The high court victory of a woman who declined to create a website promoting gay marriage affirmed the long-held tenet that the US government can’t force you to say things you don’t believe.
The troubling decision says faculty speech about institutional governance doesn’t get First Amendment protection, giving public universities broad power to oust faculty whistleblowers, dissenters.
Federal appeals court ruled that warehouse workers should be allowed to sue their employer for playing music from the rapper Eminem and others over the company’s speakers.
In a unanimous decision late last month, the Connecticut Supreme Court issued a blistering critique of Yale University’s lack of procedural safeguards in its Title IX proceedings.
A Georgia city has eliminated an unconstitutional law that required citizens to get approval from the mayor and city council before they could exercise their right to protest.
The Supreme Court decision in Counterman v. Colorado is largely good news for the First Amendment because it sets a higher bar for punishing speech as a “true threat.”