Here is how I describe the Court's compelled speech doctrine in my Telescope Media article:
Compelled speech is unconstitutional. Of this there can be
no doubt. In an earlier work, I stated the Court’s no-compelled-speech rule as
follows: “[U]nder the Free Speech Clause government may not compel a person to
express or disseminate any belief, creed, or statement of values, whether it
is the government’s own message or the message of a third-party.” Or, in the
words of one of the leading First Amendment scholars, Professor Eugene Volokh,
“Government coercion is presumptively unconstitutional . . . when it compels
people to speak things they do not want to speak.”
First thing you need to know is that the Supreme Court
has repeatedly held that the right of free speech includes the right not to be compelled to speak.
Here is how the Court stated the “no compelled speech”
rule in Wooley V. Maynard (casebook p. 1609), the
landmark case on this Free Speech right:
"We begin,” said the Wooley Court,
“with the proposition that the right of freedom of thought protected by the
First Amendment...includes both the right to speak freely and the right to
refrain from speaking at all." 430 U.S. at 714.
In other words, the government may neither silence those who wish to speak, nor put words in the mouths of those who wish
not to speak.
Wooley, of course,
is the famous case concerning the license plate motto—Live Free or Die-- in the State of New Hampshire.
Mr. Maynard was a Jehovah’s
Witness who was conscientiously opposed to that motto.
He covered the motto with tape on his license plate,
and New
Hampshire was so committed to its “live free or die” message that it prosecuted
Maynard for covering up the motto. 430 U.S 705.
And the Wooley
Court held that Government may not compel citizens to display or to help
distribute speech of which they disapprove. Freedom of thought protects
expressive autonomy.
Alexander Solzhenitsyn has captured
the essence of the right not to speak
as being based upon each individual’s
conscience and commitment to the truth as he or she understands it.
In an essay entitled Live Not By Lies, Solzhenitsyn
said “let us refuse to say that which we do not think” and continued:
An honest man worthy of the respect of both his
children and his contemporaries:
“will not depict, foster or broadcast a
single idea which he can see is false or a distortion of the truth, whether it
be in painting, sculpture, photography…or music.”
“Let us refuse to say………that which we do
not think.”
See also West Virginia State Bd of Educ v. Barnette (casebook p. 1608) in which the Court struck down a mandatory flag salute requirement and said this:
If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it is
that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be orthodox in
politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion or force
citizens to confess by word or act their faith therein.
Why is this right so fundamental, to human dignity and freedom of thought?
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