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The First Amendment . AHA! 11 th grade Interdisciplinary Project Cunnane, Erby, Stahl, & Favianna. Pay attention & participate I will tell you when you need to take notes. PAY ATTENTION. The FIRST AMENDMENT to the US Constitution.
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The First Amendment AHA! 11th grade Interdisciplinary Project Cunnane, Erby, Stahl, & Favianna
Pay attention & participate I will tell you when you need to take notes PAY ATTENTION
The FIRST AMENDMENT to the US Constitution • Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
The 5 parts of the 1st amendment • RAPPS: • Religion • Assembly • Press • Petition • Speech
The government cannot tell you what to believe in or practice The government cannot tell you what NOT to believe in or what NOT to practice Religion:
Citizens can come together in public and in private You can meet for political, social, religious, or recreational purposes Assembly:
Information can be accessed from a ton of sources Government cannot control what is printed in newspapers, books, magazines etc. or what is broadcasted on TV or the radio Citizens can write what they want: letters to the editor, post their own websites or blogs, & make flyers… Press:
CNN Fox News www.msnbc.com www.sfgate.com NPR KPFA Youth Radio The New York Times The Boston Globe The Chicago Tribune
You have the right to request changes from your government You have the right to request stuff from your government contact representatives, petition for new laws Petition:
Say what you think! The government cannot make laws prohibiting what can say or tell us what to say Citizens have the right to criticize the government Speech: (expression)
“If we don't believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all.” ~Noam Chomsky • “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” ~Voltaire
Inalienable Rights Freedom of Consciousness: protect everyone, not just majority Our ideas belong to us Example: I am free to believe in the death penalty 1) First Amendment affirms Freedom of Individual
Shared information leads to informed choices and informed decision making Example: multiple news sources provide varied information and perspectives 2) Free Expression is the Foundation of Democracy
The government can regulate time, place and manner of political or religious beliefs but cannot regulate content Example: I have the right to be pro choice but if I want to hold a rally in SF I have to get a permit first 3) “Hands Off” policy
First Amendment belongs to all Americans First Amendment protects minorities limiting some rights will eventually limit everyone’s rights Example: If I am the only person in this room to support the War in Afghanistan, do I still have the RIGHT to my opinion? Can I still VOICE my opinion? 4) Other People’s Rights
Courts (government) steps in when 2 rights collide; often involves defamation Defamation: communication about a person that damages the person’s reputation Spoken = libel Written = slander 5) Balance of Rights
Actress Cameron Diaz sued The British Sun for implying that she had an affair with a married man. This was slanderous to her reputation (2005). Example of defamation
We can question what we want Asking questions helps us to understand choices and make better decisions 6) Questioning
So why is there a contradiction between our First Amendment rights as written and as practiced?
Learning Objectives: students will understand (write this down) • 1) The theory of the 1st Amendment as written & the practice of 1st Amendment rights; • 2) How artists have used 1st Amendment rights for social change & the legal limits of this expression • 3) Who is responsible for restricting 1st Amendment and on what basis; who is accountable for upholding the 1st Amendment & on what basis?