Random
First Amen.
100

Free Exercise 

Substantial burden on religion free exercise analyze under strict scrutiny

-compelling

-least restrictive means 

If Neutral Law of general application: Apply Rational Basis

-rationally related to legit state interest 

100

Forum Doctrine 

Traditional Public Forum: park, road, town square, Shouldn’t restrict except for TMP

 

Non-public Forum: Only exist because of government (prison, military base), Government can have more restriction here, Gov. can restrict content based here but not viewpoint based 

200

Proving Discrimination 

1) disparate impact 

2) discriminatory intent 


200

Look at law around speech and ask..content based (viewpoint), or content-neutral...then what analysis...

IF LAW IS CONTENT BASED OR VIEWPOINT BASED, ANALYZE UNDER STRICT SCRUTINY 

 

IF LAW IS CONTENT-NEUTRAL, THEN GOVERNMENT CAN PUT RESTRICTIONS ON FREE SPEECH THROUGH TPM 

300

Establishment Clause: Coercion Test 

 The coercion test, derived from Supreme Court case law, evaluates whether governmental actions or policies effectively coerce individuals into adopting a particular religious belief or participating in religious activities. 

If the law or governmental action applies significant pressure on indivduals as such that could be deemed to “coerce” them into conforming to certain religious practices or beliefs, then the action will be deemed to be unconstitutional. Factors the court can look to to determine if there is coercion is the setting (location), nature of the government action, and vulnerability or characteristics of those participating in the action. 

OFFENSE DOES NOT EQUAL COERCION, Look at historical practices and understanding 

300

O'Brien Test Expressive Conduct 

When speech and non-speech elements are combined in the same course of conduct, a sufficiently important governmental interest in regulating the nonspeech element can justify incidental limitations on First Amendment freedoms. The regulations must meet the following requirements: 1) be within the constitutional power of the government to enact, 2) further an important or substantial governmental interest, 3) the interest must be unrelated to the suppression of speech (content-neutral), and 4) prohibit no more than is essential to further that interest. If the regulation passed is not content-neutral, then the regulation must pass strict scrutiny, where the government has a compelling interest and the means are narrowly tailored to achieve the goal.  

COUNTER TO THIS IS JOHNSON-NO REASON TO MAKE A LAW FOR FLAG BURNING OTHER THAN TO LIMIT SPEECH/EXPRESSION 

400

Everson v. Board of Education: Transportation Case for Establishment. Why was this deemed constitutional?

1. Law was neutral and did not pinpoint one school (student) over another 

2. Money went to parents and parents had Choice, and money did not go to the church 

400

Pickering-Garcetti Test Public Employee

The Pickering-Garcetti test serves as a critical framework for evaluating the First Amendment rights of public employees regarding their speech. By distinguishing between speech made in an official capacity and speech made as a private citizen, it balances the interests of public employees against the legitimate government interests in the workplace.


-speech made during official duty--NOPE

-Speech made not in official, Do pickering balance test to weigh EE's interest in speaking against the ER's interest in maintaining order

500

Central Hudson Test Free Speech 

  • Does the speech concern lawful, non-misleading activity? 
  • Does the gov. have an important interest?
  • Does the regulation directly advance that interest? AND
  • Is the regulation the least restrictive means?