Speech is not an absolute, above and beyond control by the legislature when its judgment, subject to review here, is that certain kinds of speech are so undesirable as to warrant criminal sanction. Nothing is more certain in modem society than the principle... Communist Methods of Infiltration - Стр. 1679авторы: United States. Congress. House. Committee on Un-American Activities - 1953Полный просмотр - Подробнее о книге
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1967 - Страниц: 608
...which is beyond the control of the Congress; and when legislation, reviewable in the courts, provides that certain kinds of speech are so undesirable as to warrant criminal penalty, there is no abridgment of freedom merely because speech is involved. Dennis v. United States,... | |
| United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary - 1968 - Страниц: 702
...be applied flexibly without regard to the circumstances of each case. Speech is not an absolute, and above and beyond control by the legislature, when...its judgment subject to review here is that certain of .speech are so undesirable as to warrant crimiunl sanction. Judge Smith, would you say that this... | |
| Barry D. Riccio - 1994 - Страниц: 264
...Vinson, who in a noted Supreme Court decision earlier that decade proclaimed with absolute assurance that "nothing is more certain in modern society than the principle that there are no absolutes. . . ."129 Still, Lippmann was not a voice crying in the intellectual wilderness. Nor, one might add,... | |
| James E. St. Clair, Linda C. Gugin - 2002 - Страниц: 420
...circumstances of the case." "Speech," he declared, "is not an absolute," and the legislature can deem that "certain kinds of speech are so undesirable as to warrant criminal sanction." Wading into a thicket about relativism, Vinson wrote, "Nothing is more certain in modern society than... | |
| Charles Gaines - 2006 - Страниц: 422
...a foundational principle of governing America. Listen to his remarks regarding constitutional law^ "Nothing is more certain in modern society than the principle that there are no absolutes," He was a fool ! There are absolutes and he simply was not aware of them. Dr Schaefer warned that a... | |
| R. Jonathan Moore - 2007 - Страниц: 225
...Chicago EERDMANS -- Suing for America's Soul (Moore) pg cxs Friday, May 04, 2007 1:36:57 PM Contexts Nothing is more certain in modern society than the principle that there are no absolutes. Chief Justice Fred Vinson, 195 11 If the Judeo-Christian principles that served as the source of all... | |
| George Anastaplo - 2007 - Страниц: 346
...decision in Dennis v. United States (1951). The Chief Justice had disclosed, on that 1951 occasion, "Nothing is more certain in modern society than the principle that there are no absolutes." It could be disclosed at the same time, as we have seen, "that all concepts are relative." The Opinion... | |
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