge for "objectionable" plates?
"Now we're merely haggling over the price."
As your (probably Shaw) quote implies, if the state charges based on "objectionable", you're not in free-speech land even if it's not entirely banned.
Fine by me. Tbh, I don't particularly care about them censoring what custom plate numbers you can set. My inner 12 year old likes the challenge of trying dozens of ways to slip a variation of NIGGER past them.
My plate numbers are randomly assigned because I simply don't give a fuck and am not interested in giving the government a dime extra for that form of speech. I also can't be bothered paying extra for vanity plate backgrounds. While I wouldn't mind the Gadsden flag one, I don't want to give them money for it and don't want to deal with assholes keying it when I'm stuck going into the DC area
Just recently saw a Kansas personalized plate - KUMONME
Bold move sir/maam.
I guess BUKAKKE was already taken?
It’s going to be a moot point soon enough. People are increasingly ignoring the “obligation” to pay to register or license their cars.
I mean, it’s that or the grocery bill. And they’re choosing the groceries.
Let’s Go Brandon.
I don't know the ILVTOFU guy's motives - maybe he was genuinely expressing support for vegetarianism - but let's just say it's...open to misunderstanding.
Your home is burning down and you're worried that "Dinner will be late" !!!!!!
Yes, that DMV stuff is bad but so are hemorrhoids.