American Government
1st EditionGlen Krutz
412 solutions
American Corrections
11th EditionMichael D. Reisig, Todd R. Clear
160 solutions
Criminal Justice in America
9th EditionChristina Dejong, Christopher E. Smith, George F Cole
105 solutions
Government in America: Elections and Updates Edition
16th EditionGeorge C. Edwards III, Martin P. Wattenberg, Robert L. Lineberry
269 solutions
Recommended textbook solutionsAmerican Government
1st EditionGlen Krutz
412 solutions
Government in America: Elections and Updates Edition
16th EditionGeorge C. Edwards III, Martin P. Wattenberg, Robert L. Lineberry
269 solutions
Criminal Justice in America
9th EditionChristina Dejong, Christopher E. Smith, George F Cole
105 solutions
American Corrections
11th EditionMichael D. Reisig, Todd R. Clear
160 solutions
Recommended textbook solutionsAmerican Government
1st EditionGlen Krutz
412 solutions
American Corrections
11th EditionMichael D. Reisig, Todd R. Clear
160 solutions
Government in America: Elections and Updates Edition
16th EditionGeorge C. Edwards III, Martin P. Wattenberg, Robert L. Lineberry
269 solutions
Criminal Justice in America
9th EditionChristina Dejong, Christopher E. Smith, George F Cole
105 solutions
Texas vs Johnson- A person burns an American flag in protest of government policies. government may not limit or punish the speech.
schenck vs the united states- A person creates a website asking people to support an anti-war agenda. 2 = government can limit or punish the speech under rare conditions.
- A person writes and publishes an essay about the superiority of his or her race. 1 = government may not limit or punish the speech.
- A person criticizes the U.S. president on a blog site about public policy. 1 = government may not limit or punish the speech. criticism is at the heart of the first amendment
- A person spreads malicious lies about a political candidate during an election. 4 = government can usually limit or punish this type of speech
- A public school student criticizes the principal and teachers on social media.3 = you are unsure when and how the government can limit or punish the speech, but you think there may be good arguments on both sides.
- A public school student starts a website for students to say hateful things about other students. 4 = government can usually limit or punish this type of speech
- A student threatens violence against his school on social media in the form of a poem. government can always limit and punish this type of speech. 5 = government can always limit and punish this type of speech.
- A person posts online that someone should assassinate Supreme Court justices.5 = government can always limit and punish this type of speech.
- A person creates a pro-terrorist website that asks people to join terror groups in overthrowing the U.S. government. .