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AP U.S. History Exam 1.36 165 Views
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Description:
AP U.S. History Exam 1.36. During World War I, the Supreme Court ruled that the Espionage Act did not violate First Amendment rights if the speech of the convicted...what?
Transcript
- 00:00
[ musical flourish ]
- 00:03
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by the Espionage Act,
- 00:07
a common defense mechanism for former spies.
- 00:10
Yeah. That act.
- 00:12
All right, check out this excerpt.
Full Transcript
- 00:13
[ mumbles ]
- 00:17
[ mumbling continues ]
- 00:20
All right, and the question:
- 00:22
During World War I, the Supreme Court ruled
- 00:25
that the Espionage Act did not violate
- 00:28
First Amendment rights if the speech of the convicted...
- 00:32
what?
- 00:33
And here are your potential answers.
- 00:34
[ mumbles ]
- 00:38
[ mumbling continues ]
- 00:41
Government suspension of civil liberties during wartime was a
- 00:44
common practice by the early 1900s.
- 00:47
But the Espionage Act
- 00:49
packed a particular punch with its
- 00:51
punishment "by death
- 00:53
or by imprisonment for not more than thirty years."
- 00:57
All right, well, let's see how the Supreme Court justified
- 00:59
the cost of having some speech that was no longer free.
- 01:03
Well, did the Supreme Court rule that the Espionage Act
- 01:07
didn't violate the First Amendment
- 01:09
if the speech of the convicted A -
- 01:12
involved a "willful disclosure of information"?
- 01:15
Well, geez, that's pretty broad, since you can willfully disclose
- 01:18
anything from an insignificant detail to a widely
- 01:21
guarded state secret. So it's not A.
- 01:24
Did the Supreme Court say this kind of speech wasn't
- 01:26
protected under the First Amendment if it C -
- 01:29
was deemed "inflammatory or injurious"?
- 01:32
Well, actually, the First Amendment excludes inflammatory
- 01:36
or injurious words from protection as free speech.
- 01:39
But that kind of talk wasn't under discussion for this case.
- 01:42
Did the Supreme Court justify this censure in
- 01:45
cases where the speech D - was considered
- 01:48
"false or scandalous" against the United States?
- 01:51
Hmm, well false and scandalous statements were made
- 01:54
criminal under the Alien and Sedition Acts,
- 01:57
which John Adams signed in 1798 during
- 01:59
the aftermath of the French Revolution.
- 02:01
So we're about 120 years too late for that one.
- 02:04
Which means the Supreme Court was totally on board with
- 02:07
the Espionage Act when the speech of the convicted
- 02:10
B - presented a "clear and present danger" to the United States.
- 02:14
In Schenk versus United States,
- 02:16
the case involving the Espionage Act,
- 02:19
the Supreme Court created a famous litmus test
- 02:22
that said the First Amendment did not protect speech
- 02:26
that created a "clear and present danger" to the United States.
- 02:29
So B is the correct answer.
- 02:31
Though its intentions were noble,
- 02:33
this so-called litmus test justified
- 02:35
the dubious arrests of many leftists
- 02:38
protesting the draft. So for those guys,
- 02:40
the clear and present danger was simply
- 02:43
avoiding a war they didn't wanna fight.
- 02:49
[ wind blows ]
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