Debating Culture and the CourtroomPast and Present
Cultures, Courts, and the U.S. Constitution
By James H. Landman
Source: James H. Landman, "Trying Beliefs: The Law of Cultural Orthodoxy
and Dissent." Insights on
Law & Society 2.2 (winter 2002).
America is a nation where many different cultures live side by side.
Its educational institutions reflect this multiculturalism. The outlooks,
foods, religions, clothing, and even the jewelry of students in your
school most likely reflect norms established by the majority culture
and that of the very large minorities. On the other hand, there are
students in your school whose families belong to less populous minority
groups whose customs are so different from the norm that their pastimes,
foods, religions, and clothing may seem exotic to other students. These
families have chosen to adhere to the standards of their own small cultural
groups.
People living under the American system of justice expect that whatever
their customs and opinions are, they will be equally treated and equally
protected, whether they are pursuing an education, a career, or a religious
ideal. Many U.S. laws are designed to ensure the rights of minorities
and protect them from the tyranny of dominant groups. U.S. courts are
dedicated to upholding those laws.
Cultural Orthodoxy in Tudor England
The bigger groups in a nation, however, aren't always the ones that
dominate. Small groups, such as the English Tudor royalty of the 1500s,
used their political power to determine how their entire nation would
pray. Through laws and courts, they could regulate everything the people
said or did, with imprisonment, torture, and, sometimes, execution being
the punishments for failing to comply. This enforced cultural orthodoxy,
or set of cultural norms, was openly justified as needed to protect
the faith's purity, the state's stability, and the public safety. Unspoken
were the monarchs' determination to remain in power by controlling dissident
cultures in their realm.
The English story offered the Framers of the Constitution rich examples
of how the cultures of dominant groups could suppress weaker cultures,
and the English body of law was at the heart of many of the important
debates at the Constitutional Convention about the extent to which the
United States would tolerate and protect cultural difference. The First
Amendment's opening two clauses provided that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof." These provisions laid the legal grounds for defusing
what was then, and continues to be, one of the most volatile sources
of cultural strifeclashes between and among conflicting religious
cultures.
English law had long been a powerful alliance of church and state,
with political and religious orthodoxy going hand in hand from as far
back as the thirteenth century, when England was still a Catholic nation.
At that time, the Fourth Lateran Council imposed a duty on "all the
faithful" to take the sacrament (communion) and confess to a priest
once a year. It also condemned all heresies against Catholicism. Ecclesiastical
(church) courts tried heretics and handed the condemned to civil courts
for punishment. In this way, the church recognized the authority of
a loyal sovereign, who would in turn enforce the will of the Church
through civil courts, ensuring that people were conforming with church
teachings. This is the essence of an established church-a doctrine of
belief that gives legitimacy to a state structure, which in turn lends
its power and force to support the faith by persecuting dissident cultures.
An offense against one is often treated as an offense against the other.
Three hundred years later, the ecclesiastical and civil courts were
brought together when the English monarchy broke with the Roman Catholic
Church and established itself as the head of the Church of England.
Now an attack on the established church could be even more easily interpreted
as an attack on the king or queen. A series of laws legitimized the
succession of the royal line as supreme governors of the realm; imposed
a standard book of common prayer, rites, sacraments and ceremonies,
and punishments of up to life imprisonment on any religious figure who
committed blasphemy (contempt or lack of respect for the sacred)
by failing to follow and support the standards; and excluded anyone
who refused to take the sacrament from membership in English town corporations
and civil or military office. Thus, all Roman Catholics, nonconforming
Protestants, and Jews were barred from public office in the 1500s and
would remain so until that law was repealed in the 1800s. Official protection
of the established church against blasphemy still exists today in English
law.
Also in the 1500s, the Tudors established an administrative tribunal
called the Star Chamber, which served at their pleasure. Star Chamber
was not bound by common law procedurestrial by jury, for example,
was not required. Although the court could not impose capital punishment,
it could impose corporal punishments such as branding, maiming, and
whipping.
In the 1606 case De Libellis Famosis, Star Chamber defined seditious
libel (criticism of public persons or the government) as a crime
because it tended to undermine respect for public authority. Having
told the truth was no defense against a seditious libel charge because
the crime was based on the need to maintain public respect for government
and its agents. Star Chamber was dissolved in 1641, but seditious libel,
like blasphemy, became established as a common law offense. Charges
of blasphemous and seditious libel became practically interchangeable.
Both were seen as attacks on the state, which was now both religious
and political. The development of seditious libel as a common law offense
in England would prove to influence the development and interpretation
of law in American courtrooms hundreds of years later.
First Amendment and Culture
The First Amendment's opening clausesprotecting free exercise
of religion and prohibiting the establishment of a national religionwere
a direct response to the English experience with the tyranny of religious
orthodoxy, which the Framers were determined to prohibit. Nonetheless,
the practical effect of these protections on majority and minority religious
cultures in the United States has not been without surprises.
For most of U.S. history, the majority of Americans have practiced
some form of Christian Protestantism. Legal attempts to ban or suppress
the practice of other faiths have been rare, but lawmakers have at times
shown considerable imagination in passing laws that openly promoted
a state purpose but adversely affected the ability of minority cultures
to practice their beliefs.
One such Oregon law, declared unconstitutional in 1925 by the Supreme
Court in Pierce v. Society of Sisters
required all children between 8 and 16 to attend public schools, which
at the time still played a significant role in inculcating Anglo-Protestant
values. The law, which on the surface promoted the state's interest
in ensuring an adequate education for its citizens, had the practical
effect of destroying the Roman Catholic parochial schools that had developed
to give parents an alternative to the moral education offered in the
public school system.
Small religious groups have had mixed success in their attempts to
practice their faiths, such as those Native American tribes who have
been unable to regain ancient burial grounds and treasured religious
artifacts seized for display in museums. In 1862, Congress passed the
Morrill Act, making the public but limited Mormon practice of plural
marriage a federal crime. Utah was denied statehood until its church
president finally clarified the official Mormon position against plural
marriage in 1890. On the other hand, the Supreme Court overturned a
municipal ordinance in Florida that prohibited Caribbean immigrants
who practiced the ancient African Santeria religion from performing
ritualistic animal sacrifice within city limits. The Court found the
ordinance unconstitutional because it singled out followers of this
faith while allowing the killing of animals for nonreligious reasons
such as food, hunting, and fishing.
Ironically, the First Amendment's religious clauses have frustrated
many faith-minded Americans in large and small cultural groups who see
court interpretations of the establishment clause, such as those banning
prayer at school and public events, as a restriction of their right
to freely exercise their religions, and even as a government assault
on their religious beliefs and a suppression of their religious culture.
The First Amendment's third clauseguaranteeing freedom of speechhas
likewise met with unexpected challenges, some of which relate to the
offense of seditious libel.
The English Treason Act of 1352 defined treason in both concrete and
vague terms. The Framers adopted the concrete portions that defined
treason as levying war against the United States or "adhering to their
enemies, giving them aid and comfort." They omitted the vague offense
of "compassing or imagining the death of a king," which criminalized
an intentionan act of the mind. English law eventually developed
the doctrine that, in order to come before the court, an act of the
mind had to be accompanied by an overt act.
There have been relatively few cases of treason in U.S. history and
few controversies involving the treason clauses. But the continuing
force of the English common law of seditious libel on American law remains
highly controversial. The U.S. Constitution did not grant the branches
of government the authority to regulate speech, and it denied the government
authority to prosecute political dissidencethe expression
of thoughts or ideas about the governmentthat did not rise to
the level of treason. The First Amendment's provisions that "Congress
shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech" strengthened
this protection.
Yet, under the American system, is one entirely immune from punishment
if speech is seditious or otherwise injurious to the common good? Sometimes
the answer has been no. In one landmark sedition case, Abrams v. United
States (250 U.S. 616) (1919), the Supreme Court upheld the conviction
of five alien radicals for publishing two leaflets criticizing the U.S.
war effort in World War I, with the government's case including the
argument that the First Amendment left the English common law of seditious
libel in force.
The federal government has enacted several sedition acts over the course
of American history. All were passed in times of great uncertainty,
when the nation was on the brink of or actively engaged in war. Tolerance
of dissidence tended to be low, and distrust of cultural "outsiders"
ran high.
Historically in times of crisis, U.S. courts have allowed the government
generous rein to restrict speech that may pose a threat to the government.
Throughout the twentieth century, the Supreme Court struggled to define
a workable balance between free speech rights and the need of the federal
government to protect national security, including the test that spoken
or published words present "a clear and present danger" of substantive
evils that Congress has the right to prevent.
Today, in an era of tragedy and war that is producing new fears of
sedition, there still exists no legal formula that conclusively defines
protected speech. From all sectors of American culture, there is unprecedented
support for the way the war is being prosecuted by the executive branch.
Yet, as in the past, a culture of political dissent exists in America
that was instilled at its inception to protect against the tyranny of
political orthodoxy in what was fashioned as a secular, rather than
a religious, state. That dissent will find expression, challenging the
laws and the courts to uphold the principles upon which the nation,
however tensely, rests.
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