10/31/2024
Here are some key things to remember as you communicate:
Be responsible. What you say and do matters. You’re responsible for your words and actions and you’ll be held accountable for them.
Be helpful. Your voice is your contribution — make it productive.
Be thoughtful. Your statements can be attributed to United States of America regardless of your intent, and you should be thoughtful about making statements that could cause others to make incorrect assumptions.
Our country is threatened when our constitution is threatened when the first amendment is taken away from us then the rest of the Constitution will be too. Do not let any sitting Administration a government for making and enforcing laws. of any kind that violates our constitution and your rights as an American citizen.
The Biden and Harris Administration wants to take these right from us. Starting with the first amendment by censorship and our second amendment. Then all our rights as citizens. How tough would a President Kamala Harris be to fight for all American citizens if it any thing like it is as vice president God help the USA
American citizens have many rights, including:
Freedom of expression: The right to express yourself and your ideas
Freedom of worship: The right to worship as you choose
Right to a fair trial: The right to a speedy trial by a jury of your peers
Right to vote: The right to vote in elections for public officials
Right to apply for federal jobs: The right to apply for most jobs with the federal government
Right to petition for family members: The right to petition for certain family members to obtain lawful permanent residence
Right to a U.S. passport: The right to apply for a U.S. passport, which allows you to travel internationally
The First Amendment of the United States Constitution protects freedom of speech, but there are some types of speech that are not protected:
Obscenity: Speech that is considered obscene is not protected by the First Amendment.
Fighting words: Words that are inflammatory and could cause the listener to retaliate or break the peace.
True threats: Speech that is a true threat is not protected by the First Amendment.
Inciting imminent lawless action: Speech that incites people to commit a crime or engage in illegal activity is not protected by the First Amendment.
Defamation: Defamatory speech is not protected by the First Amendment.
False advertising: False advertising is not protected by the First Amendment.
Government speech: The government can censor its own speech.
Public employee speech: Public employees are not protected from employer discipline for statements made while performing their official duties.
The First Amendment also protects freedom of the press, which includes books, newspapers, magazines, art, film, music, and internet materials.