Political Science, asked by donmbrns, 11 months ago

Which power is given to Congress by the “clear and present danger” rule?

the power to prevent harmful speech against the government
the power to prevent appeals for convictions of espionage
the power to draft soldiers during time of war
the power to outlaw the use of words that refer to weapons

Answers

Answered by zerotohero
3

Answer:

a) the power to prevent harmful speech against government.

Explanation:

It is a doctrine adopted by the Supreme Court of U.S. to determine under what circumstances limits are to be placed on The First Amendments. it was established on the case of Schenck vs US. This was a check of freedom of speech so it is not misused for the threat on the country.

Answered by Arslankincsem
3

Answer:

A. the power to prevent harmful speech against the government.

The most stringent insurance of free speech would not secure a man in erroneously yelling flame in a theater and causing a frenzy. The inquiry for each situation is whether the words are utilized in such conditions and are of such a nature as to make an obvious peril that they will achieve the substantive wrongs that Congress has an option to avoid.

This statement, while celebrated for its similarity, additionally gave the Court a down to business standard to utilize when looked with free discourse difficulties. The ""clear and present danger"" standard supported the utilization of an adjusting test to scrutinize the state's confinements on the free speech on a case-by-case premise. In the event that the Court found that there was a ""clear and present danger"" that the discourse would deliver mischief that Congress had taboo, at that point the state would be legitimized in constraining that discourse.

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