This is a fabulous (and very long) article explaining the Supreme Court's centuries-old struggle to distinguish incendiary speech that must be protected from speech that must be outlawed.

https://texaslawreview.org/the-second-founding-and-the-first-amendment/

The tieback to the outlawing of the speech of those enslaved and the incendiary speech of the abolitionists on the grounds that their speech was dangerous is quite interesting.

I spent the morning struggling to digest it.🤓

The Second Founding and the First Amendment | Texas Law Review

Introduction The nation’s founding compromise with slavery resulted in a Constitution that proclaimed universal liberty in theory while protecting human enslavement in practice.[1] After centuries of struggle and a cataclysmic Civil War, a new constitutional order emerged: A Second Founding of the nation that sought to dismantle the legacies of slavery and turn American law […]

Texas Law Review

@Teri_Kanefield

Good granny, I almost screeched to a halt when I saw "Texas Law Review". But, since it is coming from you, oh esteemed one, I will check it out thoroughly. Yikes, Happy Thanksgiving. carry on