Transcript Slide 1

First Amendment
Heroes Hall of Fame
Greetings !
Welcome to
the First
Amendment
Hall of
Heroes.
My name is
John
Marshall.
I was the first
Chief Justice
of the
United States
Supreme
Court.
Let’s learn
about the role
our Supreme
Court plays
in protecting
our First
Amendment
freedoms.
The Supreme Court has a special role
to play in the United States system of
government.
The Constitution gives the
Supreme Court the power to check,
if necessary, the actions of the
President and Congress.
It can tell a President that his actions
are not allowed by the Constitution.
It can also tell Congress that a law
it passed goes against the
U.S. Constitution.
The Supreme Court is like a referee
on a football field.
The Congress, the President,
and other government officials
are the players. As "referees",
it is the Supreme Court judges,
called “justices”, say when
government officials
step out-of-bounds.
The decisions of the Supreme Court
are made inside a courthouse in
Washington, D.C.
Here the justices receive about thousands
of requests, called “cases”, each year.
Of these the Court will agree to hear
only a few.
One the morning of each day, the justices take
their seats. Lawyers step forward and explain
their side of the case. The justices listen from
their high seats and often interrupt to ask
the lawyers questions.
The justices may take several days to
study the case more.
Some cases are about the First Amendment.
The Constitution does not allow laws that
"abridge the freedom of speech."
Freedom of speech is protected, along with
freedom of the press, freedom of assembly,
freedom to petition
the government,
and freedom of
religious expression.
These are the sorts of difficult questions that
the Supreme Court justices must answer.
That’s why they deserve to be in our
First Amendment Hall of Heroes!
Let’s visit our
Hall of Heroes
and hear what our
Supreme Court
justices have said
about our
First Amendment
freedoms.
Those who won our
independence
believed that
freedom to think as
you will and to
speak as you think
are means to the
discovery of truth.
Justice Louis
Brandeis
Restriction of free
thought and free
speech is the most
dangerous of all.
It is the one
un-American act
that could most
easily defeat us.”
Justice William
Douglas
The right to think
is the beginning of
freedom, and
speech must be
protected because
speech is the
beginning of
thought.
Justice Anthony
Kennedy
If there is a bedrock
principle underlying
the First Amendment,
it is that the
government may not
prohibit the
expression of an idea
simply because
society finds the idea
itself offensive or
disagreeable.
Justice William
Brennan
If there is any
fixed star in our
constitutional
constellation, it is
that no official
can prescribe
matters of
opinion or faith.
Justice Robert
Jackson
Above all else, the
First Amendment
means that
government has no
power to restrict
expression because
of its message or its
ideas…Each
individual is
guaranteed the right
to express any
thought.
Justice Thurgood
Marshall
If the First
Amendment means
anything, it means
that regulating
speech must be a
last resort.
Justice Sandra Day
O’Connor
You can study
more about
Supreme
Court’s cases
about the
First
Amendment
and how the
Court works
for our
freedoms…