If you don’t want to risk being drowned out by opponents,
don’t hold a rally on the Boston Commons.
The “Free Speech” rally on the Boston commons on August 19 steamed
ahead in the wake of the deadly attack by a rightest in Charlottesville the
week before. The Boston organizers of the rally declined to cancel or
postpone, and, in its supporters included not only of the “alt-lite”
anti-feminist, anti-immigrant, “anti-sharia,”
nationalist sorts, but also open alt-right white supremacists al a
Charlottesville, including the Klan. Understanding the rally to be another expression
of the extreme right, the counterprotesters
were many times more numerous than the rightests. The antis, although
physically separated from the rally by the police, drowned out the rally’s speakers. This has led to much
internet whining that the left violated the free speech rights of the right
wing rally.
Not being a governmental organization, the counterpotestors
cannot have violated the First Amendment. There remains, however, a question
whether they violated the underlying spirit of free speech principles by
shouting down the rightests.
Anyone who
lobbied the city to prohibit the rally on content grounds, even indirectly on
content grounds, would have violated those principles in my view. I would also argue that a scrupulous
adherence to free speech principles would usually require their opponents to
forebear shouting down rightists if they held their gathering in an
auditorium. (An occasional heckle is one
thing; drowning out the program is another.)
A rally held the Boston Commons, however, makes an implicit
appeal to the general public in, around, and passing through that public space. The organizers would have been delighted had the ambient Bostonians flocked to
and applauded the rally. They should, then, accept in good grace the opposite
eventuality. As the public had a free
speech right to cheer, they had an equal right to jeer, and to jeer as long and
as loudly as they wanted.
I recognize that the distinction between when drowning out
opponents is morally and politically permissible free speech and when it
violates the free speech rights of those drowned out only roughly follows the
distinction between public parks and indoor meeting spaces. There will be some
outdoor, public space gatherings at which one should at most heckle and some
circumstances in which drowning out is permissible in auditoriums, but it is a
useful rough cut that a rally open to all those who want to lend their voices
in support is also fair game for all who want their voices to sound in
opposition.
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