Some words are worth fighting for
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“Any system of prior restraints of expression comes to this court
bearing a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity.”
Supreme Court (Bantam Books, Inc. vs. Sullivan, 1963)
“Whore,” “Satan’s spawn” and “drunk” aren’t necessarily words to
live by, but sometimes hearing them is part of the price we pay in a
country where -- unless for a compelling reason -- our words, or our
writings, are not regulated before we say or publish them.
That was at the core of a decision of the 4th District Court of
Appeal on Aug. 11. The court overturned a trial court injunction that
prohibited Anne Lemen, a neighbor of the Village Inn in Balboa
Island, from using such defamatory words in her public bemoaning of
noise and other nuisances at the bar-restaurant.
We agree with the court’s opinion.
Perhaps our own free speech leanings show here, but imagine a
country in which for no good reasons of law or compelling interest,
the government censored the media’s coverage of news before it was
actually reported. Imagine City Council meetings in which reporters
were vetted by the government before they could publish the meeting’s
events. We don’t think that’s a healthy system.
To rule differently in Lemen’s case would have given too much
power to the government to censor what a person says before a person
says it. At least let the harsh words be said. The restaurant itself,
in this case, has firmer legal ground to stand on if its being a
“whorehouse” is alleged and not censored by the government. If she
really said it, the plaintiff can try to prove it.
Lemen has filed several nuisance complaints with police, started
petition drives, and, according to allegations in the trial court,
called coming-and-going customers, employees and a wife of one of the
owners names such as “whores,” “madam whore,” “drunks,” “Satan” and
“Satan’s spawn.” Among the prohibitions in the trial-court injunction
won by Village Inn, Lemen could not say that the bar sells to minors,
that it’s open until 6 a.m., that it makes sex videos, that it is
involved in child pornography or that it’s connected with the mafia.
But the restriction on Lemen was “...based solely on [the
statements’] content” and broadened to “anyone, anywhere, at any
time, in any context,” the appeals court said in its opinion. That
broad application restricted her rights to make a public grievance in
the first place.
“I don’t know what her problem is,” Balboa Island resident Marko
Slattery said of Lemen.
But like it or not -- like her or not -- Lemen’s problem was
protecting a cherished right: to be able to speak or publish speech
when there is -- as the court said -- no compelling state interest
justifying restraints on that speech, and when there is no equal
competing right that could trump it.
Harsh on the ears? Sometimes yes. But that is the price for free
speech. That’s worth fighting for.
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