Those Demanding Free Speech Limits to
Fight ISIS Pose a Greater Threat to U.S.
Than ISIS
By
Glenn Greenwald
December 29, 2015 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept
"
- 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.”
To
make his case, Gingrich cited
a 2005 Commentary article
by the
extremist former prosecutor Andrew
McCarthy, entitled “Free Speech for
Terrorists?,” the central premise of
which was that “the free-speech clause
was never intended to frustrate
government’s ability to suppress true
threats to national security.” 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 this week 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.
That speech cannot be banned even
if it constitutes advocacy of
violence has a long history in the U.S.,
but was firmly entrenched in the Supreme
Court’s
unanimous 1969 decision in
Brandenburg v. Ohio, about
which I’ve
written many times. The Brandenburg ruling “overturned
the criminal conviction of a
Ku Klux Klan leader who had threatened
violence against political officials in
a speech.” Even more important was the
law which the Brandenburg court
invalided as unconstitutional:
The KKK leader in Brandenburg
was convicted under an Ohio statute
that made it a crime to “advocate .
. . the duty, necessity, or
propriety of crime, sabotage,
violence, or unlawful
methods of terrorism as a
means of accomplishing industrial or
political reform” and/or to
“voluntarily assemble with any
society, group, or assemblage of
persons formed to teach or advocate
the doctrines of criminal
syndicalism.” The Court struck down
the statute on the ground that it
“purports to punish mere advocacy”
and thus “sweeps within its
condemnation speech which our
Constitution has immunized from
governmental control.” The Court
ruled that “except where such
advocacy is directed to inciting or
producing imminent
lawless action” —
meaning conduct such as standing
outside someone’s house with an
angry mob and urging them to burn
the house down that moment — “the
constitutional guarantees of free
speech and free press do not permit
a State to forbid or proscribe
advocacy of the use of force” (emphasis
added).
The First Amendment bars the U.S.
Government from banning or punishing
speech even if that speech advocates
“the duty, necessity, or propriety of
unlawful methods of terrorism.” And
that’s exactly how it should be.
There are millions of people in the
world who believe and argue that the
U.S. has been supporting tyranny and
bringing violence to predominantly
Muslim countries for decades as a means
of dominating that region, and that
return violence is not only justifiable
but necessary to stop it (just as there
are millions of westerners who believe
and argue that they must bring more
violence to the countries of that
region). In particular, it’s astonishing
to watch Americans – whose favorite
political debate is deciding which
country should be bombed next or which
individuals should be next assassinated
– propose changes to the First Amendment
to make it a crime for others
to justify (not engage in, but merely justify) the
use of violence in what they argue is
valid self-defense.
Cass Sunstein with his wife, U.S.
Ambassador to the UN Samantha Power,
at the TIME 100 Gala, Time Warner
Center on April 21, 2015, in New
York. (Photo: Evan Agostini/Invision/AP)
Abusing the force of law to silence
legitimately expressed views – by
criminalizing the advocates of one side
of that debate – is as direct an attack
on core free speech rights as anything
that can be imagined (to understand how
extremist the proposal is, see
Ken White’s response to Posner’s article).
Trying to dictate which views can and
cannot be expressed on the internet,
aside from being futile, is the
modern-day hallmark of an authoritarian.
Throughout its history, the U.S. has
suffered far greater harm from
overwrought authoritarians acting in the
name of security than it has external
threats; the tyrannical impulses that
drove the Alien and Sedition Acts, World
War I prosecutions of anti-war
dissidents, the internment of
Japanese-Americans and McCarthyism did
at least as much damage to the U.S. as
any foreign adversary.
Above all, this has been the core lesson
of the “War on Terror”: the greatest
threats to western countries have
come from those seeking to limit rights
in the name of fighting terrorism,
not the terrorists themselves. There is
no more compelling example than those
who now explicitly advocate Newt
Gingrich’s 2006 idea of formally
restricting the First Amendment.
For the reasons I set forth
here, no human beings or human
institutions should ever be trusted to
promulgate lists of Prohibited Ideas and
Viewpoints. But even if you are someone
who yearns for such lists, it should be
immediately obvious that your dream of
prohibiting ideas is utterly futile,
particularly in the digital age (so
predictably, the killing of Awlaki did
not silence his ideas but rather, as
the NYT reports, “enhanced the
appeal of his message to many admirers,
who view him as a martyr”). And, just by
the way, there is still not a single
example of a terrorist attack carried
out on U.S. soil by anyone radicalized
by ISIS’s social media campaign
(contrary to initial reports, the San
Bernardino attackers were
inspired by the message of Awlaki
and al-Qaeda, not ISIS); this
is the threat that some individuals
are now invoking to dismantle a core
protection of the First Amendment?
What makes all of this especially ironic
is that not even a year has elapsed
since the western world congratulated
itself for its
flamboyant street celebration of free
speech in the wake of the Charlie
Hebdo murders. Remember all that? Yet
now, explicitly advocating new
restrictions on free speech and internet
freedom is the norm.
It
is essential to note that, for many
years, the U.S. and other western
governments have been abridging free
speech rights in the name of terrorism.
They’ve already
repeatedly prosecuted people –
almost always Muslims, of course –
for the
ideas they have expressed on
the internet and
elsewhere. Those abridgments have
already been severe when the villain was
al Qaeda; now that it’s ISIS, these
attacks on free speech are intensifying
throughout the west.
But there is a difference between
violating constitutional rights, as
those cases have done, and formally
restricting them, as people like
Sunstein and Posner are now agitating to
do. Guaranteeing free speech rights is
one of the things that the U.S.,
relative to the rest of the world, still
does well (not perfectly, but well). It
is not an exaggeration to say that
the people now plotting how to exploit
terrorism fears in order to formally
restrict rights of free expression
themselves pose a clear and present
danger to the U.S. (Sunstein
previously proposed that the U.S.
Government “cognitively infiltrate” the
internet by sending teams of covert
agents into “chat rooms, online social
networks, or even real-space groups” to
discredit what he regards as false
conspiracy theories, as well as pay
so-called “independent” credible voices
to bolster the Government’s messaging).
And as far as “hate speech” goes: there
are few things more “hateful” than
wanting to imprison one’s fellow
citizens for expressing prohibited
political ideas.
I
certainly don’t think their right to
espouse these dangerous ideas ought to
be suppressed or punished. The solution
to their dangerous ideas is to confront
and refute them, not outlaw them. But it
is vital to recognize the danger they
and their ideas entail. We’ve been told
for years that The Terrorists “hate our
freedoms,” yet we cannot seem to rid
ourselves of those who think the
solution is to voluntarily abolish those
freedoms ourselves.
Photo: Members of a joint military honor
guard stand watch over the Bill of
Rights at the National Archives Rotunda
in Washington, Dec. 15, 1991.