USSC = United States Supreme Court
"Guide" = The Oxford Guide to United States Supreme Court Decisions
edited by Kermit L. Hall 1999
ISBN 019-511883-9 (Cloth)
ISBN 019-513924-0 (Pprbk.)
This discussion is regarding the history of the defense of the rights of (or to utter) unpopular speech. Amazing has discussed the 1917 WTS case ( http://www.jehovahs-witness.com/6/65633/2.ashx ); I shall attempt to discuss practically everything else
Historical Background:The following cases set the scene for the Sedition Law issues. Note that two earlier cases (Abrams/Schenck) were contemporary with the Rutherford case. Interestingly, for all that the WTS likes to crow about being at the forefront of legal endeavors, THEY WEREN'T in this instance. Somebody else's name is on these landmark cases.
Also, note the following events during this historical time period: WW1, Russian Revolution, anarchists, beginning of the Zionist movement, previous history of labor movement in US and abroad, Railroad labor disputes, and the Haymarket Square bombing.
This was the time of the old classic "round bomb anarchist", that we laugh about in the old movies. But all of that was very real. People and the government were very serious about these things.
The government was calling out the army to suppress riots during labor strikes. The Haymarket Square bombing in Chicago killed 8 policemen in 1886; more than 60 other people were injured or killed. The total of rioter casualties cannot be determined. That was like the "9-11" of our day.
http://www.chipublib.org/004chicago/disasters/haymarket.html
Labor disputes were violent in those days; people got killed. Secret societies would ride at night and lynch those they disagreed with, burn some building to the ground or blow something up. Matters were handled with fists, clubs and guns. When the local law couldn't handle things, government troops would be called out. That was in the US!!!
In Russia, the revolutionaries were preparing to take over the country from the imperialist Czar's. Russian émigrés in America were lobbying to prevent the US participation in WW1 or helping Russia and asking for money and arms to overthrow the Russian state. Of course, the Russian state wanted help, too.
The Zionist movement was starting and it looked to forming a new nation in the Middle East region of the original biblical Hebrews. Since there were Russian and German Jews, all of this was mixed in with the politics of the Russian revolution and the ongoing WW1 conflagration in Europe. Since the US was dragging its feet on entering WW1, the proponents of all these radical sides were over here in abundance, seeking money, peddling influence and promising to do mischief with violence.
And as Amazing pointed out, the WTS was apparently active in discouraging support of the war effort, to the point of discussing or promoting resistance to the draft. They also published a discussion against the draft.
Now, as these cases indicate, others did the same thing. All of these groups (laborer organizers, Socialists, Zionists, Russian revolutionaries, anarchists and who-knows-what-else) would publish pamphlets and make speeches to further their cause.
As mentioned herein, patriots became superpatriots and politicians expected total obedience to the governmental policy. It would have been a very good time for the WTS to truly practice neutrality and not discourage others from the governments aims, or to push their own agenda. Note that the WTS picked the time of least tolerance to cause their grief.
I'm left with three observations on that:
1) The anarchists and revolutionaries was not very good company to keep. (Even though they didn't directly associate, they were doing the same thing.)
2) The WTS was not showing neutrality here.
3) The real legal work that established freedom of speech was done by the following 3 cases, not the WTS:
Abrams vs. United States Schenck v. U.S. (1917 Espionage Act) Brandenburg v. OhioReviews from the "Guide" will follow.
Re: Debs v. U.S. (1918 Sedition Act)
(I thought about including this one, but I decided against it, as there seems to be confusion over more than one case...)
Legal Observations:There is also the Sedition Act of 1798. It is still on the books. But it was so very onerous that it was ruled into oblivion in about 40 years. Regarding the Sedition Act of 1798, I reference a quote from New York Times Co. v. Sullivan. This case is about the newspaper libel of public officials. Sullivan is a very important and profound decision in it own right, but is beyond the scope of this discussion.
Since it is very lengthy, I will only include the excerpt concerning the Sedition Act of 1798.
"...Drawing upon history, the Court analogized the civil law of libel, as applied by the Alabama court, to the Sedition Act of 1798, which had been invalidated "in the court of history", because of the restraint it "imposed on upon criticism of the government and public officials" (p. 276)."
The Oxford Guide to United States Supreme Court Decisions pg. 215There is also a lot of material about the Smith Act regarding the Communist Party (Noto, Yates et al) that touches on this subject, but you have to limit the scope somewhere.
So, enter the Sedition Act of 1918 and the Espionage Act of 1917...
Note that Brandenburg v. Ohio was in the 60's. This is where the policy finally changed from the "Clear and Present Danger" doctrine started by Holmes (Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes) to the "Direct Incitement Test" doctrine that is currently held. This was an evolutionary process that started about the turn of the 20th century. Laws were written, interpreted and rewritten along the way.
The "Clear and Present Danger" theory held that writing or speaking of Seditious Acts (contrary to governmental policy, authority or law) was sufficient grounds for action (actionable). The "Direct Incitement Test" theory relaxed this considerably and required action.
At first, it was sufficient to merely write inflammatory material to get yourself tossed into prison. These people (Abrams/Schenck) were doing this during WW1 (Debs did Seditious Acts earlier.) There was some lessening of severity of the view of inflammatory writings after WW1 ended. Holmes was gradually relenting in his view, for instance. WW2 saw similar activities, as far as nationalism and patriotism were concerned. But by the 60's, it had been recognized that speech and action were to be viewed separately. So, Brandenburg, the KKK'er actually was allowed to do things that got Abrams and the others tossed in the graybar motel!!! (That's jail.)
In summary, in 1917, the "Clear and Present Danger" doctrine prevailed. This gradually changed until in 1969 the "Direct Incitement Test" was established by the Brandenburg decision. The value of Free speech (and writing) overruled the restraint of criticism of the government. However, direct action is held to be legally actionable.
Mustang
PS Case reviews will follow in separate postings in this thread.