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Talking Points on Opposing the Flag Desecration Amendment
Reasons why the flag desecration constitutional
amendment is unwarranted and unconstitutional:
- This amendment is injurious to one of the very freedoms
the flag symbolizes: free speech. It directly
empowers the Congress to engage in thought control. There
is a distinct difference between real and forced patriotism.
Flag burning and desecration is offensive because it is political.
Experience shows that the way to fight political expression
with which one disagrees is not to outlaw it, but to express
disapproval.
- Freedom cannot survive if exceptions to the First
Amendment are made when someone in power disagrees with an expression.
If we allow that, our right to free speech will depend on what
Congress finds acceptable, precisely what the First Amendment
was designed to prevent.
- This amendment may provoke rather than diminish the
very acts it purports to curtail. Our nation's
experiment with an amendment to the Constitution concerning
Prohibition shows that a cure by amendment to the Constitution
may itself incite harm of the very nature it seeks to prevent.
- The flag desecration amendment is a solution
in search of a problem. The expressive act, burning
a flag, which this amendment attempts to curtail, is exceedingly
rare. Professor Robert Justin Goldstein documented approximately
45 reported incidents of flag burning in the over 200 years
between 1777 when the flag was adopted, and 1989, when Congress
passed, and the Supreme Court rejected, the Flag Protection
Act. About half of these occurred during the Vietnam War.
- This amendment would be the beginning, not the end,
of the question of how to regulate a certain form of expression.
It empowers Congress to begin the task of defining what the
"flag" and "desecration" mean. The use of the flag as
symbol is ubiquitous, from commerce, to art, to memorials, such
that Congress would be in the position of defining broad rules
for specific applications. Congress, the courts, and law enforcement
agents would have to judge whether displaying the flag on Polo
jeans is "desecration," but the Smithsonian's recent removal
of two million stitches from the 188-year old flag that inspired
Frances Scott Key, is not.
- The United States Supreme Court has ruled consistently
that flag burning is a form of speech protected by the First
Amendment. In Texas v. Johnson (1989),
the Supreme Court held it unconstitutional to apply to a protester
a Texas law punishing people who "desecrate" or otherwise "mistreat"
the flag in a manner that the "actor knows will seriously offend
one or more persons likely to observe or discover his action."
The Court found that the law made flag burning a crime only
when the suspect's thoughts and message in the act of burning
were offensive, thus violating the First Amendment's protections
of freedom of the mind and freedom of speech. The next
year, in United States v. Eichman (1990), the Court
reviewed a Congressional statute that attempted to be neutral
as to the messages that might be conveyed, prohibiting flag
burning except when attempting the "disposal of a flag when
it has become worn or soiled." The Court struck down this
statute as another attempt to punish offensive thoughts.
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