First Amendment Center Discussion | God in America | NPT
Amy Walter at the First Amendment Center
First Amendment Center Moot Court Competition
First Amendment Test: Federal Courthouse/Visitor Center
State of the First Amendment 2012: off-campus online student speech
APME 2012: First Amendment Showdown
State of the First Amendment 2012: photographing police
"Biology, the Bible, and the First Amendment"
2014 State of the First Amendment Survey
Inside Media: State of the First Amendment
State of the First Amendment 2012: online piracy
State of the First Amendment 2012: Citizens United
First Amendment Videos on DVD - Free School Materials Grades 7 - 12
Laughter and the First Amendment
First Amendment Center Discussion | God in America | NPT
Amy Walter at the First Amendment Center
First Amendment Center Moot Court Competition
First Amendment Test: Federal Courthouse/Visitor Center
State of the First Amendment 2012: off-campus online student speech
APME 2012: First Amendment Showdown
State of the First Amendment 2012: photographing police
"Biology, the Bible, and the First Amendment"
2014 State of the First Amendment Survey
Inside Media: State of the First Amendment
State of the First Amendment 2012: online piracy
State of the First Amendment 2012: Citizens United
First Amendment Videos on DVD - Free School Materials Grades 7 - 12
Laughter and the First Amendment
First Amendment Videos on DVD - Free School Materials Grades 2-6
State of the First Amendment 2012: news bias
State of the First Amendment survey 2012
Journalism: First Amendment (Lecture)
NPC Special Event: State of The First Amendment 2011
An "F" in the First Amendment: Charles Haynes State of Belief Interview, August 10, 2013
Seigenthalers "Living the First Amendment" at MTSU
The First Amendment
Was Donald Sterling's First Amendment Right to Free Speech Violated?
The First Amendment Center supports the First Amendment and builds understanding of its core freedoms through education, information and entertainment.
The center serves as a forum for the study and exploration of free-expression issues, including freedom of speech, of the press and of religion, and the rights to assemble and to petition the government.
Founded by John Seigenthaler, the First Amendment Center is an operating program of the Freedom Forum and is associated with the Newseum and the Diversity Institute. The center has offices in the John Seigenthaler Center at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn., and at the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
The center’s programs, including the Religious Freedom Education Project at the Newseum, provide education and information to the public and groups including First Amendment scholars and experts, educators, government policy makers, legal experts and students. The center is nonpartisan and does not lobby, litigate or provide legal advice.
The center’s website, www.firstamendmentcenter.org, is one of the most authoritative sources of news, information and commentary in the nation on First Amendment issues. It features daily updates on news about First Amendment-related developments, as well as detailed reports about U.S. Supreme Court cases involving the First Amendment, and commentary, analysis and special reports on free expression, press freedom and religious-liberty issues.
The First Amendment (Amendment I) to the United States Constitution is part of the Bill of Rights. The amendment prohibits the making of any law respecting an establishment of religion, impeding the free exercise of religion, abridging the freedom of speech, infringing on the freedom of the press, interfering with the right to peaceably assemble or prohibiting the petitioning for a governmental redress of grievances.
Originally, the First Amendment applied only to laws enacted by the Congress. However, starting with Gitlow v. New York, the Supreme Court has applied the First Amendment to each state. This was done through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court has also recognized a series of exceptions to provisions protecting the freedom of speech.
Opposition to the ratification of the Constitution was partly based on the Constitution's lack of adequate guarantees for civil liberties. To provide such guarantees, the First Amendment (along with the rest of the Bill of Rights) was submitted to the states for ratification on September 25, 1789, and adopted on December 15, 1791.
Donald T. Sterling is an American real estate mogul, attorney, and the owner of the National Basketball Association's Los Angeles Clippers. Sterling acquired the Clippers in 1981 for $12.5 million, and as of the 2008 rankings, the team is valued at $297 million by Forbes magazine, ranking them twenty-fifth out of thirty teams.
Donald Tokowitz (legally added Sterling as his last name as an adult) was born in 1933 in Chicago, Illinois, but he and his family moved to the Boyle Heights area of Los Angeles, when he was two years old. His parents, Susan and Mickey, were Jewish immigrants. He attended Theodore Roosevelt High School in Los Angeles, where he was on the school's gymnastics team and served as class president; he graduated in 1952. He next attended California State University, Los Angeles (Class of 1956) and Southwestern University School of Law (Class of 1960) in Los Angeles. Starting in 1961, he began to make his career as a divorce and personal injury attorney, but he made his biggest ventures in real estate, which he began when he purchased a 26-unit apartment building in Beverly Hills.
No I wont Conform to your fears
Imposed by your Tyranny
Wear your crown of hate
All alone in your murder industry
Underneath Disguise of being free
Lies a plan of Fascism
Read between the lines and you'll see
The Blood of children all over you
Waging war and death
On a land rich with opportunity
Drowning in a cause
Inhuman, led by Christianity
God Endorses war, in his mind
Liberate by homicide
Terrorism's bred by terror first
You commit our suicide
Pain will be the price of the ones we kill in vain
Forget what you read or heard in the media today
The White House has been stained by the blood of innocence
It is inhumane to ignore what's evident
Election by fraud, and by lies, this is not democracy
You will be the fall and demise of our civil liberty
Look closer in eyes, see the truth
Your the real enemy
Our freedom of speech
Amendment one
Will fight your inhumanity
Pain will be the price of the ones we kill in vain
Forget what you read or heard in the media today
The White House has been stained by the blood of innocence
It is inhumane to ignore what's evident
Look closer in eyes, see the truth
Your the real enemy
Our freedom of speech
Amendment one
Will fight your inhumanity
Pain will be the price of the ones we kill in vain
Forget what you read or heard in the media today
The White House has been stained by the blood of innocence