While I agree with you that interrupting a funeral is in extremely poor taste, it's not speech. To the extent that it is, speech in opposition to other speech is not a crime eitherJBaney45;1757314; said:When the Westboro baptist church interrupts "the speech" of events already going on, funerals and the like they seem to be free to do that.
Well, to be clear, the constitution protects speech from government intervention, not private intervention. The enforcement of laws intended to let speakers have their pulpit are designed to encourage speech, and especially unpopular speech. Though, merely standing in opposition to a speaker is not arrestable.... assaulting the speaker with tomatoes is. (I didn't watch your vid, just sayin). If these people were arrested simply for being opposed, then it is an arrest that is unconstitutional. That is to say, one's right to speak does not weigh more than my right to speak out against it. That's precisely the sort of "debate" the clause is intent on encouraging (though political speech is truly at the heart).I don't see how its different from the kids interrupting a church service as long as they aren't crossing onto private property (again besides the obvious idiot with a gun but that wasn't what they arrested the others for).
We don't go about picking and choosing, though. It is not fun to protect unpopular ideas. But, it is a principle upon which this nation stands. I may hate what you have to say, but I will protect your right to say it.We have a lot of values paramount to this country that we don't seem very committed to protecting, our current speaker of the house laughs at the constitution, people like Ron Paul who are strict constitutionalists get laughed at and called "radical". I'm not saying we shouldn't protect them, it's just amusing to look at how we go about picking and choosing
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