Blogs > Liberty and Power > What is Freedom of Speech?

Aug 16, 2009

What is Freedom of Speech?




Last week, Miss California Carrie Prejean, who eventually came in second in the annual Miss USA contest, was asked as part of the competition to give her opinion of gay marriage. Her answer was that though she thought it was great that our society has developed to the point that people can choose to love people of the same sex, marriage should nonetheless be reserved for relationships between opposite sex partners. In this nasty and crudely disingenuous video, the questioner makes it plain enough that he voted against her in part because she took the wrong position on this issue.

One blogger has asserted that, however obnoxious his behavior might be, it has nothing to do, as some have claimed it does, with free speech:

Miss Prejean has as much free speech as anyone else in America. She was asked for her opinion, and she gave it. Live on television. If asked again, she could say the same thing. She could sing it from the rooftops, provided she stop before 11pm, lest she cause a noise violation. No one is restricting her speech in any way.

The question of whether or not she lost the crown for her remarks isn't the same as the question of free speech. The Miss USA pageant is an enterprise, not a government body. They may choose whomever they wish. It is up to the judges to decide, on whatever arbitrary grounds they see fit to apply, who wears the Miss USA crown for a year.
I think this reflects two sorts of confusion. First, free speech in our culture is generally not understood as a matter of being able to speak (positive freedom) but of not being punished or penalized if you do (negative freedom). By this blogger's logic, the only penalty that would abridge my freedom of speech would be execution. After all, as long as I am left alive, I am able (though perhaps in a prison cell and under the threat of further punishments) to shout out my opinion. Free speech, I say, is a matter of speaking without fear of being punished. It is not about whether I have the capacity to speak if I don't mind paying the penalty.

The second confusion is in assuming that free speech is a mere matter of governmental arrangements. Arguably, this is true of the right of free speech, but free speech and speaking freely are broader than that. Indeed, free speech probably cannot survive in a society in which people think of it in such a narrow way.

As John Stuart Mill pointed out in 1859, free speech advances our understanding of the world and constantly improves our ideas about it. Governmental arrangements like the First Amendment serve these vital functions as part of a wider social system of ideas and practices that protect speech. Mill went so far as to say that we ought never to judge the content of what someone says as immoral unless it is directly harmful to someone else. He reasoned that the threat of the sting of our disapproval penalizes expression in fundamentally the same way that legal punishments do. This may be going too far, but I would say that at least we should not go out of our way to penalize someone for the offense that Orwell called" crimethink." This ought to me mere good manners.

Without such standards of civility, the narrowly legal institutions of free speech will not really do what they are supposed to do. In fact, without and the appreciation for liberty that supports such standards, the legal arrangements may not even be around much longer.
[This is cross-posted in my personal blog,"E pur si muove!"


comments powered by Disqus

More Comments:


Bogdan Enache - 4/26/2009

I don't think I wrote that with an explicit language-game argument in mind, but rather with a dose of - actually quite related - Swift sarcam; however if there is a "standard" argument it would be something along the line of Wittgenstein's discussion of language games. It's not the case to goo that deep, as it were, in this situation.


Roderick T. Long - 4/26/2009

if I change my diet, cereals won't be called fruits; or if I (and others) write with my left hand it won't going to be renamed right

What is that supposed to be an argument for? You've lost me.


Roderick T. Long - 4/26/2009

Well, yes. Those answers are usually idiotic. The contest organisers are trying to pretend that the ability to give thoughtful answers is part of what's being judged and valued in beauty contests when of course it isn't.


Bogdan Enache - 4/26/2009

The problem is that, from watching the video and reading the contestant's answer, the referent for the adjective "idiot" is misplaced. She gave an articulated and honest answer but this guy took the pains to make an video in order to do two things any "wannabe dictator in disguise" (including those who mascarade around in High Priests of Tolerance) do : 1) viciously undermine the reputation of the person whose opinion you do not share (ad hominem); 2) take it as a given that your version of what is Correct is the Unique Truth and implicitly upheld that Uniformity with your particular preference or opinion should be invariably the Norm. How can one have a remotely rational discussion in these circumstances?! What is one to understand?! Was it the effect of the cocktail? How can he be taken seriously?!

Let me add that I have publicly supported many "gay causes", including whatever form of civil union that can be crafted out; know some ok gay people etc ; but at the same time I have to say that for a group demanding more freedom in a very private matter many advocates of gay causes that I see make even the most bigoted monks (note : the pejorative use of the term doesn't apply to a very important part of them, having strong beliefs doesn't mean intolerance) that I've met look like "saints of reasons", let alone intelligent and decent. The whole thing, for instance, regarding banning the use of the words mum and dad in kindergartens and schools, in Britain I think, also sounds straight from Orwell. In mean, let's face it : if I change my diet, cereals won't be called fruits; or if I (and others) write with my left hand it won't going to be renamed right.


Aeon J. Skoble - 4/26/2009

I watchd the video you linked to. He said he voted against her because she was an idiot, not because she opposes ssm. So what's the problem? It's not like she's otherwise "entitled" to win.


Lester Hunt - 4/25/2009

I agree, of course. But, you know, I just saw a clip of Miss Arizona answering a question about "universal health care as a right of citizenship" and it was utter drivel. Quite literally, the poor dear failed to say anything at all. She made Miss California sound like Wittgenstein.


Stormy Dragon - 4/25/2009

No, in that case he lost something because he had already been given the trip (even if he hadn't taken it yet). And if the woman already was Miss America and was decrowned because of saying this outside the contest, then I'd agree she was being punished.

But Miss Prejean didn't have a promise or even an expectation of becoming Miss America, so I don't think it's equivalent to your example.


Roderick T. Long - 4/24/2009

I don't know what the judge's criteria for evaluating answers are supposed to be, but apart from the content of her judgment about gay marriage, I would have a problem with the defense she gave of it -- namely, that that is how she was raised. "I was raised to believe p" is not adequate as a move in a public discussion as to whether p is justified.


Lester Hunt - 4/24/2009

I was thinking something like what James says above, except that I think this does mean that the judge's presumed reaction (for simplicity, voting against her) was a penalty for her expression of her views and that consequently this was a matter of free speech.

I have a colleague who, through actions of the University, had a prospective trip to a conference in Japan taken away from him because of comments he had made in class that offended some Hmong students. By Stormy's reasoning, one might say: How was he being punished? Before the university's actions he had not taken the trip to Japan, and after its actions he had still not taken his trip to Japan. It is possible to do something to somebody that constitutes a penalty or punishment even though it doesn't make them worse off than they were before -- it can do so by making them worse off than the would have been otherwise (where this is done illegitimately).


James Otteson - 4/24/2009

I think the only grounds on which she might have a legitimate complaint are if the criteria on which the verbal answers to questions are supposed to be judged do not include (or perhaps explicitly exclude?) personal political biases. In other words, this judge employed illegitimate standards in evaluating her answer to that question.

So I don't think it's a free speech issue, but, rather, one of professionalism. Having judges like that damage the pageant's credibility.

My guess--though I don't know for sure--is that the rules require judges to evaluate the answer's cogency and clarity, as well as the answerer's poise and eloquence. The judge's agreement or disagreement with the moral or political position they take is probably not supposed to inform his evaluation.


Stormy Dragon - 4/24/2009

In what way was Carrie Prejean punished? She was, at the end of the competition, no worse off than she was at the beginning.

Are you suggesting that withholding a reward constitutes interfering with free speech. The consequences of that logic seem to lead quickly into the realm of absurdity. I don't go to Michael Moore's movies, for instance. Does that mean I'm interfering with his free speech because it means he's not getting my ticket payment?