Milwaukee County Sued For Requiring 10 Page Permit Application to Play Pokemon Go in Public Park
Do augmented reality games get First Amendment protections like books, movies, and traditional video games?
Do augmented reality games get First Amendment protections like books, movies, and traditional video games?
But the same lawsuit at San Francisco State University seeks to censor opponents as well
Can states force religious bakers to provide services to same-sex couples?
Film favors martyrdom over careful analysis.
Germany violently enforces the law by busting into dozens of households to prevent a "climate of fear".
Podcast also argues over the Philando Castile verdict and Otto Warmbier's critics
Also, she thinks the Kent State shootings are an argument for censorship.
Chinese UC San Diego students felt the Tibetan spiritual leader "contravened the spirit of respect, tolerance, equality, and earnestness"
Administrators cancelled their event after a drawing of Pepe the Frog was found on their "free speech ball."
Sociologist Frank Furedi on how to bring liberalism back to campus.
Starting with Roe v. Wade, the bestselling author argues in Commentary, the high court has removed too many topics from legislative debate.
A discussion about last week's congressional shooting, Michelle Carter, Cuba sanctions, and DnD Creator Gary Gygax.
The justices say the law's "unprecedented" and "staggering" scope violates the First Amendment.
"Speech may not be banned on the ground that it expresses ideas that offend."
Combating repressive, anti-free-speech cliches just got a little easier.
Michael Moynihan finds students scared to express "nuanced" ideas, a progressive professor demonized as a racist, protesters mocking "free speech," and a college president who cannot rule out that he might be a white supremacist.
The law should not treat words as violence.
Plus: Notes from a man who recently interviewed Alex Jones yet generated very little controversy
Five terrible, perpetually recurring arguments, debunked.
One hundred years ago today, the U.S. government declared war on the First Amendment.
Even progressive professors can't escape the wrath of student activists.
Defense attorney and Popehat blogger Ken White refutes all censorious clichés.
Janus v. American Federation of State, County, and Municipal Employees asks SCOTUS to end mandatory public-sector union fees.
Blocked Trump critics argue that his personal account is a "designated public forum" from which they cannot legally be excluded because of their views.
Robert Groden was ticketed 82 times and arrested twice because the city of Dallas wanted him off the streets.
Adam Kissel has a history of advocating for free speech and due process.
Paris Agreement Climate Change
Nick Gillespie, Andrew Heaton, Katherine Mangu-Ward, & Matt Welch on terrorism, climate change, Bill Maher, Kathy Griffin, Evergreen, and more.
Using fear of terrorists to try to control what you can see online
Handing out pamphlets gets treated as a crime.
For the millionth time, there's no "hate speech" exemption.
The rules would apply only to videos-for now.
Washington, D.C. bar pulls drink named for TV star after "highly predictable outcry."
The court should uphold a lower-court ruling suppressing the unconstitutional (and unconscionable) law.
Why government-funded agencies should display Confederate symbols only at historic sites or museums
Flying Dog Brewery's Jim Caruso took on government censors and won.
A Red Sox fan's bigoted comment about a singer's rendition of the national anthem prompts a police investigation.
Should Congress be allowed to forbid a private voluntary treatment because it's bad and discredited?
"The tattoo itself, the process of tattooing, and the business of tattooing are forms of pure expression fully protected by the First Amendment."
Bill would also add severe restrictions on retail businesses' use of billboards.
Government censorship always wears the mask of 'public interest,' and this will be no different.
Man faces up to 3 years in prison, $100,000 fine if convicted.
Initially arrested for crimes rooted in his part in linking to hacked documents online, Brown now seems to be being punished just for allowing himself to be a subject of journalism.
The drama started with the inclusion of the Multnomah County Republican Party in the parade.
Conservatives at Berkeley and critics of the Trump administration both deserve freedom of speech.
"You'd think liberal arts undergrads had the nuclear codes," writes Chris Hayes.
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