Those
Demanding Free Speech Limits to Fight ISIS Pose a Greater Threat to U.S. than
ISIS
In 2006 – years before ISIS replaced Al Qaeda as the
New and Unprecedentedly Evil Villain – Newt Gingrich gave a
speech in New Hampshire in which, as he put it afterward,
he “called for a serious debate about the First Amendment and how terrorists
are abusing our rights–using them as they once used passenger jets–to threaten
and kill Americans.”
In that speech, Gingrich argued:
“Either before we lose a city, or, if we are truly stupid, after we lose a city, we will adopt rules of engagement that use every technology we can find to break up (terrorists’) capacity to use the Internet, to break up their capacity to use free speech [protections] and to go after people who want to kill us–to stop them from recruiting people before they get to reach out and convince young people to destroy their lives while destroying us.”
In a follow-up article entitled
“The First Amendment is Not a Suicide Pact,” Gingrich went even further,
arguing that terrorists should be “subject to a totally different set of
rules,” and called for an international convention to decide “on what
activities will not be protected by free speech claims.”
In general, McCarthy argued, we must say that “some things are
truly evil,” and “that advocating them not only fails to serve any socially
desirable purpose but guarantees more evil.”
Thus, the U.S. Government must “convey in the strongest terms
that the advocacy of terrorism in this day and age is entitled to no First
Amendment protection.”
Back then – just nine
years ago – Gingrich’s anti-free-speech remarks were, for the most part,
quickly dismissed as unworthy of serious debate.
Even National Review,
which employs McCarthy, included Gingrich’s anti-free speech proposal on its 2011 list of the bad ideas the
former speaker has espoused in his career.
In 2006, I argued that
the Gingrich/McCarthy desire to alter the First Amendment to fight The
Terrorists was extremist even when judged by the increasingly radical standards
of the Bush/Cheney War on Terror, which by that point had already imprisoned Americans arrested on U.S. soil with no due
process and no access
to lawyers.
With rare exception, Gingrich’s desire to abridge Free Speech
rights in the name of fighting terrorism was dismissed as a
fringe idea.
Fast forward to 2015,
where the aging Al Qaeda brand has become decisively less
scary and ISIS has been unveiled as the new never-before-seen menace.
There are now once again calls for restrictions on the First
Amendment’s free speech protections, but they come not from far-right radicals
in universally discredited neocon journals, but rather from the most mainstream
voices, as highlighted by The New York Times.
The NYT article
notes that “in response to the Islamic State’s success in grooming
jihadists over the Internet, some legal scholars are asking whether it is time
to reconsider” the long-standing “constitutional line” that “freedom of
speech may not be curbed unless it poses a ‘clear and present danger’ — an
actual, imminent threat, not the mere advocacy of harmful acts or ideas.”
The NYT cites
two recent articles, one in Bloomberg by
long-time Obama adviser Cass Sunstein and the other in Slate by Law Professor Eric
Posner, that suggested limitations on the First Amendment in order to fight
ISIS.
It describes growing calls to
ban the YouTube lectures and sermons of Anwar al-Awlaki, the American cleric
whom the U.S. assassinated by drone in 2011 (and then, two weeks later, killed his 16-year-old American son).
It also notes that the desire to restrict the internet as a
means of fighting ISIS has seeped into the leadership of both parties: Donald
Trump said the
“internet should be closed up” to ISIS, while “Hillary Clinton said the
government should work with host companies to shut jihadist websites and chat
rooms,” a plan that would be unconstitutional “if the government exerted
pressure on private firms to cooperate in censorship.”
All of these proposals
take direct aim at a core constitutional principle that for decades has defined
the First Amendment’s free speech protections.