Thankfully X isn’t real life
Unfortunately, social media is real life to some and social media has successfully radicalized people (i.e., suicide bombers aligned to Al Quida) so why not people like Tyler Robinson? If he continously hears that Republicans are fascist and Hitlers, why not kill Baby Hitler (Charlie Kirk) to save the world?
Free speech is a precious right but there is a limit to it. Celebrating a killer for taking out a political opponent could lead to copycats. Having that kind of rhetoric from a professor who is shaping the lives of young people is reprehensible on all levels whether it crosses the constitutional line of limitation. Rather than celebrating Charlie Kirks' death, why wouldn't the professor use his/her platform to debate the merits of the issue? It is intellectually lazy to use flamatory labels like fascism to incite hatred when you cannot make an argument on its merits for your views. Debate of ideas should be encouraged, particularly in college.
One of my sons was part of Turning Point USA @ Ohio State. He said he had to be careful in some classes or his grades would be impacted. His brothers (both liberal) agreed he should do that given their experiences at Clemson and Indiana University. This was in the 2016-2020 years, but it's probably worse now. I never found that acceptable because I encourage debate and exchange of ideas in a household that feels like a rainbow of political positions. That's how my college experience was and I'm sad society changed.
Google Summary.
The Supreme Court limits prosecution for true threats by requiring that the prosecution prove the defendant acted with at least recklessness regarding whether their words would be taken as a serious expression of intent to cause harm. A true threat is a serious expression conveying an intent to commit unlawful violence, but the First Amendment protects speech that isn't a genuine threat or lacks the required mental state, even if it's offensive.
Elements of a True Threat
For a statement to be considered a true threat and lose First Amendment protection, it generally must meet two criteria:
Serious Expression of Intent: The statement or act must be a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence. It cannot be something said in jest or in an attempt to be idle.
Mental State: The prosecution must show that the speaker acted with at least recklessness in creating a statement that would be interpreted by a reasonable person as a serious expression of intent to commit violence.
Key Considerations
Recklessness
: The Supreme Court's ruling in Counterman v. Colorado established that a defendant's subjective awareness of the potential danger of their words, or a reckless disregard for that danger, is necessary for a true threat prosecution.
Reasonable Person Standard
: While the speaker must have a specific mental state, the assessment of whether the statement is a true threat is often based on how a reasonable person would interpret the statement in its context.
First Amendment Protection
: The First Amendment generally protects free speech, but it does not protect speech that falls into certain narrow categories, including true threats.
Context Matters
: The specific context and circumstances surrounding the communication are crucial in determining whether it constitutes a true threat.