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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 31, 2025

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You know what, I was going to go point-by-point and discuss some of this, but I'm going to wait on that. What I'd like to wait for is to hear you say anything at all about 1A law. I just don't see any of that yet. None of the keywords. Nothing about content-neutral/content-based, viewpoint-neutral/viewpoint-based, nothing about the compelled speech doctrine and its extent/limits, nothing about the standards for commercial speech, etc.

The first amendment prohibits state governments from passing laws abridging the freedom of speech, unless it falls under a few exempted categories of speech restriction, such as laws against obscenity, defamation, and threats. Forcing people to speak French is not in one of those categories. So you explain to me why those other concepts are relevant and why this is a case where abridging freedom of speech would be allowed.

abridging the freedom of speech

Why is this an abridgment of the freedom of speech? (Generally, you could reach to one of the various well-established explanations of what counts as abridgments of the freedom of speech, some of which I mentioned.)

Controlling what language people speak is abridging freedom of speech. People are not free to use whatever language they want to use.

I am not hearing a single reference to any established 1A doctrines.

I don't see how they're relevant. The law prohibits abridgments of freedom of speech. This abridges freedom of speech. Therefore, it is unconstitutional unless someone can explain how it falls under one of the established exempted forms of speech.

This abridges freedom of speech.

404 - Argument Not Found