The Arizona Supreme Court Strikes a Powerful Blow for Free Speech and Religious Freedom – National Review

Breanna Koski, co-owner of Brush & Nib Studio, at news conference following oral arguments at the Arizona Supreme Court, January 22, 2019.(Alliance Defending Freedom)

Free speech and religious liberty are on a winning streak. Last month the Eighth Circuit Court of appeals ruled that Christian wedding photographers could not be compelled to use their artistic talents to help celebrate same-sex weddings. Today, the Arizona Supreme Court reached a similar holding, this time on behalf of Christian calligraphers and painters Joanna Duka and Breanna Koski. The case, brought by my friends and former colleagues at the Alliance Defending Freedom, is similar to multiple other wedding vendor cases. The plaintiffs do not discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation (they happily serve gay customers). They merely refuse to produce art that advances ideas they find objectionable.

Duka and Koski operate a limited liability company called Brush & Nib Studios. The companys Operating Agreement declares its beliefs quite clearly stating that it will not create custom artwork that communicates ideas or messages . . . that contradict biblical truth, demean others, endorse racism, incite violence, or promote any marriage besides marriage between one man and one woman, such as same-sex marriage. As with all these cases, the core question is whether the custom artwork at issue constitutes constitutionally protected speech (the court was interpreting the Arizona constitution, but applied federal free speech precedents). If so, then the states demand that the plaintiffs produce art for same-sex marriages constitutes a form of compelled speech, among the most egregious forms of First Amendment violation. Compelled speech violates the fundamental principle that an individual has autonomy over his or her speech and thus may not be forced to speak a message he or she does not wish to say.

The court held that the plaintiffs custom wedding calligraphy constituted pure speech:

Each custom invitation created by Duka and Koski contains their hand-drawn words, images, and calligraphy, as well as their hand-painted images and original artwork. Additionally, Duka and Koski are intimately connected with the words and artwork contained in their invitations . . . For each invitation, Duka and Koski spend many hours designing and painting custom paintings, writing words and phrases, and drawing images and calligraphy. Moreover, they insist on retaining artistic control over the ideas and messages contained in the invitations to ensure they are consistent with their religious beliefs.

The court compared the plaintiffs to tattoo artists, individuals who are unquestionably in the business of creating art. Its worth repeating time and time again that refusing to advance a particular message is not the same thing as the refusal to provide a service. Custom art is not ham and eggs at Cracker Barrel. Progressive legal dissenters (including the dissent in this case) recognize and dont wish to overrule the compelled speech doctrine; they instead label the custom artwork at issue (whether its a custom cake, custom wedding video, or custom floral arrangement) as mere commercial activity, and the plaintiffs refusal to create the custom artwork is discriminatory conduct. The court disagreed:

Ultimately, the Citys analysis is based on the flawed assumption that Plaintiffs custom wedding invitations are fungible products, like a hamburger or a pair of shoes. They are not. Plaintiffs do not sell identical invitations to anyone; every custom invitation is different and unique. For each invitation, Duka and Koski create different celebratory messages, paintings and drawings; they also personally write, in calligraphy or custom hand-lettering, the names of the specific bride and groom who are getting married. In short, Plaintiffs do not create the same wedding invitation for any couple, regardless of whether the wedding involves a man and a woman or a same-sex couple.

A well-crafted court opinion is an educational document. It can and often should not only persuade the precise legal reasoning at issue but also the justifications for the legal rules it applies. The courts words are compelling:

Duka and Koskis beliefs about same-sex marriage may seem old-fashioned, or even offensive to some. But the guarantees of free speech and freedom of religion are not only for those who are deemed sufficiently enlightened, advanced, or progressive. They are for everyone. After all, while our own ideas may be popular today, they may not be tomorrow.

Free speech for me, but not for thee cannot be an American governing philosophy. Moreover, continued victories for freedom of speech could well draw lines that allow both sides of the cultural divide the space to speak and exercise their liberties without creating a false, zero-sum conflict. The court quoted the Supreme Court of the United States seminal opinion in West Virginia v. Barnette, and its worth quoting here as well:

As governmental pressure toward unity becomes greater, so strife becomes more bitter as to whose unity it shall be. . . . . Ultimate futility of such attempts to compel coherence is the lesson of every such effort from the Roman drive to stamp out Christianity as a disturber of its pagan unity, the Inquisition, as a means to religious and dynastic unity, the Siberian exiles as a means to Russian unity, down to the fast failing efforts of our present totalitarian enemies. Those who begin coercive elimination of dissent soon find themselves exterminating dissenters. Compulsory unification of opinion achieves only the unanimity of the graveyard.

This is a great truth of history, and every American victory for free speech builds a larger and deeper defense of American pluralism. Today, the Arizona Supreme Court did its part to maintain Americas first freedoms.

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The Arizona Supreme Court Strikes a Powerful Blow for Free Speech and Religious Freedom - National Review

The Growing Right-Wing Threat to Campus Free Speech – Reason

When it comes to free speech on American campuses, there seems to be a law of conservation at work: Just when the internal threat of censorship from left-wing campus activists is abating, the external threat from right-wing lawmakers starts rising. Given that the new threat relies not on the decibel level of immature 18-year-olds but the state power of motivated adults, it may be much harder to fight.

Concerns about political correctness on campus date back at least 25 years before Philip Roth wrote The Human Stain,his brilliant novel depicting the travails of a half-black classics professor pretending to be Jewish who gets summarily fired after black students take offense over his use of the word "spooks." But after a brief hiatus, these concerns came back with a vengeance in the last decade, at least partly because a well-oiled right-wing machine emerged to pounce on every student transgressionbig and small, real and imagined, in order to paint a picture of a "free speech crisis" in academia.

Consider the experience of Ursinus College's Jonathan Marks, a conservative professor who writes extensively about higher education: He recounts with amusement how first The College Fix, a right-wing campus watchdog website, and then Breitbart picked up a piece he wrote for Commentary earlier this year making fun of California State Fresno's new faculty and staff rules prescribing that "everyone be nice to each other." Both outfits distorted the story and blamed students who had nothing to do with the rules, because that was better aligned with their narrative of easily triggered snowflakes demanding safe spaces. The College Fix appended a grudging "update" after some coaxing from Marks, but Breitbart didn't bother. "If you investigated the dental profession with as much intensity as college campuses and devoted entire websites to covering it, you could come up with lots of bad things too," he laughs.

Though the notion of a campus free speech crisis may be overblown, it's still a problem. Otherwise, New York magazine's Jonathan Chait, a liberal, wouldn't write about the damage that a culture rife with trigger warnings and microaggressions does to the cause of free and open dialogue. Vox even thought it fit to run a piece by a liberal professor under a pseudonym complaining that some of his liberal students "terrify" him.

But regardless of how one characterizes what's transpiring on campuses, there are encouraging signs that things are getting better.

A report last year by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), an outfit that does yeoman's work tracking the threats to free speech in colleges, found that the percentage of institutions with speech codes "that clearly and substantially restrict freedom of speech," a genuine problem in the 1990s, had diminished by 42 percentage points since 2009 in the sample it surveyed. Even better, 37 universities earned its green light rating for having no speech codes whatsoever compared to merely eight in 2009. Meanwhile, 27 schools or faculty bodies embraced University of Chicago's widely-praised free speech principlesup from just seven the year before. The principles reaffirm the university's commitment to stand firm against the disinvitation of controversial speakers or disruption of events.

There is more good news on the disinvitation front: After peaking in 2016 at 43 disinvitations, the number plummeted to 18 last year, according to FIRE's non-comprehensive tracking list. This year, the disinvitation number has moved up to 30including 13 leftist speakersbut that's still lower than the peak. The most likely reason for the overall drop isn't self-censorship or state laws protecting campus speech, Acadia University's Jeffrey Adam Sachs has convincingly argued. Rather, it is a combination of boredom over the tactics of campus yahoos and a new culture of campus tolerance with students forming clubs and networks to promote respectful cross-political dialogue. It also helps that, unlike 2016, this is not a polarizing presidential election year.

But even as universities are beginning to defuse the threat to free speech from leftist radicals on campus, they are facing new ones from right-wing lawmakers off campus.

Conservatives warn day and night about liberal political correctness but give scarcely a thought to how their own brand of patriotic correctness stifles free expression. If they did, they wouldn't be instigating anti-flag-burning amendments on a regular basis. And they certainly wouldn't have stood squarely behind this president when he berated 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick for kneeling during the national anthem to protest police brutality and demanded that the NFL fire him.

Nor are conservative lawmakers shy about launching their own jihad on academic freedom to squelch professors or viewpoints they dislike.

There is a rising trend that goes something like this, as per New York University's Jonathan Haidt: A left-wing professor says something provocative on social media or elsewhere and the right-wing media goes into overdrive, covering the story ad nauseum to gin up viewer outrage. Republican politicos jump in and demand action. University administrators, terrified of the PR damage but unworried about academic freedom, put the professor on leave and begin the "process of termination," especially if the professor isn't tenured. (Haidt, incidentally, is no liberal pleader. He is a celebrity in conservative circles because he founded the highly respected Heterodox Academy, whose purpose is to address the lack of intellectual diversity on liberal-dominated campuses.)

In just the last six months, Acadia University's Sachs has documented several incidents in Iowa, California, and Connecticut that fit exactly this pattern.

In another incident just last month, the University of Alabama fired Jamie R. Riley, its black assistant vice president and dean of students, after Breitbart exposed past tweets in which Riley criticized the American flag and made a connection between police and racism. Meanwhile, the chief of staff of Rep. Jeff Fortenberry (RNeb.) personally called and threatened University of Nebraska Professor Ari Kohen for "liking" a Facebook post depicting a defaced campaign sign of the congressman showing googly eyes and calling him Fartenberry. The staffer accused Kohen of encouraging "vandalism," arguably an attempt at chilling speech.

It isn't just professors that Republicans are going after. In January, FIRE had to send a cease-and-desist letter to the University of Georgia after it invited an investigation by the state's Republican attorney general into a philosophy graduate student who called white people "crappy" at a meeting.

Meanwhile, bills are proliferating across Republican-controlled states such as Wisconsin requiring universities to expel students engaging in "disruptive" protests, which could potentially include anything from loud clapping to walkouts, according to the ACLU. Also in Wisconsin, a Republican lawmaker threatened to cut the University of Wisconsin's budget over an "obscene" reading assignment aimed at exploring how sexual preferences can lead to racial segregation in the gay community.

In another disturbing incident, Rep. Ted Budd (RN.C.), successfully petitioned the Department of Education secretary to investigate Duke University and the University of North Carolina to ensure that the $235,000 grant that the universities' Middle East consortium received isn't being used to promote "anti-Israel bias."

Conservatives pose as the guardians of free speech against the excesses of political correctness. Yet they have few qualms about deploying the purse and power of the state to police the boundaries of acceptable speech and speakers. It is too bad that conservatives' threat of censorship is heating up just when campus snowflakes are showing signs of melting away.

A version of this column originally appeared in The Week.

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The Growing Right-Wing Threat to Campus Free Speech - Reason

Freedom of Speech Protects Calligraphers’ Right Not to Create Custom Same-Sex Wedding Invitations – Reason

From this morning's decision inBrush & Nib Studios, LC v. City of Phoenix:

The rights of free speech and free exercise, so precious to this nation since its founding, are not limited to soft murmurings behind the doors of a person's home or church, or private conversations with likeminded friends and family. These guarantees protect the right of every American to express their beliefs in public. This includes the right to create and sell words, paintings, and art that express a person's sincere religious beliefs.

With these fundamental principles in mind, today we hold that the City of Phoenix cannot apply its Human Relations Ordinance to force Joanna Duka and Breanna Koski, owners of Brush & Nib Studios, LC , to create custom wedding invitations celebrating same-sex wedding ceremonies in violation of their sincerely held religious beliefs. Duka, Koski, and Brush & Nib have the right to refuse to express such messages under article 2, section 6 of the Arizona Constitution [which protects the freedom of speech and of the press], as well as Arizona's Free Exercise of Religion Act .

Our holding is limited to Plaintiffs' creation of custom wedding invitations that are materially similar to those contained in the record. We do not recognize a blanket exemption from the Ordinance for all of Plaintiffs' business operations. Likewise, we do not, on jurisprudential grounds, reach the issue of whether Plaintiffs' creation of other wedding products may be exempt from the Ordinance.

Duka and Koski's beliefs about same-sex marriage may seem old-fashioned, or even offensive to some. But the guarantees of free speech and freedom of religion are not only for those who are deemed sufficiently enlightened, advanced, or progressive. They are for everyone. After all, while our own ideas may be popular today, they may not be tomorrow. Indeed, "[w]e can have intellectual individualism" and "rich cultural diversities only at the price" of allowing others to express beliefs that we may find offensive or irrational. West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette (1943). This "freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter much [t]he test of its substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of the existing order."Id.

I hope to post more about this soon; note that I cosigned an amicus brief in this case, together with the Cato Institute and fellow Volokh Conspiracy blogger Dale Carpenter.

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Freedom of Speech Protects Calligraphers' Right Not to Create Custom Same-Sex Wedding Invitations - Reason

Nicholls holds freedom of speech panel discussion – Daily Comet

In honor of the university's Constitution Week, several of Nicholls State University's professors offered their perspectives on free speech in today's society and on campus during a panel discussion Tuesday.

They ranged from discussing "cancel culture" to the history of student press rights at public schools to the role freedom of speech plays in maintaining a democracy.

Sitting on the panel were Nicki Boudreaux, a mass communication professor; Rusty Thysell Jr., a government professor; David Whitney, the social sciences department head; and Paul Wilson, the geography department head. They were also joined by Student Government Association Vice President Markaylen Wiltz, and the discussion was moderated byJames Stewart, mass communication department head.

All of the panelists shared the sentiment that the right to free speech is integral to the country's progress and finding truth

"To me, free speech is the cornerstone of our society, and it's the cornerstone of this and all universities," said Whitney. "It has to be protected at all costs."

Whitney asserted that freedom of speech is a protection for the minority in society against the majority.

"From mob rule," he said, pointing to how public opinion changes over time with examples like the acceptance of gay marriage and the civil rights movement.

Wilson argued "cancel culture," or the boycott of someone like a celebrity due to a questionable opinion or behavior, is the greatest threat to freedom of speech. This is an alternative term to "call-out culture."

"You're allowed to change," he said. "You've all said offensive things in your life."

Wiltz noted that the original purpose of a liberal arts college was to promote "freedom of thought."

"We're caught in this dilemma of society where people want to feel safe, but they don't want to hear the reaction to their words," he said. "You need to remember to watch how you say things but also get your point across."

Thysell said he advises his students to recognize that while they have the right to say something, they still have to think about whether there are repercussions.

"You can basically say anything you want," he said. "The problem is the consequences."

Boudreaux added that in the mass communication department, they couple the law associated with freedom of speech with the ethics of speech so students understand "the personal responsibility we have as speakers."

"I can offend you," she said. "But just because I can say something doesn't mean I should say something."

Staff Writer Halle Parker can be reached at hparker@houmatoday.com or 857-2204. Follow her on Twitter, @_thehalparker.

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Nicholls holds freedom of speech panel discussion - Daily Comet

Remembering why free speech is important – Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF)

At a time when freedom of speech seems to be under assault, its worth stepping back to reconsider why it matters.

In a free society, all citizens must be able to pursue their own paths, set their own goals, and think for themselves. Of course, in America and elsewhere, there are norms, orthodoxies, and taboos. And dissident personalities frequently challenge these norms by eschewing orthodoxy and venturing into the taboo.

How a society treats these dissidents can tell you a lot about how truly free that society is. In some places, government silences or punishes those with unpopular viewpoints for refusing to sacrifice their independence and their ideas (the recent protests in Hong Kong are an instructive example).

America offers a richer tradition. People are free to express their ideas, even if those ideas are unpopular, unconventional, or wrong (though, in many cases, they may eventually be proven right). Americans are thus free to participate in peaceful protests, wear black armbands to school, and even burn the nations flag. A speaker may say things that are unpopular, uncomfortable, or downright grotesque. But in a free society, we engage dissent through discussion and debate rather than through censorship and punishment.

Free speech is inextricably linked to prosperity. After all, prosperity comes from ideas, and new ideas can thrive only in a society in which they are free from suppression. Its easy to think of widely embraced ideas that were once controversialfor example, the idea that all children, regardless of race, should have the same educational opportunities. Thanks to our tradition of free speech, such forward-looking ideas reshaped our society for the better.

Today it is more important than ever to protect our freedom of speech. Too many people have come to believe that discussion and debate are inadequate; they seek a society that squelches dissent with force. In law, government regulations are censoring speech that is disparaging, immoral, and offensive.

In culture, people attack the speaker rather than engaging their ideas. Opponents vilify speakers as misogynists, or racists, and then attempt to drive them from the public square, or deprive them of their livelihood. In worst-case scenarios, disagreeable speech is met with violence. These attacks on the tradition of free speech are damaging to a free society and suppress uninhibited, robust, and wide open debate.

Freedom of speech is an invaluable cornerstone of a free societyand its worth fighting to protect.

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Remembering why free speech is important - Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF)

Wheaton College Students Sue Chicago for Banning Them From Evangelizing at The Bean – The Daily Beast

Four students at Wheaton College filed a federal free-speech lawsuit against the City of Chicago this week, claiming that it violated the Constitution when it prohibited a group of evangelists from speaking and passing out fliers near The Bean statue at the popular Millennium Park.

The three sophomores and one junior who filed suitMatt Swart, Jeremy Chong, Gabriel Emerson, and Caeden Hoodare all members of the Chicago Evangelism Team at the 2,500-student, Christian liberal arts school. The team is sponsored by the colleges Office of Christian Outreach.

An essential part of Christianity is sharing the gospel, Chong told The Chicago Tribune, which first reported the lawsuit, on Thursday.

The 24.5-acre park is the most popular tourist destination in the midwest, with about 25 million annual visitors, and was often used by the team to proclaim the gospel in the city of Chicago to whomever we find there, pray with and listen to all those we meet and be a light and a witness for Christ, according to the lawsuit.

But six members of the team were halted by park security in December 2018 while open air preaching, the complaint claims.

Park officials told the students that they were soliciting the public to subscribe to their beliefs and therefore in violation of a Chicago ordinance which prohibited solicitation on the park sidewalk between Randolph Street and Roosevelt Street, the lawsuit states.

Over the next several months, the students and other evangelists continued to face hostility and opposition from park employees frustrating their ability to preach or distribute free religious literature, the complaint contends. In one case, students say they were told by a park official they could not discuss religion in the park. That official allegedly ordered the students to leave the park if they wanted to talk about religion.

In April, the citys Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events officially divided the park into 11 areas, or rooms, and on its website announced that it would ban the making of speeches and passing out of written communications in 10 of them.

The rules, which were updated in August, contain unconstitutional provisions which unduly restrict speech within a traditional public forum, the lawsuit claims.

The rules essentially restrict anyone from making speeches or passing out written materials in the park, including near the world-famous Cloud Gate statue, commonly known as The Bean, except for the area of Wrigley Square and the Millennium Monument, in the northwest corner of the park, according to the complaint.

The Bean is one of the highest tourist attractions in the United States ... thats where you want to get your message out, the students attorney, John Mauck, told the Tribune.

The 39-page federal lawsuit was filed on Wednesday in the U.S. District Court in the Northern District of Illinois and claims the city violated their constitutional rights to freedom of speech and free exercise of religion.

This isnt just about evangelists, Mauck said. This is for politicians campaigning, political activists and whoever else wants free speech.

This case is about keeping secure the liberty of public citizens, in general, and the four student plaintiffs, specifically, to freely engage in speech activities at Millennium Parka public park and traditional public forum, the complaint states. The right of citizens to discuss matters of public importance, to engage with other citizens, and to hear encouraging or challenging opinions is a bedrock of the first amendment, which has found its fullest expression in the context of public forums.

Through the suit, the students are seeking to forbid the city and its employees from enforcing rules that prohibit or unduly restrict the students speech and religious activities within a traditional public forum, unspecified damages for violating their rights, and reimbursement of attorneys fees and expenses.

Despite the fact that he was forwarded a copy of the complaint, Bill McCaffrey, a spokesman for the citys legal department, told The Daily Beast on Thursday: We have not yet received this suit and therefore cannot comment specifically on the litigation, however, the new rules protect First Amendment rights while also respecting the rights of patrons to use and enjoy the park.

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Wheaton College Students Sue Chicago for Banning Them From Evangelizing at The Bean - The Daily Beast

A Revival of Free Speech (and True Tolerance) – Townhall

When it comes to freedom of speech, were in the midst of a revival.

On Monday, the Arizona Supreme Court ruled in favor of Phoenix artists Joanna Duka and Breanna Koski of Brush & Nib Studio, holding that the Arizona Constitutions Free Speech Clause does what it purports to do; namely, it ensures that religious organizations and persons are given proper protection as they seek to teach the principles that are so fulfilling and so central to their lives and faiths, and to their own deep aspirations to continue the family structure they have long revered.

This ruling continues a trend back toward the fundamental freedoms of belief and expression that our nation was founded upon. Its a welcome change.

Not long ago, Tolerance 2.0 was in full swing. For the uninitiated, Tolerance 1.0allowed for the existence of opinions that one dislikes or disagrees with. In contrast, Tolerance 2.0seeks the homogenization of belief and expression, particularly as it relates to the government-approved orthodoxy regarding marriage and human sexuality.

Those who dissented by stubbornly clinging to their sincerely-held beliefs were to be punished. They were to be rebuked, reeducated, and (if successful) reintroduced to society as reformed. Alternatively, they were to be removed from polite society and the public square.

The examples are numerous, but include:

-Jack Phillips, the cake artist in Colorado

-Barronelle Stutzman, the florist in Washington

-Blaine Adamson, the promotional printer in Kentucky

-Carl and Angel Larsen, the filmmakers in Minnesota

-Joanna and Breanna, the artists in Arizona

One by one, these men and women were forced to plead their cases before human rights commissions, as well as state and federal courts. They faced the possibility of fines, the loss of personal assets, or even prison. Some received death threats or were compared to Nazis. All were told some variation of this message: compromising your religious beliefs is the price of citizenship.

But then Jack Phillips stood before the U.S. Supreme Court, and Justice Kennedy proclaimed that tolerance is essential in a free society. I wrote at the time that Masterpiece Cakeshopwould require that the justices grapple with the question of what tolerance demands in a free society. The Court answered, in part, ruling that the state in its position here has beenneither tolerantnor respectful of Mr. Phillips religious beliefs and condemning the commission for implying that religious beliefs and persons are less than fully welcome in Colorados business community.

Many wondered what might come next. Would lower courts protect the constitutional freedoms of all Americans, or simply require future infringement on those freedoms to be undertaken with more respect (that is, with less overt hostility)?

We are starting to see the answer.

Just weeks ago on August 23, Blaine Adamson stood before the Kentucky Supreme Court and asked it to rule that Americans need not surrender their First Amendment rights of expression and belief when they enter the public square. Two lower courts in the state have already ruled in favor of Blaine and his company, Hands On Originals. Its very possible the Kentucky Supreme Court will uphold those decisions.

On that same day, the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in favor of Carl and Angel Larsen, holding that the First Amendment allows the Larsens to choose when to speak and what to say. The Larsens seek to make films about Gods design for marriage as a lifelong union of one man and one woman, but a state law demands that if the Larsens produce such films, they must also create films celebrating same-sex marriage. The courts ruling instructs the trial court to reconsider whether the Larsens are entitled to a preliminary injunction preventing enforcement of the law.

Mondays ruling in Arizona gives defenders of freedom additional cause to rejoice. It recognizes that, while Christian professionals like Joanna and Breanna happily serve all people, they are unable to express messages that conflict with their faith. The Court held:

Plaintiffs must, and they do, serve all customers regardless of their sexual orientation. But no law, including a public accommodations law, is immune from the protections of free speech and free exercise. The enduring strength of the First Amendment is that it allows people to speak their minds and express their beliefs without government interference. But here, the City effectively cuts off Plaintiffs right to express their beliefs about samesex marriage by telling them what they can and cannot say.

Time will tell if this trend continues. Barronelle Stutzman loves her longtime customer and friend Rob Ingersoll, but she was sued when she respectfully declined his invitation to help celebrate his same-sex ceremony, and now faces the loss of everything she owns. She may be headed back to the U.S. Supreme Court. Meanwhile, Jack Phillips remains embroiled in the latest attack on his faith and livelihood. It remains to be seen whether freedom of belief and expression will prevail in his case.

Any good revival doesnt just beginit endures. Lets hope this recent free speech revival turns out to be a good one.

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A Revival of Free Speech (and True Tolerance) - Townhall

Appeals Court: No, Lynching Threats Are Not Free Speech – Patheos

A federal appeals court has ruled against a man who sent clear lynching threats to a Muslim candidate for public office, who argued that these were not true threats (the legal standard applicable here) because they were covered by the First Amendment Free Speech Clause. The court upheld a district court judge that said he had to stand trial for it.Credit: JMacpherson https://www.flickr.com/photos/lipstickproject/16195812463

Attorneys for Joseph Cecil Vandevere, 52, argued that charges against their client should be dropped on the grounds of freedom of speech, the Associated Press reported on Tuesday.

Vandevere is charged with interstate communication of a threat to injure a person. He allegedly used anonymous social media accounts to communicate lynching threats.

In one tweet, Vandevere is said to have sent a picture of a lynching to Virginia state Senate candidate Qasim Rashid, who is Muslim. The tweet included the words VIEW YOUR DESTINY.

He didnt limit his hatred only to Muslims. He also posted on Facebook that Jews should be arrested and prosecuted for being dual citizens of the United States and Israel. The district court judge rightly ruled that, A true threat dressed up in political rhetoric or artistic expression alone does not render it a non-threat.

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Appeals Court: No, Lynching Threats Are Not Free Speech - Patheos

Why oppose banning books and free speech? – Seacoastonline.com

These days, I sometimes question the value of the First Amendment: freedom of speech. When I watch movies on Netflix and every other word is profanity, for instance. Or when the president tells four dynamic recently elected women in the U.S. House of Representatives to go back to where you came from, or denounces a major American city for being rat-infested as a cover for his racist beliefs. Why does our society have to endure such unfair, ugly uses of words?

But of course, the consequences of banning free speech would be unendurable, and undemocratic. Our countrys founders knew that. If we legalized limitations, think of the tyranny that would result. Only specific books and speeches would be allowed, and they could be fascistic or bigoted. Every controversial idea could be labeled subversive as a means of controlling thought! The creative possibilities of art and literature might never be developed!

So while we may fantasize a time without an embarrassingly crude and hateful speaker in the White House, we do not want to consider a time where books are banned from schools and libraries because of the damage free thought might cause in our thinking and actions. And it is this freedom of speech and freedom to read and freedom from censorship that we annually celebrate during Banned Book Week. This year, we will honor those rights on September 24 at Water Street Book Store at Banned Book Night, co-sponsored by the bookstore and the American Civil Liberties Union of New Hampshire.

Six local readers will read segments from six banned or challenged books. Each reader has chosen a book from a huge list of books, and this year, the choices show an interesting pattern: four of the books are by and about black lives, and a fifth is about book banning by burning! It seems to me that the news of the year is influencing these readers choices. Discriminatory practices, racist talk at high levels: they often lead readers to explore more fully writers such as James Baldwin and Nobel Prize winner, the late Toni Morrison and books such as To Kill A Mockingbird, Their Eyes Are Watching God, Go Tell It On the Mountain, and The Bluest Eye. And Ray Bradburys fascinating Fahrenheit 451 illustrates the outcome of banning books and limiting free thought!

In addition to the emphasis on books dealing with race in our local program this year, national reports show that books dealing with LGBTQ topics have been most frequently banned and challenged in 2019, even including childrens books. And Tango Makes Three is among those, and it, too, will be highlighted in our Exeter event.

The public is invited to attend readings from these banned books by Paul Durham, author of young adult and childrens books; Leslie Haslam, director of Exeter Adult Education; Eileen Flockhart, local activist and former state representative; PEA student Liam Ahern; PEA Diversity and Inclusion Director Stephanie Bramlett; and Joe Pace, chair of Kensington Board of Selectmen and area political activist. Join in the conversation about whether there should ever be book banning or limits on free speech. Some banned books will be raffled. Refreshments will be served.

Pat Yosha is a resident of Exeter and is the facilitator of the Banned Book Night at the Water Street Bookstore.

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Why oppose banning books and free speech? - Seacoastonline.com

The litmus test for free speech – The Hindu

Freedom of speech and individual liberty are enshrined in Articles 19(1)(a) and 21 of the Constitution. However, these rights, like all others, are not absolute but subject to reasonable restrictions. What would be a reasonable restriction is an extremely important matter to consider, as on that would depend the validity of several detention orders and prosecutions in India.

In America, the earlier decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court had laid down the bad tendency test to determine whether the restriction was reasonable or not. This test was that free speech or acts could be prohibited if they were likely to adversely affect the welfare of the public. However, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, a celebrated judge of the U.S. Supreme Court, felt that the bad tendency test was vague. In Schenck v. United States (1919), he laid down the clear and present danger test to determine the reasonability of the restriction. This test means that a restriction would be reasonable only if the speech or action constitutes a clear and present (and not remote) danger to state security or public order.

The clear and present danger test was not consistently followed by the U.S. Supreme Court, though. In Dennis v. United States (1951), for instance, a balancing test was adopted.

In Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969), the clear and present danger test was expanded, and the imminent lawless action test was laid down by the U.S. Supreme Court, which the court has followed since. This test states, The constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit the state to forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation, except where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action.

The word imminent used in the judgment is very important. Imminent means likely to happen very soon, at hand, or fast approaching.

Two decisions of the Indian Supreme Court Sri Indra Das v. State of Assam (2011) and Arup Bhuyan v. State of Assam (2011) followed the decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio, and so Brandenburg has become the law of the land in India too.

By applying the Brandenburg test, it becomes evident that the prosecution against the Bhima Koregaon accused; Professor G.N. Saibaba; activist Shehla Rashid; and Pawan Jaiswal, the journalist who published a report that children in a primary school in Mirzapur, Uttar Pradesh, were getting only roti and salt in their mid-day meals; among others deserve to be quashed as these acts or speeches did not create any danger of an imminent lawless act. The recent detention of many persons in Kashmir (except those accused of militant activities) would also be illegal from that standpoint.

Recently, the Bombay High Court rejected the plea of Gautam Navlakha, an accused in the Bhima Koregaon case, for quashing the criminal proceedings against him, observing that there was some material to indicate that the accused was in contact with Naxalites. But being in contact with a militant organisation cannot by itself be a crime, a`s it does not result in any imminent lawless act. One could be a writer who contacts Naxalites for doing research about them, or a social activist, or even a sympathiser. That would be legal, being within the ambit of the Brandenburg test.

It is submitted with respect that the Bombay High Courts decision is incorrect, and should be set aside by the Supreme Court, which should reaffirm the Brandenburg test. That would pave the way for quashing several detentions and prosecutions (many of them based on manufactured evidence) which are a slur on democracy and liberty.

In these critical days in India, when onslaught on liberty and freedom of speech is commonplace, it is the higher judiciary which must do its duty as guardians of the citizens constitutional rights. The court must not succumb as it did during the Emergency.

Markandey Katju is a former Judge of the Indian Supreme Court

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The litmus test for free speech - The Hindu

The Right Wings War on the L.G.B.T.Q. Community – The New Yorker

An Arizona Supreme Court ruling on Monday provided further evidence that gay rights are under siege in this country. Other recent events show that the Trump Administration is leading the assault. The Arizona court held that Brush & Nib Studio, a Phoenix-based company that makes customized wedding invitations, has the legal right to reject a gay couple as customers. Even though Phoenix has a local law that prohibits discrimination against the L.G.B.T.Q. community, the court ruled that the religious convictions of the business owners exempted them from the obligation to treat all customers equally. According to the court, designing wedding invitations is a creative act; to compel the owners to design an invitation against their will violates their rights both to freedom of religion and freedom of speech.

The opinion treats the business ownerstwo womenas a beleaguered minority. Their beliefs about same-sex marriage may seem old-fashioned, or even offensive to some, the court wrote. But the guarantees of free speech and freedom of religion are not only for those who are deemed sufficiently enlightened, advanced, or progressive. They are for everyone. This, to put it charitably, is nonsense. The owners of Brush & Nib are free to believe anything they want. What they should not be allowed to do is to use those beliefs to run a business that is open to the general public but closed to gay people.

Its important to recognize that religious people have made similar arguments for decadesthat their beliefs entitle them to exemptions from the rules that bind everyone else. This has been especially true when the religious people in question operated a business. In 1982, the Supreme Court rejected an attempt by an Amish business owner in Pennsylvania to avoid paying his share of his employees Social Security taxes, because his community believed in helping their own and not accepting assistance from the state. Every person cannot be shielded from all the burdens incident to exercising every aspect of the right to practice religious beliefs, Chief Justice Warren Burger wrote in his opinion. When followers of a particular sect enter into commercial activity as a matter of choice, the limits they accept on their own conduct as a matter of conscience and faith are not to be superimposed on the statutory schemes which are binding on others in that activity.

Its long been clear that the government has the right to make sure that businesses refrain from discriminating in their business practices. In 1964, the court upheld the Civil Rights Act, and the burdens it places on business owners, because, Justice Tom C. Clark wrote, the government has the right to prevent the deprivation of personal dignity that surely accompanies denials of equal access to public establishments.

But the use of religious freedom as a tool to enable discrimination has become a bedrock principle of the modern conservative movementand of the Trump Administration. The Labor Department has just proposed a rule that would allow companies that do work as federal contractors to discriminate against prospective L.G.B.T.Q. employees based on the company owners religious beliefs. Conscience and religious freedom rights have been given second-class treatment for too long, a senior Labor Department official told Politico. This fulfills the Presidents promise to promote and protect our fundamental and inalienable rights of conscience and religious liberty, the first freedom protected in the Bill of Rights in the First Amendment itself.

Of course, its not clear that the Supreme Court will uphold these discriminatory practices. In the famous Masterpiece Cakeshop case, in 2017, which involved a Colorado baker who had refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, the Court dodged the issue. (The Court ruled for the baker, on the ground that Colorado officials, specifically the Colorado Civil Rights Commission, had behaved improperly, in a non-neutral manner.) But anyone counting on the current Supreme Court to protect the rights of any minorities, including the L.G.B.T.Q. community, is almost certainly looking for disappointment. That may become even clearer this term, when the Justices hear three cases on the question of whether the Civil Rights Act forbids employers from discriminating on the basis of sexual orientation and gender identity as it does on the basis of race or sex. These cases will be the first to address the rights of gay Americans since Justice Anthony Kennedy, who was clearly supportive of them, stepped down and was replaced by Justice Brett Kavanaugh, who is not. The President and his allies boast of their tolerance and enlightenment on L.G.B.T.Q. issues, but facts stubbornly suggest that they are hurting the cause in every way they can.

Originally posted here:

The Right Wings War on the L.G.B.T.Q. Community - The New Yorker

Reactions Mixed After Brush & Nib Ruling – KJZZ

Jimmy Jenkins/KJZZ

Joanna Duca, co-owner of Brush & Nib.

STEVE GOLDSTEIN: But first, the Arizona Supreme Court is allowing a calligraphy studio to refuse to sell their custom wedding invitations to LGBTQ couples. It's a blow to Phoenix's anti-discrimination ordinance. The decision was 4-3, and the majority said the ruling applied only to this company and only to their wedding invitations. But the decision raises all sorts of questions. We'll get some legal analysis in just a few minutes. But here to report on the reaction is KJZZ's Bret Jaspers. Good morning.

BRET JASPERS: Good morning.

GOLDSTEIN: So the people who brought the case with the owners of Brush & Nib Studios, they lost in lower court.

JASPERS: That's right. The two owners of Brush & Nib are Joanna Duka and Breanna Koski. They say making their wedding invitations is an artistic act and they shouldn't have to make custom invitations for same-sex couples because that would be compelling speech that's against their religious beliefs. The majority of justices on the state Supreme Court agreed with them. Here's Duka.

JOANNA DUKA (audio): Breanna and I are thankful and relieved that the court has upheld, not just our freedom, but the freedom of other speakers to choose what they say and what they don't say.

GOLDSTEIN: So what does this mean then for Phoenix's anti-discrimination ordinance?

JASPERS: Well the mayor and the city's lawyer said this was a narrow ruling, and the ordinance still stands. Here's a direct quote from the decision: "Our holding is limited to plaintiff's creation of custom wedding invitations that are materially similar to those contained in the record. We do not recognize a blanket exemption from the ordinance for all of plaintiff's business operations.".

GOLDSTEIN: So this is a narrow ruling by the court, then?

JASPERS: Well it seems so, but I'm really curious as to what your legal guest will say. The dissenting judges did not agree that this would only affect this one business. In fact, they thought this opened the door to discrimination in many other contexts. And the attorney for the calligrapher is Jonathan Scruggs, also said the analysis was broad. He's with the Christian Legal Group Alliance Defending Freedom.

GOLDSTEIN: Ok, so that's the group based in Scottsdale that represented the Colorado baker in a similar recent Supreme Court case.

JASPERS: Yeah, and they're also defending a florist in Washington state who refused a gay couple. Here's what Scruggs said about the ruling being brought.

JONATHAN SCRUGGS (audio): The analysis the court put forth is broad. Protecting the freedom of speech and freedom of religion. So that's what the ruling did. It protected the speech, as Phoenix acknowledged, that what our clients do is create speech.

JASPERS: But I talked to Brendan Mahoney. He's a lawyer who actually co-wrote Phoenix's anti-discrimination ordinance. His view is that this is a case of a certain group being denied, not the case of a message that's being compelled.

BRENDAN MAHONEY (audio): That was part of the question, is writing an invitation free speech or not? And if it is free speech, even free speech has its limits. In this case, it isn't a particular message. It's a broad class of people that are being discriminated against. And that's the distinction.

JASPERS: So Mahoney told me that it isn't that someone is coming to the calligraphers and asking them to write a different message than they typically write. It's asking them to provide a service that they're providing to the rest of the public and the calligraphers say each wedding invitation is unique and their unique artistic vision is at play. So that's why they say the city was compelling speech.

GOLDSTEIN: So how did Mayor Kate Gallego respond?

JASPERS: Well she wouldn't say, Gallego wouldn't say whether or not she's worried about other businesses bringing similar cases against the city. She framed it as part of a long-term struggle against discrimination.

KATE GALLEGO (audio): This case was never about one business refusing to acknowledge the humanity of our LGBTQ community. It was about whether we accept discrimination in our community. The ordinance is not just something nice to have on paper. It's something we have seen been used to lodge complaints by community members who have, who feel they have been unfairly targeted.

GOLDSTEIN: Bret, finally, this was in state court. Are there federal court appeals possible here?

JASPERS: Well, the city's lawyer kept repeating that they're reviewing the decision and reviewing their options. He wouldn't really say what the next steps even were.

GOLDSTEIN: KJZZ's Bret Jaspers, thank you.

JASPERS: You're welcome.

LAUREN GILGER: And now for a legal analysis of the case, we are joined by Professor Gregg Leslie, executive director of the First Amendment clinic at ASU's law school. Good morning, Gregg.

GREGG LESLIE: Good morning.

GILGER: OK. So let's start with that question that Bret brought up there. So the court says, the majority of the court said this was a narrow ruling, some of the dissenting judges disagreed. How narrow is this?

LESLIE: Well, it seems like it has to be a fairly narrow ruling. They very carefully parsed through whether the writing of an invitation is expressive, is speech basically. And they seem to have narrowed this to cases where somebody is expressing their opinion about something. Now, to agree with the outcome, you'd have to believe that a calligrapher, or, in the other case, a cake decorator, is actually communicating their thoughts on a wedding, to agree with the outcome, it seems. I've never thought of a calligrapher in that way but maybe some people do. I've never received a wedding invitation and thought, "Oh great, the calligrapher approves of this wedding."

GILGER: But could you see this case being used to protect a different company who decided not to sell its different sort of artistic products to a gay couple or somebody else that they didn't want to?

LESLIE: Well, you're kind of touching on an important distinction. If it's about just selling a product to a couple, they would still say that falls, that is, the law is applicable there. If they're compelled to create speech, then yes, other businesses would probably object on the same grounds. It's that idea of being compelled to say something that's critical.

GILGER: Yeah. So this is a case, like Bret mentioned, that is being carried out across the country. We talked a lot about the Colorado baker case, we've covered that on The Show, and there's another one in Washington. The thought is that one of these cases will end up at the Supreme Court at some point. What are your views on that, and could it be this case?

LESLIE: Well it's strange, I don't know if the Supreme Court has an appetite to take these cases. When they considered Masterpiece Cake Shop, they really went out of their way to say "we don't want to consider this right now." Even after they took it, then they punted it back for the strangest of reasons. So I'm not sure if they're anxious to take it, and a further complication is that the U.S. Supreme Court won't review a state constitutional decision. So if the state Supreme Court decided it purely on First Amendment grounds, the U.S. Supreme Court might take it. But this court went out of its way to talk about the Arizona constitution, and they kind of pegged it to the Arizona constitution and the U.S. Supreme Court won't review the Arizona constitution.

GILGER: Right. Ok, so I want to, in the last few minutes we have here, dig into the First Amendment issue right at hand. So, what is considered free speech, religious speech, and what is not, in general, in these cases? What did the lower courts rule that ruled in favor of the city's ordinance?

LESLIE: Yeah. And I think there is no solid answer to that. That's why cases like this go to appellate courts. I would not have thought that writing out an invitation when, it's somebody else's wedding invitation, you're not really expressing anything, you're not welcoming people to a wedding, you're just providing the artistic touch on an invitation. I would not have thought that was speech in the sense that you could decide who or who not to work with based on that. So there is no clear standard, but you have to look at how much expression is involved in something and whether they're actually trying to communicate something. So, regardless of how it came out in this case, I think there are a lot of cases where somebody really engaged in artistic output could say that their rights are violated by having to comply with a law like this. And those will be tricky situations and there's no clear bright line rule that will tell us which ones, how those will come out at any particular time.

GILGER: Is this common that nondiscrimination ordinances like this come into conflict with First Amendment issues?

LESLIE: Well you saw it all the time, 50 years ago. In the 60s, when there were groups saying they didn't want to have to let African Americans stay in their hotels or sit at their lunch counters, and they would often try to claim Christian beliefs that justified that. So we saw it all the time then, we thought that era was over, I think. But then when cities started passing gay rights measures, and a lot of religious groups feel that's objectionable, it's kind of arisen again in this context, and it seems to be limited to this context.

GILGER: Alright. That's Gregg Leslie, executive director of the First Amendment clinic at ASU's law school. Gregg, thank you for coming in.

LESLIE: Thank you.

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Reactions Mixed After Brush & Nib Ruling - KJZZ

Greta Kline of Frankie Cosmos on slowing down (to a certain point) – Metro US

The music that songwriter Greta Kline creates inhabits the small moments of life in an abundant way. For years, she has been recording her own brand of bedroom pop under numerous monikers and uploading them online at the same pace that many of us exercise. These days, the creating process has slowed down only a little as she has settled into her most notable persona Frankie Cosmos releasing her second studio album for Sub Pop earlier this month, Close it Quietly.

The album recorded with her longtime band mates, Lauren Martin (synth), Luke Pyenson (drums), and Alex Bailey (bass) finds Kline delivering one of her most focused and immediate selections of songs to date. And as with her past output, this is saying something, as the 21 songs that are included on Close it Quietly hover just around two minutes on average with some clocking in around thirty-to-forty seconds. When she reaches two and a half minutes on the albums closer, This Swirling, it feels like she is reaching prog territory in comparison. The record feels like the work of an artist who has spent years consistently putting in the work. A culmination of constant sharing and experimentation with song craft.

Greta Kline with her band, Frankie Cosmos. Photo: Jackie Lee Young

But with the bands ever-busy touring schedule, Klines output has slowed down to only one or two releases per year as opposed to, say, five with an emphasis on creating the right representation of her creative mind-set at that point in time.

Before we were a real band I was just putting out music every month, says Kline of the process of releasing music at this point in her life. Every time I made a demo I was putting it out. Now it seems like so much less to me. In the past it seemed like I was putting out everything I thought of. Now its like, Ill write ten songs and one of them will make it onto an album.

With someone as prolific as Kline is, the emphasis on chiseling time out to record amidst the recording and touring cycle has put things into perspective. I think my time at home has a different meaning to me now, she explains. Because we tour so much of most years. When Im at home, I really want to be working on something. For us, this past Winter was that. Just being able to record feels different than when youre touring. It just feels like precious time.

With so many ideas being brought to the table, she has found a real partnership with her band, whose contributions to the new album provide the right amounts of impact and pathos when required.

I feel like weve, over the years, developed a really good style of communication with each other. We have more of a streamlined way of communicating. Its always hard because its four people talking about what we should do with a song, Kline explains. Something that I really appreciate about my bandis they know when a song doesnt need to be added to. There are a couple of solo songs on the album where they were like, Yeah, I dont think we can add anything to this. Then when they do have something to add, theyre like, Yeah, maybe we could add this there. That makes me trust them. Theyre not greedy players (laughs).

In a way, being a fan of Klines music brings a sort of reliable constant to your life. As every five or six months or so, you are bound to hear a continuation of her story through a collection of short songs that will catch you up on how she is feeling at that given time. Its like a conversation is resuming after being interrupted. I ask Kline if she views each song cycle in this way.

I dont even think about the collections of songs as theyre going to be an album, Kline says. I think it does function in the way that youre saying where you get all of these snapshots and of course you have more of an understanding on a bigger thing because its a bunch of short things. But I think it could be any bunch of short songs, its just whatever I have. I think theyre connected because theyre from a similar time in my life. I write about the same stuff over and over, so that will also make them a little more similar or connected in some way. I dont necessarily think about the way the songs are working together to represent something, its more that each one is a small moment and if you want to you can piece them together in some deeper understanding of life, or my life, or whatever.

Make sure to catch Frankie Cosmos on tour this Fall.

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Greta Kline of Frankie Cosmos on slowing down (to a certain point) - Metro US

With a $70 Kit, This Startup Promises to Turn Anyone Into an Artist – Inc.

While on vacationfour years ago, Elad Katav decided to try to teach himself a new skill: painting. The software company COO had little artistic experience andthought it would be a good chance to clearhis mindand do something creative.He watched some tutorials on YouTube, picked up somesupplies at a local crafts store, andsat down with a photo of his 5-year-old son to try to paint a portrait.

A few days later, the canvas--half completed--sat at the bottom of a trash bin.An experience that Katavhad hoped would be therapeutic instead brought a lot of frustration.

Today, Katav is founder and CEOof Boston-based Cupixel, a startup that uses augmented reality to help people who aren't skilled artistssketch and paint. The company launched its first product, a $70 supply kit that's compatible with an app, on its website in January and quickly sold out of its inventory. In July, it launched on theHome Shopping Network's website, and Katav says the startup ison the verge of announcing partnerships with major brick-and-mortar retailers.

Katav previously served as COO of enterprise software company Correlsense. After his failed painting attempt, he believedthere was a business opportunity around the concept of helping non-artists create art--and, having a background in software, he decided the product should involve some advanced technology. He founded Cupixel in 2016 and soon raised$2 million in seed funding from private backers. After two years of developing the AR tech, he launched the product at CES this January. Katavdeclined to reveal the startup's revenue, but said the company sold out of its first batch of 1,000 kits within two months and hassince restocked with an additional 15,000 units.

For Katav, an Israeli immigrant with no artistic background, it's affirmation that there's a segment of the population who don'thave the natural ability to make artbut wantto. "Art creation has so many benefits," he says."It relaxes the body. It relaxes the mind. It gives you an opportunity to be creative. Yet it felt like this processwas closed off to people like me."

Cupixel's kit includes everything you need--canvas, pencils, paint, brushes, a frame--to producea hand-paintednine-by-nine-inch piece of artwork, aside from a smartphone or tablet. You start by choosing a workfrom Cupixel's online galleryor by uploading your own photo, whichthe software then converts into a sketchable image. On your device'sscreen, the image is divided into nine squares that correspond with the nine canvas tiles provided withthe kit. Youpoint your device's camera at the canvas, andon your screen, you see the image that you'll be tracing and painting. Using your pencil and brushes, you follow along with what's on the screen--an AR version ofpaint-by-numbers. When finished, you piece the nine squares together to form one larger one. Katav says the entire experiencetakes under two hours for most users.

Cupixel now has deals with more than 20 artists to include their work in its database. An artist receives a royalty each time his or her work is selected to be painted by a user.Katav says the startup is in the process of finalizing deals with two of the U.S.'s biggest arts and crafts retailers, though he declined to sharewhich ones. It's worth noting that one of Cupixel's board members is Lew Klessel, a managing director at private equity firmNew Mountain Capital and the former interim CEO of Michaels.

Cupixel's kit isn't the first AR product meant to help people create art. Lithuania-based SketchAR makes a$28 app that turns a phone into an AR device, overlaying a piece of paper or other canvas with a traceable sketch. Cupixel's product adds the painting aspect and includes the necessary supplies.

Katav'sgoal is to launchAR kits for other art forms likesculpting, woodcrafting, and paper crafting, though these three-dimensional processes clearly would be a bit more complex. Katav doesn't have a timeline yet, though he says the company has prototyped a paper-crafting AR product in its lab.

While the technology is exciting, Katav admits that some professional artists have pushed back about the ideaof using technology to turn just anyone into an artist. The founder objects to this sentiment. Instead, hecompares Cupixelto meal-in-a-box services that make cooking easier for those who lack the skills to do it all on their own.

"It doesn't make you a professional chef," he says. "But now you can participate in a beautiful process that you otherwise might not be able to."

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With a $70 Kit, This Startup Promises to Turn Anyone Into an Artist - Inc.

Scarlett Moffatt shares troll post and calls for people to be kinder – digitalspy.com

Former Gogglebox and I'm a Celebrity... Get Me Out of Here! star Scarlett Moffatt has hit out at online trolls by naming and shaming one of them.

The reality TV personality shared private Instagram messages from someone branding her a "fat bitch" and a "fat c**t", before uploading a series of videos to her Stories calling for people to be nicer online.

Scarlett said: "I just want to say... apologies that last post has swearing in. But I just think it's really important for people to see some of the daily messages that I get.

"I'm really pleased that Jesy Nelson done the show on bringing trolls to the forefront and making people understand the effect it can have on you, especially if you don't have a good support network around you, I can imagine it's really, really difficult."

Related: Love Island's Chris Hughes feuds with Katie Hopkins following Jesy Nelson's documentary

She continued: "People say because you're on the TV or if you're in the public eye then people are allowed an opinion.

"Yes, I would agree to that to an extent, but when people are using vile and bullying comments... at the end of the day, being a TV presenter is my job and if I was in any other job and I was getting emails like that from staff or from people, they would be getting warnings and sacked, something would be done about it.

"People need to remember it's okay having an opinion but when it's hurting people's feelings and when it's vile, abusive language, that's when it needs to stop!

"Educating children the majority of the time it's not children but if we start and drum this into kids young as they get older they'll understand that this is wrong. The majority of the comments I get are from around 25 to 50-year-old men, they seem to love calling me names, God knows why.

"People don't know what's happening in people's lives so you need to be a bit kinder."

Jesy Nelson: Odd One Out aired on BBC One, and is available to watch on BBC iPlayer now.

We would encourage anyone who identifies with the topics raised in this article to reach out. Organisations who can offer support include Samaritans on 116 123 (www.samaritans.org) or Mind on 0300 123 3393 (www.mind.org.uk).

Readers in the US are encouraged to visit mentalhealth.gov.

Want up-to-the-minute entertainment news and features? Just hit 'Like' on our Digital Spy Facebook page and 'Follow' on our @digitalspy Instagram and Twitter account.

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Scarlett Moffatt shares troll post and calls for people to be kinder - digitalspy.com

IGTV: What, Why and How You Should be Using it as a Marketing Tool – Business 2 Community

After a slow start for Instagram TV (IGTV), its now becoming an integral part of social media strategies. After announcing in February that Instagram would allow one minute previews of IGTV videos on the main Instagram feed, things started to change and views skyrocketed.

If you arent in on this yet, you should be. Heres what, why and how you should be using IGTV as a marketing tool!

Back in June of 2018, Instagram released IGTV as, a new app for watching long-form, vertical video from your favorite Instagram creators. In May 2019 they started allowing for landscape videos as well. So basically a platform to compete with Youtube.

Each creator has their own channel similar to TV. And just like a television, as soon as you access IGTV, videos start playing. Can you say hello increased engagement?!

Theres a stand alone IGTV app, but it can also be accessed straight from your Instagram app. Unlike regular Instagram videos, IGTV videos can be 10 minutes to an hour long.

IGTV can have major benefits for your clients business as well as your own. Its about creating value for your consumers. Here are some of the perks that come with IGTV:

Having another platform to share video content means another place to be seen. Which in turn means more engagement and more customers.

By 2020, the number of digital video viewers in the United States is projected to be more than 236 million. Thats a lot of potential people viewing your content.

Unlike videos uploaded straight to Instagram, your IGTV videos can be 10-60 minutes long. This makes it a great spot for how-tos, behind the scenes, story features and more!

While Instagram Stories and other platforms are better suited for posting things as they happen, IGTV needs to be well thought out and planned.

Think about your target audience. What do they want to see? What do they want from you? How can you help them?

Since Instagram announced in February that users could post one-minute previews of their IGTV videos straight to the news feed, viewership has increased. When theres a new video, your followers can tap straight from their feed to watch the full video.

Posting previews on Instagram and sending followers to your IGTV helps boost engagement.

Using IGTV can also unlock a form of the swipe up feature for your Instagram Stories (more about this later).

Side note: Videos posted on IGTV wont automatically upload to your Instagram. If you do want them to appear on your feed youll have to click Post a Preview under the title and description page when uploading your IGTV video.

You can access IGTV through the standalone app or through Instagram.

If you will be creating longer form videos, we suggest actually downloading the app. The set up and getting started is pretty straight forward with prompts. But heres a quick recap:

Webcast, October 15th: Your Baby is Ugly

There are a lot of different things you can take advantage of by using IGTV. Here are some of our favorites:

In a previous blog post, we discussed how Instagram Story swipe up features are only available to verified accounts or if you have over 10,000 followers. But theres a couple work arounds to add a link to your IG Story and IGTV is one of them.

This should be a video directing people to click somewhere on the screen that will essentially be taking them to a certain link. It could be a video of you pointing up somewhere or just a static video with arrows pointing to where you want them to tap.

One thing to keep in mind when making this is that IGTV videos need to be at least a minute long.

Your title can be whatever you want but we suggest using something like Click here for the link that reinforces your CTA. In the description, put the URL that you want to direct users. That is the most important part!

Once you upload your IGTV video, make your Story on Instagram and youll see the link icon in the options at the top. Dont get too excited, you cant directly link to the URL yet. But click the link and youll get the option to link to your IGTV video. Select your CTA video and post.

Now when people watch your story there will be an option to swipe up to watch on IGTV and from there the link will be directly clickable.

We talked about Sephora in a previous article, but honestly they are just the definition of using IGTV effectively as a marketing tool, so they are being highlighted again.

Makeup and hair tutorials, FAQs and how-tos deeply resonate with their 18.4 million followers. They take time to plan out each video and understand what their audience wants. While they are creating something helpful and entertaining, they are also driving sales. WIN-WIN!

You dont have to sell products or services to make use of IGTV and Lele Pons is a great example of this.

Pons is known for her comedic internet videos and has created somewhat of a tv show on her IGTV. She has episodes called Whats Cooking where she makes different food and brings on different guests. IGTV gave her the platform to open up a different part of her life.

So even if you arent selling anything, IGTV can still add value to your audience experience.

Heres all the details you need to know about sizing, timing and framing:

While getting started with IGTV might seem like a daunting task, the need for video in your social media strategy is too important to sit this out. So jump on the IGTV train and get to creating value for your customers!

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IGTV: What, Why and How You Should be Using it as a Marketing Tool - Business 2 Community

Steam’s wonderful Library Update beta is finally live: Here’s how to get it – PCWorld

As promised, Valve pushed the new Steam Library Update into open beta this morning. Quick access to your recently played games! More detailed Details pages! Better library search and filtering tools! Drag-and-drop! No bezels on the left and right edges! All the modern conveniences and quality of life upgrades that (if were honest) probably shouldve been in Steam already. But damn, theyre nice to have now.

You can read our detailed breakdown of the Library Update and all its featuresor you can simply install it for yourself. If youre keen on a refreshed Steam and dont mind the potential for a few bugs along the way, all it takes is an opt-in to get into the beta.

Its pretty easy. You can go click the big Join The Beta button if you want to feel official, but really all you need to do is open Steam, go to the Settings menu (under Steam), and look for a section on the Account page that says Beta Participation. Click Change, and then on the drop-down menu choose Steam Beta Update.

Restart Steam, and youre in. Youll know it worked immediately, because the familiar Store screen will now stretch all the way to the left and right edges of the window, no bezel. Most of the key features are over on the Library tab though. Thats where youll be greeted by the new Home page, the redesigned sidebar, and so forth.

Change is good, sometimes. Having lived through hundreds of interface changes across countless programs, I feared the worst. Valves PAX demo assuaged those fears somewhat, but you never really know what will annoy you until youve tested it yourself.

So far Im very impressed though. The new interface is clean and reactive, and Im finding the new organizational tools fun to mess around with. Im not going to spend a ton of time recapping because, as I said, you can read about everything at length in our longer (albeit hands-off) impressions.

But there are a few smaller features I hadnt noticed in Valves demo. I like for instance that you can quickly toggle Collections (which used to be Categories) on and off, flipping between your organized library and a simpler alphabetical list of games. Theres also a Ready to Play button in the top-left that will quickly omit any uninstalled games from the list. And even with more than 2,000 games in my library, these sorting changes are snappy.

I also like the Sort by Recent Activity button, which gives you a month-by-month breakdown of the games youve played this year, and then a yearly breakdown after that. It goes back ages, too. Curious what you were playing in 2014? Steam can now show you.

That said, there are a few weird issues. You cantor at least I cant find a wayto sort by size anymore, which is a problem in an era where game sizes are rapidly ballooning. I used to change to Steams old list view and sort by install size every year or so to do some housecleaning, uninstall that 100GB game I was never going to finish. The loss of that functionality is pretty painful.

[UPDATE: I found the "Size on Disk" sorting feature. It's hidden on the Home page, if you scroll down to the list of all your games, there's a drop-down "Sort By" menu. "Size on Disk" is under that. However, it's still a bit less useful than the old method as there's no way to separate games out by the drive they're installed on. For those of you with Steam libraries that span multiple drives, you'll now need to right-click your largest games, go to "Properties," and see where each is installed individually. Bit of a pain, though at least some of the sorting functionality is intact.]

And its a beta. Ive definitely seen some behind-the-scenes code today as Ive clicked around, with trading card messages especially susceptible to breaking. Valves also transitioning to new box art for every game in your library, but old games? Ones that will probably never be updated? They get that Vaseline-smear above and below, the same frosted window look people use when uploading vertical video to a horizontal aspect ratio site like YouTube. It looks kind-of ugly.

Still, I cant see any reason not to update. Steams been stagnant for ages now. Its refreshing to see large-scale library changes, especially since thats one of the areas where Valve has a clear lead over the competing Epic Games Store. As someone whos amassed thousands of games on Steam, its a relief to finally have some control over my backlogor at least the illusion of control.

See the original post here:

Steam's wonderful Library Update beta is finally live: Here's how to get it - PCWorld

Augmented Reality: Eight AR Marketing Applications For Brands In 2019 – Forbes

With a growing number of companies like Facebook developing augmented reality (AR) glasses, there's a good chance AR marketing will be one of 2019's hottest trends. When a global marketing leader like Facebook goes all-in on augmented reality, you know brand builders are likely to follow their lead.

Personally and through my work in this space, I've seen some amazing use cases for AR in terms of training applications that have been developed on the Microsoft Hololens to help aid frontline workers with design and manufacturing.

But how do you use augmented reality to market your business, when you're likely unfamiliar with this new technology? What do you need to know about AR marketing to make it work for your company?

If you're a brand builder who wants to put the power of augmented reality glasses and AR technology to work for your business, bear the following crucial tips in mind.

1. AR-Enabled Video

Augmented reality marketing can significantly increase your company's dwell time at live events and on your website. Consider uploading AR-enabled videos to your website and watching in real-time as potential customers interact with your creations. Forget video marketing -- as AR-enabled videos take hold, standard videos are likely to look pass compared to augmented reality videos.

When developing AR videos for web content, look for platforms that offer a fully integrated web API to allow you to take any 3D model and put it on the web, such as Vuforia or Turbosquid.

2. Wearable Technology

Wearable technology is likely to be a hot tool for those interested in using augmented reality marketing to grow their brands. Combine tools like smartwatches and voice-enabled wearables to take your AR marketing to the next level. Imagine a marketing thought leader like Gary Vaynerchuk giving a keynote speech while wearing a voice-activated wearable and augmented reality glasses to broadcast his speech in real-time. Brands may be able to tap into this content through web APIs, as mentioned above.

3. Experiential Marketing

Experiential marketing will flourish thanks to augmented reality glasses and AR technology. If you want to develop a solid relationship with your target customers, understand that offering a superior brand experience is the key to creating long-term relationships with your audience.

For example, my company recently worked with a whiskey brand to develop an AR experience. We prompted users to point their cameras on the whiskey bottle's label, which in turn showcased a history of the whiskey brand and the various types of quality available for consumers.

4. Mixed-Media Marketing

Big-name brands such as Starbucks, Volvo and Walmart have already begun experimenting with augmented reality marketing. Industry thought leaders are realizing mixed reality marketing, virtual reality marketing and AR-enabled customer outreach is where the advertising and marketing industry is heading. Thanks to tools like Apple's ARKit, even small business owners can follow the lead of industry thought leaders and put augmented reality marketing to work for their brands.

Brands looking to experiment with immersive technology can download ARKit and convert their marketing assets to 3D models, then import them into XCode in order to showcase 3D assets in real-time.

5. AR Interfaces

Augmented reality can be used in a variety of ways to increase brand awareness and drive sales. For example, include an AR interface next to your point of sale terminal, or AR interfaces that allow customers to try products prior to purchasing. Brands are using AR technology for everything from AR-enabled online content to AR-enabled interfaces at their trade shows and conferences.

Simply having a tablet in retail locations loaded up with 3D assets of your brand's products can allow you to showcase digital assets even when they aren't physically available.

6. AR Thought Leadership

The AR sector is expected to explode as more companies realize the possible uses for this technology. Sectors like manufacturing are already using augmented reality technology to design, build and test products. The sooner brand marketers realize the numerous ways they can use augmented reality technology to connect with their audiences, the sooner they can build reputations as marketing thought leaders.

Some of the best ways brands can get the word out about their immersive technology initiatives are to showcase them live in person at trade shows. This gives your prospective customers a first-hand perspective and engages them in a unique and meaningful way. This works especially well for products that are large and cumbersome and would be too expensive to travel with in order to showcase.

7. AR-Enabled Ads

Augmented reality technology can be used for everything from product testing to advertising. Expect to see a growing number of advertising networks and social media platforms begin to offer AR-enabled ads. When you consider potential customers being able to interact with your AR-enabled ads on social networks like Facebook, you begin to see the potential of augmented reality as a customer acquisition tool.

Including a call to action and a touchpoint or hyperlink within your AR application will give customers a direct link to sales channels for those engagements.

8. A Growing Trend Across Industries

A growing number of industries are expected to capitalize on augmented reality marketing. From the fashion and beauty sector to automotive and travel industries, augmented reality marketing is likely to be a hot trend across numerous verticals in the coming years. Understanding how marketing and advertising are changing will allow savvy brand builders to maximize their customer outreach efforts; this is especially true in the technology sector where brands are constantly looking to innovate.

If you are a business builder intrigued by the move toward augmented reality, it is imperative you start developing an augmented reality marketing strategy now. Creating a detailed plan of action to capitalize on AR technology can help you develop a sizable lead over your competitors while building your reputation as an industry thought leader at the same time.

Will your company be integrating augmented reality into your overall marketing strategy in 2019?

Read the original here:

Augmented Reality: Eight AR Marketing Applications For Brands In 2019 - Forbes

Love Islands Arabella Chi says I love you to new boyfriend Wes Nelson after just two months of dating – The Sun

LOVE Island's Arabella Chi has taken her relationship with boyfriend Wes Nelson to the next level by admitting she loves him online.

The model, 28, was caught declaring her love for the 21-year-old on Instagram despite only going official with the former Islander two months ago.

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Commenting on a snap of the pair posted to Wes' account, she wrote: "I love you".

And while some fans thought the gushing was "cute", others weren't as convinced.

One commented: "A bit soon for that surely".

Another wrote: "So soon?"

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The Sun exclusively revealed thatArabella and Wes were growing closeback in June, with an insider dishing that there is was "natural connection" between them.

They were then spottedstepping out to the shops after spending the night together, and then enjoyed aromantic break to Ibiza where they packed on the PDA.

But it wasn't long before the pair made things Instagram official by uploading a loved-up snap online.

Wes previously datedMegan Barton-Hansonafter meeting on last year's Love Island, however they split up earlier this year.

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She has since enjoyed a brief romance with her Celebs Go Dating co-star, Demi Sims, and is currently dating singer Chelsee Grimes.

Meanwhile, Arabella was linked to co-star Danny Williams during her time in the villa, as well as former show star Charlie Frederick.

Charlie, who starred in the 2018 series, took to Instagram shortly after Arabella's Love Island debut to reveal that their romance was "getting back on track".

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He said: "Let me set the record straight, me andArabellawere never boyfriend and girlfriend, we were seeing each other, we were getting together.

"We were working out what was going on, what we both wanted etc, we were never girlfriend and boyfriend.

"But I don't know what's worse really, telling someone you want them in your life and then disappearing into the villa... mind blown."

Got a story? email digishowbiz@the-sun.co.uk or call us direct on 02077824220.

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Original post:

Love Islands Arabella Chi says I love you to new boyfriend Wes Nelson after just two months of dating - The Sun

Looking To Sell Smartphone? Here’s What You Need to Know – Updato

Selling a smartphone sounds easy until you actually reach a point when it must be done. It's only then when we truly realize how much needs to be done.

If this is the first time that you're doing this, then the whole process can definitely feel overwhelming. That's why we decided to do create a small guide. Not only for beginners, but also for intermediates who wanna learn a thing or two.

With all that being said, let's get right into it!

Selling a phone requires you to list as much information as you can about it. What specs does it have? How large is its screen? What resolution? How much storage? How about its overall condition?

Sure, the buyer can easily find most of that information with a Google search. But, so can you. And if that puts you one step ahead compared to other people who are trying to sell the same phone at the same price, then why not take it?

This is a somewhat good example where the seller mentions not only the specs but also the overall condition of the device. If you're trying to sell smartphone on eBay or another similar website, then mentioning that kind of information will make it more likely for you to sell your device.

If you don't remember or know your phone's specifications, then you should be able to easily find them online with a quick Google search. Also, don't forget to mention if your phone is unlocked or not.

As for describing the overall condition of the device, well, that's mostly your decision to make.

Smartphones have become a huge part of our lives. Each and every device holds a ton of personal information in it.

Photos, videos, documents, contacts, and so much more. We obviously can't trust a stranger with all that information.

So, once you know the specifications of your phone, you must start preparing it so that it can be delivered in a brand-new like condition. That process involves:

There are tons of ways to backup important data. Be it contacts, pictures, or whatever.

Two of the most popular ones is either keeping everything on your computer's drive (Locally) or uploading it to something like Google Drive (Cloud). The choice is yours to make, really.

Just do keep in mind that cloud backups can get extremely slow; depending on your internet connection. However, they are also more reliable than local backups. So, weigh your options.

To make a local backup:

This is what you should see on the computer. After that, all you need to do is copy whatever you want by using the PC and keep it in a safe place. The best option is probably a separate folder for backups.

As for using Google Drive:

This is how our drive looks. But, you can manage your stuff in any way you see fit.

Do keep in mind that the free plan of Google Drive only delivers 15 gigabytes of storage. If you want more, then the only option is looking into paid subscriptions or going back to local backups.

Now that all the data is safe and ready to be moved to your new phone, it's time to erase everything from the device that's about to be sold. This will allow you to sell smartphone in a brand-new like condition.

There are primarily two ways of doing that:

Though, do keep in mind that you must log out from your Google account first. If you don't, the phone will be locked and the buyer will be forced to ask for your Google password.

If that happens, you'll be forced to reset your password after that and nobody wants that. So, to remove your Google account, go to:

Now that this is out of the way, we can proceed with the factory reset. To do it through the phone's settings, go to:

That being said, if you want the buyer to feel as if he is powering up the phone for the first time ever, then your best bet is using the recovery mode:

This is for TWRP recovery. But, it's more or less the same thing for stock recoveries as well.

Now you're almost ready to sell smartphone.

Sure. We're all expecting to find some signs of use on a used phone. But, if you keep it as clean as possible, then that increases your odds of being able to sell it. After all, you'll likely have to post some pictures anyway.

There's not much to teach you here. Using something like a simple microfiber cloth should be more than enough to get rid of fingerprints and stuff like that.

You can drop a tiny bit of water on it to clean while using the dry part to remove wet marks.

If you want to sell smartphone, sure, you could just drop it into a cardboard box, ship it, and be done with it.

But, the reality of the situation is that if you do that, then chances are that the device is going to get damaged on the way and your buyer isn't going to be happy with that.

In cases like that, they'll either ask for a refund, they'll leave negative feedback, or both. No matter how you look at it, skimping on safety isn't worth it.

So, make sure to add a bit of antistatic bubble wrap around the phone to protect it. Not sure if it needs to be antistatic, but, hey, better safe than sorry, right?

It'll be for the best if you can also find its original box and accessories.

Now that you're ready to sell smartphone, it's time to select a good platform. And there are plenty of them to choose from.

Some of the most popular ones include:

If you're living in the US, then do definitely consider Swappa as they are focused on that field of work.

Otherwise, eBay is probably your next best option since it's extremely popular. Other than that, do definitely consider checking out some local platforms that are focused specifically in your region. That makes it easier for a potential buyer to spot your offer.

Now that everything is said and done, all you have to do is post your offer, wait for someone to see it, then head over to your local office post or courier and send it over to the buyer. Simple as that.

That's all for now. Hopefully, that helped you out. If there are any questions or something that we can help with, then let us know about it in the comments.

Feel like we forgot to mention something important? Got anything wrong? Then let us and everyone else know about it in the comments section down below!

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Looking To Sell Smartphone? Here's What You Need to Know - Updato