The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
Journal of Free Speech Law: "Fake News, Lies, and Other Familiar Problems," by Prof. Sam Lebovic
The fifth of twelve articles from the Knight Institute’s Lies, Free Speech, and the Law symposium.
The article is here; the Introduction:
In the last months of 1919, a year in which a pandemic had killed hundreds of thousands and the nation's cities had been marred by racial pogroms and mob violence, Walter Lippmann reflected on the state of the American public sphere. "[A] nation," he complained, "easily acts like a crowd. Under the influence of headlines and panicky print, the contagion of unreason can easily spread through a settled community." The press was awash in fictions and propaganda; Americans had "cease[d] to respond to truths, and respond simply to opinions." There wasn't even a way to make sure people didn't deliberately and cynically lie to the public: "[If] I lie to a million readers in a matter involving war and peace, I can lie my head off, and, if I choose the right series of lies, be entirely irresponsible." The public was acting not in response to its objective social reality, but to what Lippmann dubbed a "pseudo-environment of reports, rumors and guesses." How, he wondered, could democracy function in such an environment?
Over the coming years, as Lippmann sought to answer this question, he produced a series of books that constitute perhaps the most serious effort to think through the problems, possibilities, and limits of public opinion in modern American democracy. In particular, he developed two key insights about democratic theory that can help us today, as another generation of Americans looks on their public sphere—awash in fake news, rumor, and cynical lying—with disdain and despair.
The first was his rejection of what he dubbed the myth of the "omnicompetent citizen." Americans, Lippmann argued, cling to "the intolerable and unworkable fiction that each of us must acquire a competent opinion about all public affairs." That simply wasn't possible. American society was too complex, too vast, too differentiated. The divisions of labor were too deep, social life too confusing—a kaleidoscope of shifting experiences. And the tempo and sweep of political life, sliding from crisis to crisis, from issue to issue, made it impossible for the citizen to catch their breath. How could anyone, in the spare moments between work and leisure and family, be expected to come to a considered understanding of international trade policy one night, a labor strike the next, and a public health scandal the day after?
Inevitably, Lippmann pointed out, the individual had to rely on others to help them make sense of what was going on, they had to form their opinions in a social and political environment. Yet no one had really grappled with what this meant for the operation of democracy because people continued to presume that opinions were formed and expressed by self-sufficient individuals. The result was a tendency to think about the problems of public opinion as a problem of individual rights, of the regulations and prohibitions impinging on the way individuals exchanged their ideas. And that meant that "democrats have treated the problem of making public opinions as a problem in civil liberties." They were focused on arguing about whether individuals had the right to express certain ideas or not, assuming that public opinion would emerge out of a marketplace of competing arguments.
But in his second important insight, Lippmann pointed out that this was the wrong way entirely to think about the problem of public opinion. In arguing about the "privileges and immunities of opinion," he explained, "we were missing the point and trying to make bricks without straw." What really mattered was the "stream of news" upon which opinions were based. "In going behind opinion to the information which it exploits, and in making the validity of news our ideal, we shall be fighting the battle where it is really being fought." That meant thinking not about what any one individual believed or was saying, nor even about what rights should be afforded to any class of political expression, but in thinking about how the society, as a whole, was arranging the political economy of its information.
In this essay, I want to use these two points as a guide to thinking about the best way to navigate the contemporary crises of the American public sphere. Our anxieties about the spread of fake news—of lies about stolen elections and harmful vaccines and deep state conspiracies—continue to take the form of anxieties about the way that particular forms of expressive (mis)conduct influence the (in)competence of individual citizens. As a result, the most commonly proposed remedies—particularly the temptation to regulate lies—focus on the privileges and immunities of opinion. In short, seeing fake news as an illegitimate cancerous growth, we seek to cut it out of the body politic.
Drawing on Lippmann's analysis, I will argue that this is the wrong way to think about the very real problems of American democratic life. The argument will proceed in three parts. In part one, inspired by Lippmann's reminder that lying has been a problem for over a century, I compare the lies of a conservative political faction in the present moment with lies of their ancestors in the era of McCarthy and Massive Resistance. The success of angry, conspiratorial, racist lying even in the very different media environment of the post-WWII "golden era," I suggest, helps us identify the lies of the present moment not as an unprecedented epistemic crisis, but as an expression of a conservative political formation in American political life.
In part two, I argue that this political formation is benefiting from a broader crisis in the information economy of the U.S. Drawing on Lippmann's distinction between the "stream of news" and the politics of expression, I show that the collapse of journalism as a profession has led to the underproduction of information in the polity and favored the politics of outrageous expression—both of which have benefited the conservative political formation in its effort to win elections by lying. Having developed this understanding of the contemporary problem, part three considers solutions to the current epidemic of lying.
Following Lippmann's reform suggestions from 1919, it argues that the key task is a broader politics of democratic revitalization, which will include new efforts to improve the "stream of news" by encouraging the production of information in new institutions devoted to that task. Such reform efforts should be contrasted to efforts to deal with lies by seeking to eradicate or counter them directly in the discourse, whether by censorship, civic education, or mandated counterspeech. By focusing on the politics of opinion rather than information, reform efforts centered on speech law and speech acts risk exacerbating, rather than ameliorating, the crises of American democracy.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Lippmann is one of those names I saw often, reading newspapers as a child. Walter Reuther was another. H.L. Mencken was another. Max Beerbohm was another. Evelyn Waugh. Thomas Wolfe (the first one). As someone put it, the most often forgotten era is "the day before yesterday".
Deep state conspiracy lies? Didn’t the NY Times report recently that there is a “deep state,” and lo and behold, it’s great? Harmful vaccine lies? I think myocarditis is harmful, maybe the author disagrees. Also interesting is what legitimate “fake new” the author choses to ignore. How about the Russian collusion lie? The FDAs Ivermectin lies? The Charlottesville lie? (which lie by the way Biden continues to exploit with the conniving silence of the media). And most recently, the “bloodbath” lie. Whole lotta “fake news” there and lies that were used to help the left, not the right. I suspect they escaped the author’s analysis.
Conservatives lie, liberals practice statesmanship.
Just like conservatives are ideologues while liberals are idealists.
etc.
I mean, if you take it that all those are lies, or real, or accurate, or fair, then you have a serious problem.
No. I think this is part of the problem that MAGA has: they don't even understand the concept of actual news, so they don't grasp the distinction between reporting and an op/ed. Also, Riva continues his usual pattern of not reading beyond the words he wants to see, so he didn't get that the references to deep state were ironic and meant nothing like what the GOP means by it.
Myocarditis can be harmful, which is why a vaccine that prevents a disease that causes significant myocarditis, but has very mild myocarditis as a possible side effect, is so helpful.
Not a lie.
No lies.
The only "Charlottesville lie" is that Trump didn't lie by saying that there were fine neo-nazis rallying in favor of a traitor statue
Another one where the only "lie" is the attempt to pretend that Trump didn't say the awful thing he said. Like, when he said there would be a bloodbath in the auto industry? He didn't. That's just a MAGA lie. He never said "in the auto industry."
Don't be so pedantic'
“If you’re listening, President Xi — and you and I are friends — but he understands the way I deal. Those big monster car manufacturing plants that you’re building in Mexico right now … you’re going to not hire Americans and you’re going to sell the cars to us, no. We’re going to put a 100% tariff on every single car that comes across the line, and you’re not going to be able to sell those cars if I get elected. Now if I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the whole — that’s gonna be the least of it. It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country. That will be the least of it. But they’re not going to sell those cars. They’re building massive factories.”
Exactly.
Do you think those highlighted words mean "for the auto industry"?
I mean, even if he had meant "for the auto industry," the comments would've been insane, but he in no way said "for the auto industry."
No, it means for all industries, ergo the whole country.
Thanks for admitting what is indisputable, that Trump said, “for the country.”
Now think about how using a word like “bloodbath” sounds when he said that “it’s going to be a bloodbath for the country” If he doesn’t get re-elected. That’s extremely inflammatory rhetoric to say that disaster will hit everyone if he isn’t elected. Now, if Trump had not been using language like that since 2015, this might have gone under the radar. If there wasn’t already a long record of MAGA supporters threatening officials seen to be aligned against him, and a record of actual violence that had as its goal keeping Trump in office, then it might have gone under the radar.
First, "bloodbath" IS standard political rhetoric, and I'm not going to freak out if Trump uses standard political rhetoric, particularly if the context makes it clear he means an economic bloodbath.
Second, after the BLM/Antifa riots during the Trump administration, as well as the House baseball shooting, you'd need more than January 6th for the right to take the lead in political violence.
“Standard political rhetoric?” Given the ability to search through many thousands of statements and video clips of politicians speaking very quickly using modern technology, I am not at all surprised that people found some instances of Democrats saying that a “bloodbath” would happen. That doesn’t mean that it’s “standard” rhetoric.
And since the riots following George Floyd’s murder and the softball game shooting did not have a violation of the constitutional transfer of power after an election as their goals, then they are not comparable to Jan 6.
The right definitely has the lead on using violence in an attempt to subvert constitutional democracy in the United States. A lead with no one in second place that could even see the back of the right. Not anyone acting within my lifetime, at least.
These defenses of Trump and his rhetoric get old, and they are weak anyway. Every attempt to paint someone on the left as being as bad as Trump by some measure falls ridiculously short.
It isn't. Obviously Trump isn't the first person to have ever said it, and people do use the term metaphorically, in politics and in other arenas. But go ahead: find me another American politician of any type at any level predicting that there would be a "bloodbath" of any sort, real or metaphorical, if he lost an election.
Well Dave, do you really believe that TDS nonsense you’re spewing, or are you just hoping low information readers will take your lies at face value? Just so you know, the lies don’t seem to be working anymore. All I ask is that you post a video of your agonized scream when President Trump is sworn in for another term.
And when Trump loses yet again, will you say, "Yeah, guess it was really stupid to run a sociopath with no redeeming qualities who most people can't stand and who has less competence than Wile E. Coyote at accomplishing his goals"? Or will you just invent more fake conspiracies about stolen — sorry, I mean STOLLEN — elections?
David's working hard to earn his 50 cents.
"lies about ...deep state conspiracies"
He thinks there are no real-life American counterparts to Sir Humphrey Appleby?
Or perhaps he thinks that the Applebys of the world never conspire, they just administer the government in the public interest.
If you have examples of real-life conspiracies by real-life public servants then they are not lies about 'deep state' conspiracies, are they?
If your source is a fictional show about the government of another country, you came in with your conclusion already selected.
If I said you were long-winded and tedious like Polonius, that wouldn’t mean I was using *Hamlet* as a source of evidence.
You're making a factual assertion.
A simile to a fictional show is no evidence.
I see that you’re too dim to grasp important distinctions.
The only lies of the McCarthy era are the ones saying he was wrong.
He uncovered no Soviet spies, but harmed a lot of good people.
I get a lot of “McCarthy was right, he just went about it the wrong way,” from conservative relatives. One has undoubtedly spent over a thousand dollars on books by conservatives (or more likely their ghost writers) detailing the “proof” of just about every right wing conspiracy theory you’ve ever heard. I simply can’t compete with that volume of nonsense. I guess it is the free market at work to have so many grifters pushing conspiracy theories in order to rake in cash.
"I compare the lies of a conservative political faction in the present moment with lies of their ancestors in the era of McCarthy and Massive Resistance."
So, "there is no enemy to the left", I guess? Lies are just a right-wing phenomenon? This is so laughable a starting point that it hardly seems worth reading on. Still, I read on.
Halfway through, it's not getting better. Not one solitary left-wing lie is even alluded to. The concept seems to not exist. General complaints are framed, but every single specific is from the right. It's worse than that: True stories that help the right, such as reporting on Hillary's email scandal, are part of the problem!
Two thirds of the way through: A moment of honesty! Well, sorta: At least a momentary confession that the left lies, too: "And while we shouldn’t engage in false equivalence—the right is lying more than the left—a little humility on behalf of liberals is warranted here, given how many became invested in the belief that Trump only won because of Russian interference and/or that Trump was a Russian plant."
And, back to no enemy on the left. For the rest of the essay.
The relentlessly partisan viewpoint aside, I find myself disappointed by this essay because he's so missing the point.
Sure, people are not omnicompetent. You can't drink enough from the fire hose to be competent to make decisions on every issue, even if you had that fire hose. (And his solution seems oriented towards kicking up the water pressure a bit... Thankfully he at least isn't advocating direct censorship.)
But this isn't an inherent problem of democracy. It's a problem of democracy that has lost the ideas of subsidiarity and minimizing government power. The voter doesn't NEED to know everything to cast informed votes, if the government he or she is voting for isn't DOING everything!
The more limited the ambitions of government, the less the voter needs to learn to cast an informed vote. And then if the issue government has let go of comes up in their life, they can become informed enough to make their individual decision when it becomes necessary, rather than learning enough to collectively make everybody's decisions for them all the time.
The solution isn't a fire hose, it's reducing government to a more modest scale, privatizing everything but the tiny, tiny domain that actually needs to be subject to uniform decisions.
The more limited the ambitions of government, the more unelected people will be taking on those responsibilities, with incentives and motives all their own.
That isn't necessarily bad, but don't pretend that the private sector is a costless perfect machine that needs no accountability.
This is not simple stuff; the answer is not always less government. Nor is it always more government.
"The more limited the ambitions of government, the more unelected people will be taking on those responsibilities, with incentives and motives all their own."
Yes, and they'll be taking them on for themselves, without the power to force everybody to accept the SAME solution.
Like, the Biden administration has decided to force EVs down everybody's throats, even as the market is largely rejecting them, and most of the car manufacturers are giving up on the idea. That's what happens when the government calls the shots: One size fits all is forced on everybody.
Markets are not a simple passthrough 'now people choose for themselves.'
Not are the miraculous and tailor a solution to every need.
And they have plenty of flaws of their own.
Markets are very good, but they, like government action, are merely a means to an end.
You highlight a great example of market failure - externalities of emissions are not something to ignore, even if the markets wants to.
What is the market failure of simply letting people decide whether or not to buy electric vehicles, gasoline powered vehicles, natural-gas powered vehicles, or plutonium-powered vehicles?
The usual definition of 'market failure' is the failure of the free market to produce exactly the result people advocating government control wanted.
Because gasoline powered vehicles are destroying the planet. It's like giving people a choice between licking a lollipop and licking a lead pipe. But if corporations made money from people licking lead pipes, that's the 'choice' they'd push while pouring billions into politics and fake science to promote the idea that licking lollipops gives you cancer and that brain damage is a myth. Yay, 'choice!'
And yes, there are NO market solutions to climate change and other environmental problems, they are only driving them faster and making them worse.
Unlike Brett, I’ll attempt a serious answer. The market failure, when it comes to pollution from automobiles, is that the buyers and sellers of the vehicles and the energy to run them aren’t the ones bearing the brunt of the costs of that pollution. Someone driving a large vehicle with shitty mileage (that is an extra toy rather than something they need, like the massive pickup trucks of today bought by people that just like having a big truck) will always contribute more costs in terms of pollution and damage to roadways than what they will pay of those socialized costs.
One of the reasons cars tend to be so much larger in the U.S. than other wealthy countries is that gas taxes are lower than theirs. We fucked up and tried to mandate more efficient vehicles via CAFE standards instead. But then “light trucks” were in a different category, so automakers turned to production of high profit margin trucks and SUVs. We ended up screwing ourselves by encouraging the worst kind of transportation waste. Unnecessarily large vehicles. In summary, automobiles already have large externalities, but a desire to avoid anything that looks like a tax to correct for that blew up in our faces and made the problem worse.
Electric vehicles don't abolish emissions, they just relocate them. They're not even more efficient than ICE vehicles once you take into account transmission and charging losses.
So, you highlight a great example of government failure; And as government failure generally does, it involves coercion; The government isn't planning on persuading people to buy EVs, it's just going to make everything else unavailable, by a fiat backed by guns.
Government failure is when it includes coercion?
Come one, even as a libertarian that kind of tautology has to make you wince.
And emissions from powerplants are not the same as emissions from cars. Maye they would be if we only burned coal, but even then I'm not sure how that scales.
Yeah, in a democracy coercing the majority into doing something they've already rejected IS government failure. The whole point of democracy is to stop government from pushing the majority around, after all.
They don't abolish emissions, but they reduce them considerably. What would really work though is a national electrified public transport network.
Riiight. Simultaneously oppose reliable power sources AND demand greater reliance on the electrical grid. It's hard to explain that as anything but a deliberate effort to achieve blackouts, frankly.
If I needed someone to deliver multi-faceted insight into the many, many ways that current media critiques go wide of the mark, I would hire Lebovic to do it. For that, this OP stands out. Much better than most of what we have had previously from the, "Journal of Free Speech Law." Everyone should read Lebovic to get benefit of his many insights.
On the other hand, if what I need is advice on how to fix the current media mess, I have less use for Lebovic, despite his insights. I rule him out not only because he is both brief, and far too vague on the solutions side. There is another, deeper problem. It is that despite insight superior to many rivals pushing less-thoughtful and more-tendentious media reform proposals, Lebovic is fundamentally too much like them. He remains, at heart, another internet utopian.
You search Lebovic's article in vain for evidence he is acquainted with the nuts and bolts of media management. Lacking that experience, Lebovic does what other internet utopians also do. He resorts to the always-equivocal premise that internet media deliver a complete methodological break from the past—and thus present opportunity for societal re-inventions—especially by government policy—on expressive subjects. The notion seems to be that new technology has presented a blank canvas, with opportunity to leverage expressive practices to re-frame media operations from scratch.
That illusion—and it remains only an illusion—has steered Lebovic's critique toward ambitious and potentially baleful schemes of government intervention, and re-invention, which would touch on all the media fundamentals of opinion publishing, news gathering, content vetting, and distribution. To take that tack is to settle once again on a course toward government control of media content. Which, not coincidentally, remains the destination other proposals from internet utopians also steer toward.
As with previous similar cases, the problem with that destination is only trivially that it is premised on multi-party contests without end. Inevitably, contests to see who can win an upper hand via political capture of government favor for particular expressive choices.
That threat looks bad, perhaps, but only to the extent it is deemed something which could credibly be installed and operated successfully. In fact, it is a utopian premise, and thus less a threat than it appears. The utopianism itself is the greater threat, or at least the greater obstacle to success.
Lebovic's advocacy is utopian because it posits in detail only factors which affect expressive interests, but otherwise slights practical means necessary to accomplish publication. In the real world, expressive interests and publishing means will always remain in tension. To identify and tune a dynamic to manage that tension wisely and productively—and to do it differently case by case—defines the indispensable art of publishing practice.
Thus, publication reform schemes premised only on content and expressive optimization necessarily prove paradoxical—to practice methods to implement any such reform would at the same time disrupt and burden practical means to accomplish private publishing. That in turn will thwart whatever expressive objectives could be hoped for from a would-be scheme based too heavily on public policy made only with an eye to expressive optimization.
Only private publishing, which pays its way out of proceeds derived solely by publishing activities—without need of other supports, and especially without need of government supports—has power to maintain agency independent enough to temper wisely the public life of the nation.
To make that a reality requires public policy, to be sure. But it cannot be public policy practiced with an eye to specific content. Nor can it be policy based on an intent which looks no farther than to optimize access to expressive preferences generally.
It instead must be public policy to diversify dramatically, and to multiply enormously, the national roster of mutually-competing private publishers. That must be done while leaving each publishing business free to stake out its own niche with regard to choices of content and opinion.
Doing it that way gets government out of the content business altogether. Policy to increase the number, and to multiply the viewpoint diversity of private publishers, can be counted on to curate adequately a thriving marketplace of ideas. We know that because it happened before, prior to the internet, when material demands imposed far higher barriers to entry than apply today, post-internet.
A left wing political diatribe does not qualify as multi-faceted insight. About as worthwhile as your average NY Times op ed, except there’s no paper to line a bird cage. Oh and your comment. Less is more. In your case a lot less.
He does have some good insights and properly pushes back against the idea of censorship. I too was disappointed that he had no serious solutions offered, and that he was very clearly saying that misinformation is much more of a problem in right-wing media, which is obviously incorrect to anyone who seriously studies what the news media is saying on a daily basis. He says, “the right is lying more than the left,” but that itself is a leftwing lie.
My own forthcoming book, which also leans heavily on Lippmann, offers a different conclusion: that there IS NO solution, and not because of business realities, but because of human ones. As a whole public, we do not want the truth, and so we are not given the truth. The best we can do is, for those of us who do care about the truth, learn how to consume media effectively, which does not mean — as Lebovic says — separating news into “the explicitly conservative media apparatus” and “everyone else,” but learning the tricks of the lying trade used by everyone (especially the mainstream news) to deceive us on a daily basis.
(That said, I might use some of the rightwing examples from Lebovic in my book, since most of my examples are from the leftwing media … since they are far more prevalent, and therefore easier to find.)
Lippmann’s major work (with Charles Merz), A Test of the News, was blasting The New York Times for its coverage of Russia. And the Times made the same errors with respect to Russia 100 years later, as Lebovic notes. But somehow this is a uniquely rightwing problem. Lies about Russia, COVID, vaccines, Israel, Rittenhouse, abortion, guns.
The COVID lies from the left are, alone, enough in volume and effect on the nation to dwarf the lies from the right about *everything else*.
No; the right is lying more than the left. A lot lot lot lot lot more. Maybe not in raw bytes of content — there's a lot more liberal than conservative media out there, if for no other reason than that there's essentially no conservative news outlets¹ — but certainly in terms of signal to noise.
¹By that I don't mean that there aren't conservative websites and cable channels and such; I mean that they have given up any pretense of being actual news outlets.
And, that's exactly how you'd EXPECT things to look, to somebody on the left, isn't it?
Everybody tends to exaggerate the sins of their foes, and minimize the sins of their own side. It's a tendency people need to fight, not lean into.
Faith in Propaganda
An increase in secrecy and its intendent means to become a replacement to the faith of religion, brings its weight in conjunction with portions of the now unknowingly operating federal government, and bloated beyond reason. Inside the bodies of government, truth is an elusive slithering entity designed to be so.
Over at NRO Corner Jay Nordlinger has a post on propaganda. One Imcancelled quotes a joke, “"A Russian is on an airliner heading to the US, and the American in the seat next to him asks, “So what brings you to the US?” The Russian replies, “I’m studying the American approach to propaganda.” The American says, “What propaganda?” The Russian says, “That’s what I mean.”" Three quarters of the rest of the comment thread is conservatives saying, “What propaganda?” Same as here.
Who the hell is saying "what propaganda?" I'm mocking the pretense that it's all right wing propaganda.
Guy with a beam in his eye takes a one sentence break from attacking the mote in the other guy's eye to admit that, just maybe, he has a microscopic particle of dust in his own. Then it's back to attacking the mote in the other guy's eye, and ignoring his own beam.
'I’m mocking the pretense that it’s all right wing propaganda.'
Mocking a straw man. Speaking of motes and beams.
Lippmann features prominently in my forthcoming book, “Don’t Trust: Verify.” And he would chuckle at Lebovic’s myopia.
I document many lies from “non-Fox cable news” that were, in fact, very clear examples of them “actively spread[ing] fake news as if it were the truth.”
Lebovic does a disservice to himself by pretending that “one side” is worse than the others. For my money, the worst mainstream news source for intentionally lying is, by far, NPR … and I have many receipts. Yet Lebovic uncritically links to a debunked NPR story from the leftwing propaganda org “ Center for Countering Digital Hate,” which claims that just 12 people are behind most vaccine hoaxes on social media … hoaxes like:
* “claiming that false cures are in fact the way to solve COVID, and not vaccination” Except that fighting COVID through management of symptoms and not vaccination is a matter of opinion, not of misinformation.
* “decrying doctors as being in some way venal or motivated by other factors when they recommend vaccines” This has been proven true, in some cases.
Some of this is *literally* an attempt to shut up dissenting views by *using* lies, and he uses it as evidence that the lies of the public are a problem.
Thankfully he agrees that censorship is not the answer, but his whole article is about the problem of lies, and he is pushing lies.
I suppose it is worth adding that he proves his own point that no one is omincompetent, because he certainly is not highly competent about COVID and vaccines etc.
Whether ivermectin is a treatment for covid is a question of fact — spoiler alert: it isn't — not a matter of opinion.
The editorial staff of this Journal of Free Speech Law exhibits a strange clinger-to-mainstream ratio.
Can anyone explain this situation in modern legal academia? It's as striking as a legal blog these days that is white and male.
The Journal of Free Speech Law is not affiliated with any research and teaching institution; instead, it seems to be funded by an odd source with a history of scandal
Carry on, clingers.