You seem to be assuming that Phelps has, in fact, broken existing laws in his protests.
I'm not. I'm specifically responding to what Tricky said:
Tricky said:
It might be considered harassment or slander by private individuals like yourself, but unless some legal authority agrees with you, then it's not. If it is determined to be harassment or slander, then there are already laws to take care of it..
Tricky seems to be arguing that either Phelps' actions are not illegal (and therefore should not be illegitimated), or else they're already illegal (and no additional law are required). In either case, he's suggesting that the MO legislature acted inappropriately. I simply point out that this is a false dichotomy. They may well be illegal in some abstract Platonic sense, but no law enforcement agency/court has been able or willing to enforce the existing law against him.
If this were the case, then the MO legislature has sent a clear and appropriate message about enforcing the old law in the process of creating the new.
I don't know enough about Phelps' exact conduct to have a relevant opinion about whether or not he's broken existing laws, and as you point out, he's a very smart lawyer with a practical specialization in First Amendment law, so I suspect he knows
exactly how far he can push it.
Of course, the other possible resolution of Tricky's dilemma is to suggest that even if Phelps' conduct
isn't illegal, it nevertheless
should be. The right to free speech is never absolute, and there are lots of kinds of speechlike behavior that
should be restricted. People just differ on what they are. My personal favorite is the general inability under US law to slander or libel a group. despite some case law to the contrary (e.g.
BEAUHARNAIS v. ILLINOIS). In my opinion, defaminig a group can cause as much or more damage than defaming a specific individual, and we need dig no deeper than Krystallnacht to demonstrate that. I think that this thread demonstrates quite clearly that reasonable people can and do disagee on whether Phelps' actions
should be criminalized, a variation on the question of whether society through its agent the state has a legitimate interest in preventing this kind of behavior.
Free speech theologians such as Tricky :
As long as the funeral protestors are obeying the same laws as people who picket in front of the UN (for example) then they deserve the same protection of the laws. That you find them highly offensive should make no difference.
have little ground to stand on. There's a clear articulable difference between a (private) funeral service and a (public) entity like the UN; a funeral is not a political forum. If I find picketing
at a funeral to be highly offensive, that difference alone is sufficient for me to write a constitutional place/time/manner restriction. I simply have to accept that this also means that good people can't protest at bad people's funerals, either -- but I consider the idea of "good people protesting at a funeral" to be an oxymoron, since good people just don't protest at funerals. That's part of how you can tell they're good people.