|
Mime-Version: |
1.0 |
Sender: |
|
Subject: |
|
From: |
|
Date: |
Thu, 28 Aug 1997 17:01:19 -0400 |
In-Reply-To: |
|
Content-Type: |
text/plain; charset="us-ascii" |
Reply-To: |
|
>I'm not a lawyer either. :)
>
>At 10:27 AM 8/28/97 -0400, Jacob Haller wrote:
>
>>>The government takes action amounting to a prior restraint when it
> ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>
>The analysis stops right there. The First Amendment (for those who wave it
>around so vigorously without reading it) starts "Congress shall make no
>law..." You are not Congress. You are not the government, nor are you
>acting in a gov't sanctioned capacity.
Well, the fourteenth amendment makes it a bit less simplistic than that,
but yes.
On the other hand, the analysis has to go a bit farther if (say) the
question were about a mailing list running on a computer owned by a state
university.
I still don't doubt that it would be legal, but I would be far out of my
bounds in saying why, exactly.
-jwgh
|
|
|