ANN ALTHOUSE DECONSTRUCTS FRANK RICH:
I wonder why Frank Rich wanted to evoke Free Speech case law when his aim in this column is to bemoan vigorous speech. I suppose he just meant that neither “You lie” in the House chamber or “Fire” in a crowded theater is good. Except that “fire” is good when there is a fire, which leaves Rich’s analogy setting up the argument that shouting “You lie” during a presidential speech is desirable if the President really is lying. But that’s absurd. We’d never get to the end of these already seemingly endless orations if that was the rule.
Plus this:
Not every impolite outburst equals uncontrolled anger, and I don’t remember Rich caring about all the angry statements that were aimed at George Bush. I remember him making them. He and lots of other brave dissenters loved calling Bush a liar. I don’t remember back then hearing anybody propounding the theory that free speech needed to be tempered lest it give “permission to crazy people.”
Me neither.