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Notes -
It's exceptionally unclear if that principle remains good law, not just in the awkward question of what extent Schenck was overruled (technically Brandenburg only explicitly overruled Whitney v. California), but in the sense that exact and literal text is part of the central holding of Schenck. It might get read out less often, but it's as core the famous line:
More recent cases have been highly limited in the extent they have accepted such expansive reads, but even in the specific context of Brandenburg and Davis that cry for Circumstances was recognized as permitting widely restrictive limits on speech based on whatever Current Thing was, given the extent WWI and WWII and anti-communism had twisted past precedent.
But more deeply than that, if you're trying to write an opinion on a controversial subject, and you've got a claim you think blindingly obvious, you should be able to pick a precedent that isn't a byword for bad and motivated law, whose central holding applied broadly to speech we generally permit, and who you don't have to worry about (and fail to!) note as overruled on other grounds.
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