"The free exchange of ideas, even offensively expressed ideas, is a *virtue* worthy of First Amendment protection." - Justice Harlan These words are a blessing to my ears. People don't realize the importance of this decision.
EXACTLY being under police monitoring and being targeted personally for getting someone butt hurt. They’re messing with someone’s life and livelihood. All I wanted was to be left alone and that was my message. Don’t mess with me. They could have easily left me alone as soon as I got my own weapon to protect myself from the person breaking into my room.
Try pulling a camera like a GoPro or your cell phone camera in a courthouse, courtroom or even out on the steps and you risk assault from law enforcement. Go ahead. Try to express your free speech in the most public building in your community. Just pull out a camera. Don’t say a word. Just record. Good luck.
I understand the needs of the First Amendment for all of us. And I, too, am happy that it is there for all of us. However, societal values are also important - even paramount, even though they change through the years. Justice Harlan was absolutely wrong in saying a person simply doesn't have to look. That is absurd. You certainly can turn away AFTER you see it, but why in the world would you turn away from anything that you've never seen? It's too late. You have already seen it. Now, you can turn away. But now, you've already been offended. It is a surprise and a shock to see a sign in the back of a station wagon window with this word, just as much (perhaps even more, since you may be stuck behind that station wagon for a while) as it is to have a person rounding the corner wearing a top displaying the word. The "F" word is NOT a word for public use. Nor is it a word for use in mixed company. Certainly, not for use around MY children (referencing the station wagon and even the Sonic restaurant). All of our children will have to fight off corruption and vulgarity soon enough. Parents really don't need anyone's help in escorting their children to the world of vulgarity. In Boston (when I lived there), you couldn't turn your car radio up so loud that the person in the next car couldn't even think. I thought that law was great. Sure, words are cute. Words are descriptive. Words are ways to an expression that otherwise couldn't be expressed. But there is also respect for others that somehow has been lost. Mr. White's use of the "F" word was not a free exchange of ideas. It was a provocation.