High Teen Interest Expository Essay Topics Related To Slavery And Slave Trade
Sunday, August 4, 2019
The Evolution Of The First Amendment Essay -- essays research papers
 The Evolution of the First Amendment           The first amendment states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an  establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or  abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people  peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of  grievances.(encyclopedia)       The inhabitants of the North American colonies did not have a legal  right to express opposition to the British government that ruled them.  Nonetheless, throughout the late 1700s, these early Americans did voice their  discontent with the crown. For example they strongly denounced the British  parliament's enactment of a series of tax levies to pay off a large national  debt that England incurred in its Seven Years War with France. In newspaper  articles, pamphlets and through boycotts, the colonists raised what would become  their battle cry: "No taxation without representation!" And in 1773, the  people of the Massachusetts Bay Colony demonstrated their outrage at the tax on  tea in a dramatic act of civil disobedience, the Boston Tea Party.(Eldridge,15)       The stage was set for the birth of the First Amendment, which formally  recognized the natural and inalienable rights of Americans to think and speak  freely. The first Amendments early years were not entirely auspicious.  Although the early Americans enjoyed great freedom compared to citizens of other  nations, even the Constitution's framer once in power, could resist the string  temptation to circumvent the First Amendment's clear mandate. Before the 1930s,  we had no legally protected rights of free speech in anything like the form we  now know it. Critics of the government or government officials, called  seditious libel, was oftenly made a crime. Every state had a seditious libel  law when the Constitution was adopted. And within the decade of the adoption of  the First Amendment, the founding fathers in congress initiated and passed the  repressive Alien and Sedition act (1798). This act was used by the dominant  Federalists party to prosecute a number of prominent Republican newspaper  editors.(Kairys,3) When Thomas Jefferson was elected president in 1801 they also  prosecuted their critics. More than 2,000 people were prosecuted, and many  served substantial prison te...              ...o preserve freedom of  expression have taught us anything, it is that the first target of government  suppression is never the last. Whenever government gains the power to decide  who can speak and what they can say, the first Amendment rights of all of us are  in danger of being violated. But when all people are allowed to express their  views and ideas, the principles of democracy and liberty are enhanced. American  democracy should mean more than the right to picket when you are really upset or  pissed at the system and to vote every four years in elections devoid of content  or context. Change will require, as it has in the past, recognition that free  speech and democracy are political, not narrowly legal, issues. And it will  also require an enlargement of our understanding of such rights to include  public access to the various mass media.    Bibliography    Eldridge, Larry D. A Distant Heritage: The Growth of Free Speech in Early  America. New York: New York University Press, 1994.    Kairys, David. The Politics of Law In These Times. New York. Patheon Press, 1991.      McWhirter, Darien A. Freedom of Speech, Press, and Assembly, Phoenix AZ: Oryx  Press, 1994.    The World Book Encyclopedia.1995.                       
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