Constitutional Law
Mar. 10, 2011
The Best Antidote to Hate Speech Is More Speech
Staying true to the First Amendment requires that we allow all kinds of speech, even those which society deems offensive.





Stephen F. Rohde
Email: rohdevictr@aol.com
Stephen is a retired civil liberties lawyer and contributor to the Los Angeles Review of Books, is author of American Words for Freedom and Freedom of Assembly.
Many of the U.S. Supreme Court's most important decisions upholding free speech involve the most hateful speech imaginable, testing our national commitment to the First Amendment.
Five years ago, in their hometown of Westminster, Md., Albert Snyder attended the funeral of his son Lance Cpl. Matthew A. Snyder, who was killed in Iraq. About 1,000 feet away on public property, members of the Westboro Baptist Church of Topeka, Kan., founded by Fred Phelps in 1955, conducted a ...For only $95 a month (the price of 2 article purchases)
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