@red61544
Every right discussed in our constitution comes with grave responsibilities. Traditionally, the Supreme Court determines what those responsibilities are. The rights guaranteed in the Bill of Rights have been limited by the Court since Marbury v. Madison in 1803. That case provided judicial review, not only of individual cases, but of the law itself. The scope of that review determines not only what is allowed under the law, but also the limitations of what is allowed. The limits on free speech prohibit libel and slander. Freedom of religion doesn't extend to human sacrifices or use of prohibited drugs. None of the amendments is absolute, though individuals and organizations have tried to insist that they are ever since the Bill of Rights was ratified.
I have long thought they should have called it the "Bill of Rights and Responsibilities". Yes, we are all given rights. But it is up to us to used them responsibly. And failure to do so should (and does) come with ramifications.
Just like the 1st Amendment. Yes, you have a right to speak your mind. But it is not absolute. "Hate Speech" and "Inciting a riot" are illegal, as is other things, ranging from treason to sedition. And in the same way, some rights have been expanded over the centuries.
"Freedom of the Press" when it was written only covered the print media, because that was all there was at the time. But it also expanded to cover radio, newsreels, and later Television with the exact same protections. And the same with the Internet today.
If one is going to be 100% literal, as none of what we say here is "spoken", none of this is technically protected speech. Of course, anybody that claims that is an idiot, but a lot of people love to twist and interpret these and other parts of the Constitution to suit their own desires.
And finally, look at that phrase very carefully. For the most part, are those laws people are talking about Federal laws, or State laws?
This is yet another Constitutional minefield, but if a state enacts such a law, that is not "Congress". And the Supreme Court many times has essentially stated that a law is technically "Unconstitutional". Often attributed to President Lincoln, but the first known proven mention was by Justice Robert Jackson in a 1949 freedom of speech case.
}quote}This Court has gone far toward accepting the doctrine that civil liberty means the removal of all restraints from these crowds and that all local attempts to maintain order are impairments of the liberty of the citizen. The choice is not between order and liberty. It is between liberty with order and anarchy without either. There is danger that, if the Court does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.
There have been hundreds of cases like this, where various courts have basically said "Yes, you have a right, but you abuse it and that is what you are being punished for".