The Volokh Conspiracy
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Justice Thomas (Still) Wants Supreme Court to Revisit "Actual Malice"
Justice Thomas reiterates his desire to revisit the contours of defamation law and New York Times v. Sullivan.
The Supreme Court only granted certiorari in one case this morning, MOAC Mall Holdings LLC v. Transform Holdco LLC, concerning Section 363(m) of the Bankruptcy Code.
Among the cases in which the Supreme Court denied certiorari was Coral Ridge Ministries Media v. Southern Poverty Law Center, in which Coral Ridge sued SPLC for defamation for labeling the ministry a "hate group" due to its opposition to homosexuality. Coral Ridge maintained this was a defamatory claim, which had the consequence of preventing Coral Ridge from participating in the AmazonSmile program for charitable donations.
The district court concluded that SPLC's characterization of Coral Ridge was protected opinion, and that Coral Ridge could not demonstrate that SPLC had acted with "actual malice," as is required by New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. The Eleventh Circuit affirmed, relying solely on the "actual malice" standard, prompting the petition for certiorari.
The Supreme Court denied Coral Ridge's petition for certiorari, prompting a dissent from Justice Thomas, who reiterated his desire to reconsider NYT v. Sullivan. Justice Thomas wrote, in part:
I would grant certiorari in this case to revisit the "actual malice" standard. This case is one of many showing how New York Times and its progeny have allowed media organizations and interest groups "to cast false aspersions on public figures with near impunity." . . . SPLC's "hate group" designation lumped Coral Ridge's Christian ministry with groups like the Ku Klux Klan and Neo-Nazis. It placed Coral Ridge on an interactive, online "Hate Map" and caused Coral Ridge concrete financial injury by excluding it from the AmazonSmile donation program. Nonetheless, unable to satisfy the "almost impossible" actual-malice standard this Court has imposed, Coral Ridge could not hold SPLC to account for what it maintains is a blatant falsehood. Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders, Inc., 472 U. S. 749, 771 (1985) (White, J., concurring in judgment).
Because the Court should not "insulate those who perpetrate lies from traditional remedies like libel suits" unless "the First Amendment requires" us to do so, Berisha, 594 U. S., at ___ (opinion of THOMAS, J.) (slip op., at 3), I respectfully dissent from the denial of certiorari.
As the citation to his own prior opinion indicates, this is not the first time Justice Thomas has called for reconsidering NYT v. Sullivan, and I doubt it will be the last.
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Actual is an impossible barrier to accountability for what are all hate speech propaganda outlets. These are worthless and toxic. A British approach seems more effective. Actual malice involves mind reading and violates the Establishment Clause. That is a supernatural power attributed to God by St. Thomas. That is illegal in our secular nation.
After NY Times is reversed, Marbury should be on the hit list. It violates Article I Section 1 giving all legislative powers to the Congress. "All" is an easy word to understand.
Why did the 11th Circuit not rely on the "opinion" finding of the district court? Perhaps that is why SCOTUS did not take it -- it's a complicating factor.
Is calling a group a "hate group" an actionable factual statement or inactionable opinion? That seems to me a more interesting question.
I think that is a good reason not to take the case. The plaintiff needs to win on two grounds: factual statement and actual malice.
Thomas continuing Scalia's Queer Fear.
What would "Queer Fear" have to do with overturning NYT v. Sullivan?
Not Sullivan, the instant case.
Small blessings, I guess. (Although I assume some kind of religious exemption to free speech is just around the corner.)
That would be a first amendment exception to the first amendment?
I didn't say it made sense, did I? But it makes at least as much sense as saying that the First Amendment requires giving tax money to religious schools.
Or to require high school athletes to join the post-game prayer circle if they want to have a chance to play in the next game instead of sitting on the bench with the other heathens.
But here we are. It's like the "drugs" exception to the bill of rights, certain things are so "bad" that the ordinary rights under the constitution no longer apply.
"Or to require high school athletes to join the post-game prayer circle if they want to have a chance to play in the next game instead of sitting on the bench with the other heathens."
No need to wait for something to happen. We need to base all rulings on the POTENTIAL for abuse.
Sure, there was zero evidence provided of the coach not playing kids who did not pray...he should STILL be fired because he might.
How would you like a coach who conducts similar, regular "renounce nonsense, superstition, and bigotry" gatherings? Would you be concerned that fledgling clingers might be inclined to hide their goofy purity rings, or fear that their playing time might be reduced because the coach doesn't trust their gullibility-impaired judgment?
The silver lining is that the students with character, ambition, and intellect may be persuaded to get the hell out of such a deplorable, backwater town the day of high school graduation, and never return.
Bright flight is beautiful. Everybody gets what they deserve.
And we can blame Alito for most of them.
"But it makes at least as much sense as saying that the First Amendment requires giving tax money to religious schools."
The ruling said you cannot give out money and specifically block religious schools ONLY.
Holy shit, Martin. The court did not in any way, shape, or form require the giving of tax money to religious schools. Perhaps all of these rulings wouldn’t upset you if you could interpret them accurately. To begin with, you might start ignoring the opinions of politicians on these things. They’re not honest and they are never speaking in good faith.
The court did not in any way, shape, or form require the giving of tax money to religious schools.
Sure they did, in some way, shape, or form. They said you have to give money to religious schools if you also give it to non-religious schools at the discretion of parents. That is surely a way or shape (or form) of requirement to give money to religious schools.
So what was the vote. Was there any other support to take this?
Simberg and Styern had actual malice in their infamous posts regarding Mann's Hockey stick
though their defense - valid defense at that - is there statements were an accurate reflection of mann's work on the HS
Thomas is definitely "eating different cookies" than the rest of us.
I have to wonder whether he really believes all the bizarre things he espouses or whether he's just making shit up to own the libs.
As he was quoted in '93, "The liberals made my life miserable for 43 years, and I'm going to make their lives miserable for 43 years."
Thomas is taking over. This is like a Con Law class being taken over by a student who doesn't do the readings and feels no need to cite precedent (or even deal with it).
Yes, raised clenched fist and yell of Black Power sends other justices cowering.
...except he does do so. Routinely.
But, do not worry, unlike with some people questioning a black judge on her rulings, I will not call your gibberish racist.
I call you a bigot because you are a bigot.
I believe letting right-wing racists, gay-bashers, misogynists, immigrant-haters, Islamophobes, and white nationalists hide behind euphemisms ("conservative values," "traditional values," "Republican") is unwise and immoral. Call a bigot a bigot. Lousy people deserve everything that's coming to them.
Is Thomas the one who cast a rogue vote to keep certain documents secret because, it turned out, those documents demonstrated that his wife is an un-American asshole?
The reason Justice Thomas has to cite his own opinions so much is that there really isn't any serious, intelligent, well versed or credible judge who agrees with him.
The way Thomas disregards precedents reminds me of Chesterton’s saying:
Don’t tear down that fence until you know why it was put up.
I find myself troubled by the idea of judges declaring that labeling opposition to homosexuality “hate” is false as a matter of law.
That strikes me as an intrusion on political discourse.
I would think the Kevorkian Rule would apply here. In much the way that in the 1990s the American Medical Association was within its rights to label Jack Kevorkian a “criminal” because it considered what Kevorkian stood for, did, and represented, assisted suicide, a crime, I think the SPLC is within its rights here. I think just as whether certain conduct should or should not be a crime has to be regarded as a matter of political opinion not subject to libel law, I think that whether opposition to certain conduct should or should not be regarded as hate also has to be regarded as a matter of political opinion not subject to libel law.
If Kevorkian had turned around and called the AMA a “hate organization” because of what they said about him and they tried to sue him for libel, I think they would have to lose for pretty the same reasons that their calling him a criminal wasn’t libel and he lost his label case against them.
So I think that the SPLC’s statements have to be regarded as political discourse and protected from libel as well.
The Kevorkian rule came with conditions. You had to be a public figure and known as a spokesperson for the conduct that is being denigrated. Calling a private figure or someone not making an effort to be associated with the conduct a criminal when the conduct involved was technically legal would likely remain libelous. But Coral Ridge likely meets those conditions.
"I find myself troubled by the idea of judges declaring that labeling opposition to homosexuality “hate” is false as a matter of law."
Where do you see that? The district court held it was opinion. Which means it can be neither true nor false, and hence not actionable as defamation. I am inclined to agree, and don;t understand why the 11th Circuit did not rely on that.