A TikTok ban on hypothetical grounds of a national security threat directly undermines the First Amendment’s protection of ...
Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech or of the press…” — First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution During the oral argument before the Supreme Court in the famous Pentagon ...
When the Supreme Court upheld a law that banned TikTok from the US, it seemed well aware that its ruling could resonate far ...
The policy was the result of African Americans pushing for decades to be recognized as full citizens and part of a trio of ...
When Justice Douglas asked the government lawyer if the phrase "no law" in the First Amendment literally means no law, he was unable to answer. The court found his mumbo jumbo reasoning so telling ...
Last week, the Supreme Court upheld the ban despite TikTok’s argument that it violates the First Amendment ... social media platforms in the United States would rather shut down than sell ...
The amendment ... in the United States, against the clear direction of the Constitution. Can anyone stop him? There are the courts. Unfortunately, as we saw during and after his first term ...
My name is Angele Latham, and I am the First Amendment ... TikTok and how to balance the free speech rights of those who use the social media app and the national security interest of the United ...
Possibly the most staggering action last week was Trump’s decision to pardon or commute the sentences of violent rioters who ...
The court concluded, “To hold that the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution excludes ... part of a new underclass in the United States.” Since Trump first ran for the presidency in 2016 ...