{"id":146304,"date":"2015-10-03T22:42:54","date_gmt":"2015-10-04T02:42:54","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.designerchildren.com\/free-speech-language-and-the-rule-of-law\/"},"modified":"2015-10-03T22:42:54","modified_gmt":"2015-10-04T02:42:54","slug":"free-speech-language-and-the-rule-of-law","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/free-speech\/free-speech-language-and-the-rule-of-law\/","title":{"rendered":"Free Speech, Language, and the Rule of Law"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><p>Contents          Some Thoughts on Free Speech, Language, and the Rule of    Law          by Thomas Streeter        <\/p>\n<p>      (from Robert Jensen and David S. Allen (eds.), Freeing the      First Amendment: Critical Perspectives on Freedom of      Expression, New York University Press, 1995, pp. 31-53.)    <\/p>\n<p>    This chapter discusses the relevance of research and reflection    on language to recent critical trends in thinking on free    speech. There is a tendency to interpret many of the recent    revisionist approaches to free speech as if they were simply    calls for exceptions to otherwise clear cut rules and    principles, as if, say, pornography or racism are so    exceptionally evil that they fall outside the parameters of the    kinds of speech that are \"obviously\" protected under the First    Amendment. This misses the fact that the new approaches, with    varying degrees of explicitness, involve theoretical and    epistemological challenges to the underlying premises of free    speech law in general; over the long run, what the new    approaches are calling for are not exceptions but a    restructuring of free speech law as a whole. The ideas driving    this profound rethinking come from a variety of traditions,    including various currents of feminism, literary theory, and    theories of race and ethnicity. This chapter focuses on just    one of those traditions: the complex twentieth century    theorizing of language, sometimes called the \"linguistic turn\"    in twentieth century philosophy. Although the linguistic turn    is only one aspect of the new thinking about free speech, and    although its importance and character is not agreed upon by all    those advocating the new thinking, calling attention to it is    useful because it nicely highlights some conceptual    difficulties of the traditional framework and because it helps    differentiate the revisionist criticisms from social    determinist and other subtly authoritarian criticisms of free    speech.  <\/p>\n<p>    On the one hand, this chapter argues that the linguistic turn    involves some revelations about the nature of language and    human communication that do not accord well with the    understandings of language implicit in free speech law,    particularly with the metaphor of the marketplace of ideas. On    the other, it argues that part of what is at stake is the way    American culture envisions the rule of law as a whole. In    particular, important currents of the understanding of the rule    of law suggest the possibility and necessity of constructing    rules, procedures, and meanings that transcend or can be    abstracted from context, whereas the linguistic turn suggests    that this is impossible, that meanings can be determined only    in relation to particular contexts. The final part of this    chapter, therefore, suggests some avenues for exploring free    speech in its historical and social context, as opposed to    efforts to abstract it out of context.  <\/p>\n<p>    In the course of a discussion of the campus hate speech    controversy, literary critic Henry Louis Gates (speaking from    an African American position) provided the following    hypothetical examples of potentially \"harmful\" speech directed    at a minority student:  <\/p>\n<p>    Sociolinguistics offers an answer to the first question: the    social phenomenon of linguistic style. It is not the contents    of the first statement that give it force; the argument it    makes is, at best, dubious and obfuscatory, whereas the second    statement at least would communicate the true feelings of the    speaker towards the hearer with considerable precision. The    first statement's power comes from its style.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is a well established fact that fluency in any language    involves mastery, not just of a single, \"correct\" version of a    language, but of a variety of styles or codes appropriate to    specific contexts.[2] Gates'    first example is a case of the formal or \"elaborated\" style of    contemporary English, which is highly valued in academic and    professional settings. It is characterized by, among other    things, Latinate vocabulary (\"demanding educational    environments\" instead of \"tough schools\") and elaborate syntax.    The second is an example of informal or restricted style,    characterized by ellipsis (omitting \"You get out of my    face . . . \") and colloquial constructions.  <\/p>\n<p>    Linguists also have long insisted that, in an absolute sense,    formal style is no more correct or better for communication    than informal style. Scientifically speaking, what makes a    style appropriate or inappropriate is the social context in    which it is used: in an academic setting, the formal character    of the first example gives the statement force, but in another    context, say, a working class bar, it might only elicit    laughter and derision whereas the second statement might have    considerable impact. In the appropriate context, therefore, one    can use informal style brilliantly and subtly, and conversely,    it is quite possible to speak in a thoroughly formal style and    yet be inept, offensive, or simply unclear.[3]  <\/p>\n<p>    What style differences communicate, then, are not specific    contents, but social relations between speakers and listeners,    i.e., relations of power, hierarchy, solidarity, intimacy, and    so forth. In particular, formal language suggests a relation of    impersonal authority between speaker and listener, whereas    informal language suggests a more intimate (though not    necessarily friendly) relationship. You can petrify a child by    interjecting into an otherwise informal conversation, \"No you    may not.\" The shift to formal style (no ellipsis, \"may not\"    instead of \"can't\") shows that the speaker is not just making a    request, but is asserting his or her powers of authority as an    adult over the child listener.  <\/p>\n<p>    Gates's first example would be more wounding to a minority    student, therefore, because, by couching itself in a formal,    academic style, it is rhetorically structured as the expression    of \"impersonal,\" rational, and thus institutionally sanctioned,    sentiments. It thereby invokes the full force of the authority    of the university against the student's efforts to succeed in    it. Gates's second example, with its informal style, suggests    that one individual, the speaker, harbors racist ill will    towards the listener. The first example, by contrast, suggests    that, not just one individual, but the entire institution of    the university in all its impersonal, \"rational\" majesty, looks    upon the student as unfit.  <\/p>\n<p>    So why is it easier to penalize the second kind of statement    than the first, when it is the first that is potentially more    damaging (which is not necessarily to suggest that we should    penalize the first kind of statement)? Contemporary law in    general is insensitive to matters of linguistic style.    Hollywood action movies have made a cliche of lampooning the    incongruity of reading the highly formal, legalistic Miranda    clause during arrests, which are typically emotional encounters    between working class cops and criminals, i.e., contexts where    informal style would be appropriate.[4] In First Amendment jurisprudence, where language    is not only the vehicle but the subject matter of the law, this    insensitivity can lead to conceptual confusion. Linguistic    style may be a fact of life, but traditional legal liberal ways    of thinking about free speech, especially those encapsulated in    the metaphor of the \"marketplace of ideas,\" are strangely    incapable of addressing it.  <\/p>\n<p>    The marketplace metaphor in free speech law involves imagining    symbolic and linguistic phenomena as if they were analogous to    market exchange, which implies a number of things about    language. Most obviously, it implies that language is primarily    an exchange, a transference of something (perhaps    \"information\"), from one person to another. Hence, in    linguistic exchanges what matters is the contents of the    exchange, not the style or form in which it is \"packaged,\" just    as in real market exchanges it makes little difference if you    pay by check or cash. Yet, as in Gates' example, in language    the \"package\" can be everything. The marketplace metaphor,    then, draws our attention away from the importance of just the    kind of stylistic differences that sociolinguists say are    central to the workings of everyday language.  <\/p>\n<p>    The marketplace metaphor, furthermore, tends to imply that the    good that comes from unconstrained human speech comes from some    neutral, universal, mechanical, and leveling process, a    linguistic equivalent to the economist's invisible hand out of    which will emerge truth, or at least some form of democratic    justice. That neutral, mechanical process, furthermore, is    contrasted in law with \"arbitrary\" government interference. And    yet, in several ways, linguistics has taught that language    itself is arbitrary at its core; in language, the boundary    between \"natural\" processes and arbitrary ones is difficult,    some would argue impossible, to discern.  <\/p>\n<p>    Linguists say that language is \"arbitrary\" in the sense that    meaning emerges, not from anything logically inherent in words    or their arrangement, but from the specific conventions and    expectations shared by members of a given speech community,    conventions and expectations that can and do change    dramatically from time to time and place to place. Aside from    language in general and perhaps some very deep-level aspects of    syntax, there is very little that is universal, neutral, or    mechanical about human languages. This insight grew out of the    observation that languages differ profoundly from one another,    not only in terms of the meanings of specific words, but in    terms of basic aspects of the ways those words are arranged:    some languages have only two or three words for color, for    example, others have nothing English speakers would recognize    as verb tenses. But it has also been bolstered by detailed    analysis of the workings of language in general. Meanings are    fixed neither by logic nor by some natural relation of words to    things, but by the contextual and shifting system of    interpretation shared by the members of a given speech    community.  <\/p>\n<p>    The arbitrariness of language presents two problems for    traditional thinking about freedom of speech. One problem    involves legal interpretation, the belief that properly expert    judges and lawyers following the proper procedures can arrive    at the correct interpretation of a dispute. Often    described as the problem of the indeterminacy of law, the    purely contextual character of meaning would suggest that legal    decisions will always be forced to fall back on contingent,    social or political values to decide where the boundaries in    the law lie.[5] It is in the    character of language, in other words, that a judge will never    be able to look at the text of the Bill of Rights and legal    precedents to decide whether or not flag burning is protected    by the First Amendment; she will always in one way or another    be forced to make a choice about whether or not she thinks it    should be protected, and will always be faced with the    possibility that a reasonable person could plausibly disagree.  <\/p>\n<p>    Indeterminacy should not be mistaken for the absurd assertion    that any word can mean any thing, that there is no stability to    meaning whatsoever. As deconstructionist literary critic    Barbara Johnson puts it,  <\/p>\n<p>    A second problem suggested by the arbitrariness of language    involves the impossibility of abstracting from context that is    a linchpin of the formalist legal logic which today dominates    thinking about freedom of speech. According to some    understandings of the rule of law, justice is best served when    applied according to indisputable, clear rules of procedure and    decisionmaking. Hence the First Amendment protects Nazis    marching in Skokie and flag burning, not because anything good    is being accomplished in either case, but because the important    thing is to uphold the rules impartially and unequivocally. And    being impartial and unequivocal typically means that rules are    upheld regardless of context.  <\/p>\n<p>    If one were to suggest, say, that the harm from Nazis marching    in a Jewish suburb outweighs the value of protecting their    speech because of the history of the Holocaust and the    irrational and violent character of Nazi ideology, or that flag    burning is such an ineffectual form of political expression and    so potentially offensive that nothing would be lost by    restricting it, the formalist counterargument is that this    would \"blur\" the boundaries, cross what lawyers call the bright    lines, upon which our system of justice rests: the rules are    more important than the context.  <\/p>\n<p>    An important example of formalist reasoning is the    Bellotti case, in which the Supreme Court struck down a    Massachusetts law limiting corporate campaign donations. The    Court reached its decision, not simply by weighing the positive    and negative effects of the law, nor by deciding that it was a    good thing in this case to grant large corporations the same    rights as private individuals. The decision was based on the    argument that even considering the source of the    campaign donations (the \"speech\" in question) was    inappropriate; every individual has a right to unrestricted    political speech, and even asking whether corporate    \"individuals\" are as worthy of protection as ordinary    individuals would blur the bright lines upon which the rule of    law is based.[7] Another example    would be American Booksellers Association, Inc. v.    Hudnut, when the court threw out an anti-pornography    ordinance. The court argued that, even if pornography has    negative effects, the same might be said of other forms of    protected speech. From this it concluded that \"[i]f the fact    that speech plays a role in a process of conditioning were    enough to permit governmental regulation, that would be the end    of freedom of speech,\" and thus negative effects do not justify    restrictions. As Stanley Fish has pointed out, this is a    peculiar logic: faced with facts which call into question the    speech\/action distinction which underlies the law, the court    upholds the law against the facts which would undermine it. But    it is a typically formalist logic: the point is to uphold the    rule of law, i.e., abstract, neutral principles and procedures;    if the coherence of those abstract principles is threatened by    facts, you throw out the facts, not the principles.[8]  <\/p>\n<p>    The problem is that, if the meanings of statements emerge from    convention, from social context, then the insistence on    excluding context, on divorcing rules and their    enforcement from social and political complexities of a    situation, is an impossibility. This is not simply an argument    that it would be reasonable to sometimes include a little bit    of context in legal decisionmaking, that First Amendment law    should lean towards a more policy-oriented weighing and    balancing of principles and rights in special circumstances    such as highly concentrated or technologically inaccessible    media. Rather, the argument is that formalist arguments of free    speech can not be doing what they claim, that context is    present in decisions in spite of claims to the contrary.    Decisions that grant protection to marching Nazis and flag    burning are not simply decisions that show a preference    for bright line rules over context; on the contrary, such    decisions are themselves a product of a particular social and    historical context, and in turn contribute to the making of    particular contexts.  <\/p>\n<p>    The collapse of the boundary between \"natural\" speech and    arbitrary interference with it implied by indeterminacy creates    a further problem for First Amendment interpretation: the    collapse of the distinction between speech and conduct or    speech and action. The exercise of free speech, the \"free    marketplace of ideas,\" is imagined as a kind of neutral, free    and equal exchange, contrasted with unfree or arbitrary    coercion. What disappears in the face of the arbitrariness of    language is the coherence of that contrast, the faith that    there is an important categorical distinction between people    talking and arguing and people coercing one another through    some kind of action. It is now an axiom of sociolinguistics and    many other schools of thought that language use is an important    kind of social action, that words do not merely reflect reality    or express ideas, they primarily are a way of doing things, a    way of acting in the social world. Although J. L. Austin began    his classic How to Do Things With Words by describing a    limited category of statements that do    things--\"performatives\"--he later enlarged the category and    made its boundaries much less clear by acknowledging the    frequency of \"indirect performatives,\" i.e., statements that    might appear to be merely descriptive but in context can be    shown to be in fact doing something.[9] Some have since argued that in a sense all    utterances are performatives.  <\/p>\n<p>    None of which is to suggest that a subtle verbal snub is    identical to punching someone in the nose. We do not call    trespassing on someone's lawn and shooting them identical,    though they are both categorized as violations, as coercive.    When Stanley Fish argues that speech in everyday life should    not be imagined as if it takes place in \"the sterilized and    weightless atmosphere of a philosophy seminar,\"[10] or when Matsuda et. al argue that words    can wound, the argument is not that every slight or insult    ought to be treated as if it were assault and battery.[11] What they are criticizing is the    belief that there is a fundamental, categorical dichotomy    between speech and conduct, that the dichotomy is clear and    generalizable enough to form one of the principle structures of    our law and democracy.  <\/p>\n<p>    All this points to a deeper critique of the marketplace    metaphor. The metaphor implies that linguistic exchanges, like    market exchanges, take place between individuals who, in the    absence of some outside interference, exist merely as    individuals, not as persons in particular contexts with    particular backgrounds. These are the famous abstract    individuals of legal liberalism, the persons referred to as \"A\"    and \"B\" in law school lectures on contracts: persons bereft, in    legal liberalism's ideal world, of gender, class, ethnicity,    history. People the world over, the marketplace metaphor    suggests, all share the characteristics of being in essence    rational, self-interested individuals, inherently active and    desirous. Language use, then, is a matter of expressing    pre-existing interests; it is a tool used by individuals to buy    cheap and sell dear in the marketplace of ideas. Language is    something one uses.  <\/p>\n<p>    But, according to at least some schools of linguistics and    language philosophy, language is also something that happens to    us, something that \"speaks us\" as much as we speak it. Language    is an inherently collective, social precondition to    individuality. Most definitions of language exclude any notion    of a language possessed by only one individual; for language to    be language it must be shared. People do not choose, after all,    their first language; in a sense it chooses people. And the    particularities of the language that chooses people, many would    say, in turn shapes their consciousness, their sense of what    counts as reason, their perceptions of the world and their    selves within it, even their desires.[12]  <\/p>\n<p>    This is not to imply, however, some kind of simple social    determinism. Here is where the linguistic turn in philosophy    suggests something very different from the common assertion    that individual behaviors are \"caused\" by social structures.    For one of the central discoveries of linguistics and language    theory is what Barthes called \"a paradoxical idea of structure:    a system with neither close nor center.\"[13] Except for analytical purposes, linguistic    structure does not exist outside of anyone's use of it.    Language is certainly structured, in some sense of that word;    linguistic grammar is the central example of structure,    although scholars have brought to our attention many    higher-level structures like linguistic style. But that    structure is not simply some kind of exterior constraint, a    Hobbesian limit on individual action; it is not the \"structure\"    of, say, Durkheimian sociology or orthodox Marxism. It is    dynamic, changing, and creative. As Chomsky pointed out, one    grammatical system is capable of generating an infinite variety    of sentences. And grammar is a practical, thoroughly collective    human accomplishment, not an exterior system imposed upon    individuals by a reified \"society.\" It is enabling as well as    constraining: linguistic structure is a precondition of    self-expression, not just a limit to it.  <\/p>\n<p>    Language thus troubles both legal liberalism's happy    vision of rational individuals and its dark side, its    Hobbesian view of society as the basic constraint on    individuals; it calls into question the marketplace metaphor's    notions of both individual freedom and social order. The    attraction of the marketplace metaphor in law is much the same    as the attraction of marketplace theory itself: it posits a    realm that is both free of arbitrary constraint, and yet    ordered by the certain yet neutral and unequivocal rules of the    marketplace. What the fact of linguistic structure calls into    question is not merely the \"freedom\" of linguistic exchange but    also its certainty, its divisibility from \"arbitrary\" external    restraints and interference.  <\/p>\n<p>    When MacKinnon argues that pornography is a form of action, not    of speech, or when Matsuda argues that the context of racism    and the subjective experiences of minorities in the U.S. ought    to be a primary consideration in the creation and    interpretation of hate speech laws, in the long run what    motivates these scholars is not just a desire for specific    exceptions to an otherwise intact First Amendment    doctrine.[14] The suggestion    is not simply that pornography is so damaging, or that the    specific horrors of slavery and its legacy of racism so evil    that unusual exceptions to free speech protection are called    for (though the evils of rape-culture and racism very well    might be the most urgent problems in the U.S. today). Rather,    the suggestion, at least implicitly, is that the evils of    rape-culture and contemporary racism force us, or should force    us, to fundamentally reconsider how American law thinks about    freedom, speech, and their regulation.  <\/p>\n<p>    Furthermore, the critique of the oppositions that underpin free    speech law such as speech and action, rules and context, or    politics and law, need not be read as a simple denial that any    differences exist. It is obviously not the case that there is    no difference between slighting someone with a racial epithet    and hitting them in the head, or between decisionmaking in    courts and decisionmaking in legislatures. The argument is    rather that these differences are neither clear nor    generalizable enough to coherently underwrite a system of    decisionmaking that claims to be able to transcend context and    achieve the neutrality that is the goal of law in the first    place.  <\/p>\n<p>    Inquiry does not come to an end when one accepts the criticisms    of the formalist First Amendment framework, and acknowledges    the inevitability of politics and context. Stanley Fish's quip    notwithstanding, there is such a thing as free speech. If    something is not what we think it is, it does not follow that    it does not exist. Free speech is one of the major and most    influential political and legal discourses of this century; for    better or worse, it has helped make American society, our    world, what it is. So the task is to rethink the character of    free speech, to specify its historical context and political    incidence. This is a large task; here I can only speculate    about one aspect of the historical context of free speech, its    relation to notions of the rule of law, and one aspect of its    political incidence, its relations to social class.  <\/p>\n<p>    The concept of a neutral, objective system of law that    transcends politics is not just an abstraction important to    lawyers and judges. (Lawyers and judges, in fact, are often    acutely aware of just how political and unstable legal    interpretation can sometimes be on a day-to-day basis.) A faith    in the neutral rule of law is an important element of American    culture, of the popular imagination. Evidence for this can be    seen in the way that legal institutions and documents are more    often celebrated, more often used to define American democracy,    than political institutions and accomplishments. One might    think, for example, that in an electoral democracy the most    important historical event, the event most widely celebrated,    would be the extension of the vote to the majority of the    population. Yet most citizens do not know the amendment or the    year in which the vote was extended to women, much less the    history of the long political struggles that led to the passage    of the nineteenth amendment in 1920. On the other hand, the    Constitution is regularly celebrated in fora ranging from    scholarly conferences to reverential Philip Morris ads, even    though that hallowed document underwrote a legal system that    upheld slavery for three quarters of a century, excluded women    from voting for more than half a century after that, and did    not come to rigorously protect political dissent until about    fifty years ago. Nonetheless, American culture tends to worship    the Constitution and remain ignorant of the history of    universal suffrage. The story of the Constitution is a story of    law, whereas the story of women's suffrage is a story of    protracted political struggle. And in some ways, at least,    mainstream American political culture worships the former more    than the latter.  <\/p>\n<p>    What is the substance of this worship? What makes law neutral,    and how does it support democracy? The short answer might be    that if a society makes its decisions according to fixed rules    instead of individual or collective whims, individuals will be    less able to gain systematic advantage over others. The long    answer would involve an extended and controversial discussion    of a large chunk of the literature of legal theory and    political science. But there is a mid-range answer based in    historical observations, which suggests that in the U.S. two    patterns of argument or logics have tended to shape legal    decisionmaking, particularly in this century. One logic has    been called alternately formalist, classical, bright line,    rule-based, or simply legal justice; the other,    standards-based, revisionist, policy oriented, realist, or    substantive justice.[15]  <\/p>\n<p>    Arguably, the First Amendment has become the centerpiece of the    American faith in the rule of law in this century, and not    coincidentally, First Amendment law is also highly formalist.    Formalism is not simply absolutism, a belief that there should    be no exceptions. It is more a way of thinking about what law    and legal interpretation are and how they work. (Describing the    ACLU's position on the First Amendment as \"absolutist\" is thus    a bit of a red herring.) In at least many of its variations,    formalism involves the claim that law is apolitical and neutral    because it rests on a rigid, formal model, based on an ideal of    axiomatic deduction from rules and unequivocal, \"bright line\"    legal distinctions. The role of law, then, is to locate and    uphold clear boundaries--bright lines--between the rights of    individuals and between individuals and the state. Legal    language and legal expertise are thought valuable precisely    because they provide fixed, rigorous meanings unsullied by the    political and social winds of the moment. Given a certain set    of legal rules and a certain legally defined situation, it is    assumed, a properly trained judge or lawyer, within certain    boundaries, can use expertise in legal language and reasoning    to arrive at, or at least approximate, the correct    interpretation, which is generally a matter of pinpointing    exactly where the boundaries lie.  <\/p>\n<p>    Policy oriented decisionmaking, in contrast, tends to be    context sensitive, accepting of blurry boundaries,    functionalist, and messier. It is also much more common in    legal decisionmaking than popular wisdom would suggest. In    policy argument, justice is thought to be best served by    subtle, well-informed analyses of particular contexts and    judicial \"balancing\" of competing interests and principles;    rights and values are treated, not as hard rules distinguished    by bright lines, but as general standards that can be    differentially implemented according to context. Administrative    law, such as that involved in enacting the Federal    Communication Commission's public interest standard for    broadcasters, is a classic example of policy oriented    decisionmaking. Brown v. Board of Education also    includes some exemplary policy argument.  <\/p>\n<p>    Policy-oriented decisionmaking sometimes is justified in terms    of head-on attacks on formalism of the type associated with the    critiques of free speech just discussed. Both in practice and    in theory, the argument goes, the supposedly \"bright line\"    distinctions upon which formalism is based are rarely if ever    as bright as imagined. Stanley Fish's polemic, \"There is no    such thing as free speech,\" is a recent example of such a    critique, but in some ways his position echoes, for example,    Felix Cohen's legal realist argument earlier in the century, in    \"Transcendental Nonsense and the Functional Approach.\"[16]  <\/p>\n<p>    It is important, however, that outside the academy    policy-oriented legal decisionmaking has been justified less by    theoretical criticisms of formalism as a whole and more by a    sense that, in certain limited and specialized contexts,    policy-oriented decisionmaking is simply practical. Formalism    seems to be the place our culture celebrates the ideal of the    rule of law; policy argument seems to be the place where most    of the detailed legal work of ordering society goes on. Policy    argument dominates largely in domains unrelated to    communication: the law of corporations, environmental law,    urban planning, and so forth. The prominent example of policy    logic in communication is probably government licensing of    broadcast stations according to the public interest standard.    Licensing was originally created because communication by radio    waves was understood to be characterized by spectrum scarcity    and other complicated and contingent technical matters, such as    rapidly evolving technologies and strategic needs of the    military. Treating broadcasters differently than newspapers was    thus thought to be simply called for by context, not because    there was thought to be a formal right or principle at stake    such as the public's right to access to communication.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is sometimes suggested that policy arguments began to    replace formalist ones in legal argument somewhere around the    turn of the century, and formalism was finally defeated with    the end of the Lochner era in 1937. On the level of    legal metatheory, there may be truth to this, but it remains    the case that in practice both logics remain today. Sometimes    the two logics are associated with competing sides in a legal    controversy. The argument that television violence ought to be    censored because its measurably harmful effects on children    outweigh considerations of free speech is a typical policy    argument; arguing against such censorship because it would open    the door to more serious restrictions of freedom of speech is    to lean in a formalist direction. But the two logics are also    often mixed in the context of any given argument. Conservatives    argue that broadcast licensing violates free speech rights but    also is inefficient in the context of new technologies;    liberals argue that guarantied citizen access to mass    communications would be beneficial for industrial society but    also should be treated as a \"new First Amendment    right.\"[17]  <\/p>\n<p>    So it is perhaps the case that what has been changing over the    years is not simply a shift from one kind of argument to the    other, but a shift in the \"mix\" of the two, a shift in how the    two kinds of argument have been used in which cases. And here    the historical literature suggests that, gradually in this    century, the focus of formalist argumentation has shifted from    the realm of property and contract to free speech. Up through    the late nineteenth century, during what Mensch calls the    classical era of jurisprudence, property was the central,    formal right; in theory property was celebrated as the essence    of legal liberalism, and in practice it was used aggressively    in a wide variety of areas. Property rights were invoked to    justify bans on speaking in public parks, the picketing of    factories during union drives, and turn-of-the-century social    legislation. Gradually, this formalist application of property    fell out of favor, and met its final demise in the 1937    overturn of Lochner, during the New Deal.[18]  <\/p>\n<p>    Perhaps it is not entirely coincidental that, as formalist    notions of property declined, the formalist understanding of    free speech rose. In a familiar history, the First Amendment    was gradually elevated to its current legal status, both in    case law and in the popular imagination. What has triumphed in    this period is not a policy-oriented understanding of free    speech (in spite of the best efforts of a long line of scholars    from Alexander Meiklejohn to Sunstein, but a rigidly formalist    one. So today, property rights advocates who would like to see    a return to something like the Lochner era interpretations of    property, like Richard Epstein, argue that the rules applied to    free speech should also be applied to property. Conversely,    from somewhere towards the other end of the political spectrum,    Cass Sunstein has called for \"A New Deal for Free Speech\"    wherein the 1930s revisions of property law be extended to    communication.[19]  <\/p>\n<p>    Why has formalism in legal discourse shifted from property and    contract to free speech? At this point, I can only speculate.    It's possible to put a cynical economic interpretation on the    shift: Formal interpretations of property were abandoned    because they became increasingly impractical in the face of the    bureaucratic corporate form of business and other late    nineteenth and early twentieth century economic developments.    Conversely, the soap box speakers became sanctified in law    precisely during the historical period that they ceased being    effective. In the nineteenth century, union organizers,    pacifists, and other \"radicals\" all made good use of the soap    box--of face-to-face speaking in public places--as a    communicative tool, and were regularly arrested for doing so.    In this century, however, the key to popular communication has    become access to radio, television, and other expensive    technology-based mass media, which have rendered the soap box    increasingly irrelevant as an organizing tool. A formalist    interpretation of the First Amendment grants symbolic    protection to soap boxes while in practice protecting media    corporations much more effectively than dissidents.  <\/p>\n<p>    Such an account of the shift, however, risks a functionalist    tautology (explaining historical events in terms of the needs    they serve for the power bloc) and fails to account for the    imaginative power of First Amendment formalism. So a more    comprehensive explanation might add two observations. First,    from a distance, formalism is satisfying to a legal liberal    vision of the rule of law, whereas policy argument can appear    as arbitrary, obscure, and haughtily technocratic. College    sophomores have little trouble understanding why it might be    good for the rule of law to protect Nazis marching in Skokie,    but it takes a lot of effort to convince them of the grand    principles at stake in, say, the regulation requiring TV    stations to charge political candidates the same rate for    advertising time they charge their most favored advertiser    instead of their standard rates. Second, from up close, from    the perspective of those involved in everyday, small legal    decisions, formalism is frequently impractical, whereas    policy-oriented decisions seem reasonable and pragmatic. Few    suburban homeowners would take kindly to the suggestion that    their neighbors should be allowed to raise pigs or let their    lawns go to weed on the grounds that to do so would be to    uphold the sanctity of formal property rights.  <\/p>\n<p>    It seems to be the case, then, that the American polity seems    to want a legal system that can satisfy both the desire    for legitimacy provided by formalism and the \"practical\"    effectiveness of policy-oriented decisionmaking. Perhaps,    therefore, the formalist interpretation of the First Amendment    became popular in part because it came to take property's place    as a symbol of legal clarity and formal justice. In both the    popular and legal imaginations, the image of the    property-holding yeoman farmer was gradually supplanted by the    soap box speaker as the central archetype and emblem of legally    protected exercise of rights and freedoms in a democratic    society.  <\/p>\n<p>    1. Labor and Management  <\/p>\n<p>    The polity, however, is not the public. The community of    individuals who appreciate the formalist interpretation of free    speech may include a wide range of people, such as lawyers,    judges, politicians, journalists, professors, and many others    in positions to directly or indirectly influence legal and    political consciousness. And it includes a wide range of    political positions: liberals at the ACLU seem to have little    trouble agreeing with conservatives on the Supreme Court that    flag burning is protected speech. But it certainly does not    include everyone. The majority of the American public has a    hard time seeing the justice of protecting flag burning. And    this may not mean simply that the public disdains free speech.    The ACLU reports that the majority of the complaints it    receives come from workers who feel their speech has been    restricted by their bosses--a kind of speech that the Supreme    Court and the ACLU agree is not protected.  <\/p>\n<p>    Elizabeth Mensch has remarked that, although many formerly    bright lines have been blurred in twentieth century law, the    boundary between capital and labor remains as bright and    impermeable as ever.[20] The    First Amendment, as it is currently interpreted, protects    owners and managers more than individual speakers. It prevents    government agencies from interfering with the speech of private    agencies delineated by boundaries of ownership and management,    not by individual human beings.  <\/p>\n<p>    As a result, employees have basically no free speech rights    with regards to their employers, including employees of media    businesses. When a journalist is told by an editor to drop a    story because it is politically inflammatory, the journalist    can find little comfort in First Amendment law. Network program    practices departments engage in systematic and thorough    censorship of scripts for television series with all the zeal    (if not the same principles) of Communist Party apparatchiks.    Under law, there's a sense in which A. J. Liebling's bon    mot--that the only freedom of speech in this country is for    those who own one--is literally true.  <\/p>\n<p>    For all that, Liebling's quip is an oversimplification. There    are many limits on the power of media owners to influence    content, such as the resistance of the community of    professional journalists to owner manipulation on both ethical    and self-interested grounds. Evidence suggests that, among some    groups, there probably is a popular ethic of free speech in the    U.S. that extends beyond the powers of owners and managers.    When conservative newspaper tycoon Rupert Murdoch bought the    left-wing Village Voice and tried to dismiss its editor,    for example, the threat of a staff walkout forced him to back    down, and he left the paper's editorial content alone    thereafter.[21]  <\/p>\n<p>    2. Social Class and Linguistic Style  <\/p>\n<p>    Bringing \"popular ethics\" into the discussion, however, brings    us back to the second question suggested by Gates' examples:    why does it seem easier to pass rules prohibiting direct racial    epithets than elaborate, formal statements? It is well    established that linguistic style is associated with social    class. Sociolinguist Basil Bernstein demonstrated that children    from middle and professional classes tend to do better in    school than working class students in part because they speak    more often and more fluently in formal style, or what Bernstein    calls \"elaborated code.\" Working class students, in contrast,    tend to be more comfortable, and are probably more fluent in,    informal style, or what Bernstein calls \"restricted    code.\"[22]  <\/p>\n<p>    One style is not better than the other. Rather, each style is    an adaptation to specific patterns of life and work. Informal    style has the effect of stressing membership within a group; it    is useful for interactions among people who are familiar with    each other and work with each other on a regular basis, and    thus live in \"dense\" social networks, i.e., high levels of    interaction with a limited number of people. It has a high    proportion of ellipsis and colloquialisms, not because such    language is simpler, but because these take advantage of a    higher degree of shared knowledge between speaker and listener.    Similarly, it has a higher proportion of personal pronouns (you    and they) and tag-questions soliciting agreement of the    listener (nice day, isn't it?), because these express a sense    of cooperation and solidarity.[23]  <\/p>\n<p>    Formal style, in contrast, is for people whose social networks    are less dense, who regularly deal with strangers and thus    communicate in contexts in which ellipsis and colloquialisms    are more likely to generate confusion than solidarity.    Similarly, formal style's high proportion of subordinate    clauses, passive verbs, and adjectives (besides connoting    high-mindedness through its echo of Latin grammar) are    adaptations to the need to explain details comprehensively when    speaker and listener do not share as much background knowledge    and cannot easily rely on features of the extra-linguistic    context. Interestingly, in spite of the frequency of passive    verbs, formal style also contains a higher proportion of    pronoun \"I.\" This has the effect of imposing the speaker's    individuality on the utterance, of stressing her or his unique    nature as a person, as opposed to expressing membership in a    group. Some research suggests that formal style leads people to    be judged as more intelligent, more educated, and less friendly    and less likable than informal style.  <\/p>\n<p>    It is not the case that working class people use only informal    style and middle class people use only formal style. A garage    mechanic will probably shift to formal speech when dealing with    a customer irate over a bill, and only the most hopelessly    pompous college professors use formal style when speaking with    their friends and families. But mastery over the different    styles is not evenly distributed. Bernstein's work suggests    that middle and professional class students' relatively better    skills and comfort with formal style functions as a form of    what Bourdieu calls \"cultural capital,\" enhancing their life    prospects.[24] Given the    relation of style to the character of work, moreover, fluency    in formal style (though not accent) is probably associated with    a person's present occupation, regardless of class background.  <\/p>\n<p>    What does this have to do with free speech? James Carey has    argued that the speech\/action distinction in free speech law is    an expression of distinctly middle class values and    sensibilities. Carey tells the story of a middle class man who    enters a working class bar and not long thereafter comes flying    out the plate glass window; the man then says with    astonishment, \"but all I did was use words!\" Carey's point is    that, to the working class individuals in the bar, words have    power. For them, the difference between insulting someone's    mother and punching them in the nose is not as obvious or    absolute as it is for the middle class person.  <\/p>\n<p>    Carolyn Marvin has elaborated on these contrasting sets of    values in our culture in terms of what she calls \"text\" and    \"body\":  <\/p>\n<p>    The First Amendment as currently interpreted is envisioned    largely in terms of that which middle and professional class    people have mastery over, abstract formal expression in speech    and writing. This is why it is harder to censure Gates' first    example than the second. Within the community of people who    share those values, there is something equalizing about    free speech. But it should not be surprising that, for people    who do not make a living that way, for workers and other people    whose bodies are the source of their value to society,    formalist protection of free speech may not make sense, and    might even appear as simply another way that people with    privileges (such as academics writing about free speech)    exercise their power over people who don't.  <\/p>\n<p>    The analyses and arguments of this chapter do not offer    resolutions to all of the many important debates among    non-formalist theorists of freedom of speech, such as those    between Gates and Matsuda et al. over campus hate speech codes.    But it does do two things. First, it tries to clarify some of    the underlying principles and issues at stake today in debates    over free speech, particularly the inevitability of context and    the problems this poses for traditional formalist    understandings of the rule of law. Second, it points in the    direction of a rethinking of free speech based in    context, and suggests two (among many possible) avenues to    pursue: the historical shift of formalism from property to free    speech and to matters of language and social class in both    legal discourse and in nonlegal situations. Clearly, these    examples of context-based analysis are intended only to be    suggestive. But what they suggest, it is hoped, is that this    kind of inquiry, if expanded into rich and subtle contextual    analyses, might indeed help resolve some debates and contribute    to a more fully democratic, substantive interpretation of the    role of free speech in law and culture.  <\/p>\n<p>    [1]. Henry Louis Gates, \"Let    Them Talk,\" The New Republic, Sept. 20 & 27, 1993,    pp. 37-49: p. 45.  <\/p>\n<p>    [2]. \"Style\" is the    generally accepted sociolinguistic term for language varieties    that can be classified on a continuum for formal to informal.    The word \"code\" is used by Basil Bernstein, Class, Codes And    Control, 2d edition (Boston: Routledge & K. Paul,    1974).  <\/p>\n<p>    [3]. William Labov, \"The    Logic of Nonstandard English,\" in Giglioli (ed.) Language    and Social Context (Penguin, 1972), pp. 179-216.  <\/p>\n<p>    [4]. For a    sociolinguistically informed analysis of the role of linguistic    style during arrest and interrogation see, Janet E. Ainsworth,    \"In a Different Register: The Pragmatics of Powerlessness in    Police Interrogation,\" Yale Law Journal, 103 (November,    1993): 259-322.  <\/p>\n<p>    [5]. Mark Kelman, A Guide    to Critical Legal Studies (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard    University Press, 1987), p. 12 and passim.  <\/p>\n<p>    [6]. Barbara Johnson, A    World of Difference (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press,    1987), p. 6.  <\/p>\n<p>    [7]. First National Bank of    Boston v Bellotti, 435 US 765, 776 (1978)  <\/p>\n<p>    [8]. 771 F.2d 323 (7th Cir.    1985), aff'd, <=8> 475 U.S. 1601 (1986), p. 329; quoted    in Stanley Fish, \"Fraught With Death: Skepticism,    Progressivism, and the First Amendment,\" University of    Colorado Law Review, 64 Fall 1993: 1061-1086, p. 1065.  <\/p>\n<p>    [9]. See Ainsworth, \"In a    Different Register,\" note 15: \"Austin initially adopts the    intuitively appealing assumption that constative utterances,    unlike performatives, are true or false. Having set up these    opposing categories of performative and constative utterances,    Austin ultimately deconstructs this dichotomy\" with his    analysis of indirect performatives.  <\/p>\n<p>    [10]. Fish, \"Fraught With    Death,\" p. 1061.  <\/p>\n<p>    [11]. Mari J. Matsuda,    Charles R. Lawrence III, Richard Delgado, and Kimberle Williams    Crenshaw, Words that Wound: Critical Race Theory, Assaultive    Speech, and the First Amendment (Boulder, Colorado:    Westview Press, 1993).  <\/p>\n<p>    [12]. The classic and    extreme version of this notion is the \"Sapir-Whorf hypothesis\"    named after linguists Edward Sapir and Benjamin Whorf. For a    post-structuralist variation of it, see Rosalind Coward and    John Ellis, Language and Materialism: Developments in    Semiology and the Theory of the Subject (London: Routledge    and Kegan Paul, 1977).  <\/p>\n<p>    [13]. Roland Barthes,    Image, Music, Text (New York: Hill and Wang, 1977), p.    159.  <\/p>\n<p>    [14]. Catharine A.    MacKinnon, Only Words (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard    University Press, 1993).  <\/p>\n<p>    [15]. Elizabeth Mensch    divides legal thought into classical and realist or revisionist    forms. Duncan Kennedy talks of the distinction between rules    and standards. Roberto Unger speaks of \"legal justice\" and    \"substantive justice.\" See Elizabeth Mensch, \"The History of    Mainstream Legal Thought\" in David Kairys, ed., The Politics    of Law: A Progressive Critique (New York: Pantheon, 1982),    pp. 18-39; Duncan Kennedy, \"Form and Substance in Private Law    Adjudication,\" Harvard Law Review, 89 (1976): 1685, pp.    1687-89; see also Roberto M. Unger, Knowledge and    Politics (New York: The Free Press, 1975), p. 91.  <\/p>\n<p>    [16]. Stanley Fish,    \"There's No Such Thing As Free Speech And It's a Good Thing    Too,\" Boston Review, Feb. 1992, p. 3; Felix Cohen,    \"Transcendental Nonsense and the Functional Approach,\"    Columbia Law Review 35 (1935): 809.  <\/p>\n<p>    [17]. For example, Jerome    A. Barron, Freedom Of The Press For Whom? The Right Of    Access To Mass Media (Bloomington: Indiana University Press    1973).  <\/p>\n<p>    [18]. Jennifer Nedelsky,    Private Property and the Limits of American    Constitutionalism: The Madisonian Framework and Its Legacy    (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990).  <\/p>\n<p>    [19]. Cass R. Sunstein,    \"Free Speech Now,\" The University of Chicago Law Review,    59 (Winter 1992): 255; Richard A. Epstein, \"Property, Speech,    and the Politics of Distrust,\" The University of Chicago law    review 59 (Winter 1992): p. 41.  <\/p>\n<p>    [20]. Mensch, \"The History    of Mainstream Legal Thought,\" p. 26.  <\/p>\n<p>    [21]. Alex S. Jones, \"At    Village Voice, A Clashing Of Visions,\" The New York    Times, June 28, 1985, Section B; p. 5, Column 1.  <\/p>\n<p>    [22]. Bernstein, Class,    Codes And Control.  <\/p>\n<p>    [23]. This survey of    Bernstein's work relies heavily on Peter Trudgill,    Sociolinguistics: An Introduction to Language and    Society (London: Penguin Books, 1983, revised edition), pp.    132-140.  <\/p>\n<p>    [24]. Pierre Bourdieu,    Distinction: A Social Critique of the Judgment of Taste,    trans. R. Nice (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984).  <\/p>\n<p>    [25]. Carolyn Marvin,    \"Theorizing the Flagbody: Symbolic Dimensions of the Flag    Desecration Debate, or Why the Bill of Rights Does Not Fly in    the Ballpark,\" Critical Studies in Mass Communication,    8, (June, 1991): pp. 120-121.  <\/p>\n<p>    [26]. Social class is of    course a complex construct, and is used here suggestively, not    comprehensively or precisely. Marvin points out that the values    of \"body\" in fact extend to and in many ways are exemplified by    military personnel, a group which overlaps with but is not    limited to working class individuals.  <\/p>\n<p><!-- Auto Generated --><\/p>\n<p>More here:<br \/>\n<a target=\"_blank\" href=\"http:\/\/www.uvm.edu\/~tstreete\/freespch.htm\" title=\"Free Speech, Language, and the Rule of Law\">Free Speech, Language, and the Rule of Law<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> Contents Some Thoughts on Free Speech, Language, and the Rule of Law by Thomas Streeter (from Robert Jensen and David S. Allen (eds.), Freeing the First Amendment: Critical Perspectives on Freedom of Expression, New York University Press, 1995, pp. 31-53.) This chapter discusses the relevance of research and reflection on language to recent critical trends in thinking on free speech.  <a href=\"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/free-speech\/free-speech-language-and-the-rule-of-law\/\">Continue reading <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[162384],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-146304","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-free-speech"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146304"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=146304"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/146304\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=146304"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=146304"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.euvolution.com\/prometheism-transhumanism-posthumanism\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=146304"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}