
“Free speech is the right to shout "Theater!" in a crowded fire.”
Source: Soon to be a Major Motion Picture (1980), p. 214.
Source: The Sellout
“Free speech is the right to shout "Theater!" in a crowded fire.”
Source: Soon to be a Major Motion Picture (1980), p. 214.
“It should be illegal to yell 'Y2K' in a crowded economy.”
[199811242326.PAA28495@wall.org, 1998]
Usenet postings, 1998
1960s, The American Promise (1965)
Context: We must preserve the right of free speech and the right of free assembly. But the right of free speech does not carry with it, as has been said, the right to holler fire in a crowded theater. We must preserve the right to free assembly, but free assembly does not carry with it the right to block public thoroughfares to traffic. We do have a right to protest, and a right to march under conditions that do not infringe the constitutional rights of our neighbors. And I intend to protect all those rights as long as I am permitted to serve in this office. We will guard against violence, knowing it strikes from our hands the very weapons which we seek — progress, obedience to law, and belief in American values.
“Eugenics, of course, topples easily into racism. Engels himself wrote of the "racial trash".”
the groups who would necessarily be supplanted as scientific socialism came into its own. Season this outlook with a sprinkling of anti-capitalism and you often got Leftist anti-Semitism.
2010s, Nazism (2014)
The Trouble With the '64 Civil Rights Act
LewRockwell.com
2004-06-03
http://www.lewrockwell.com/paul/paul188.html
2000s, 2001-2005
Source: On addressing racism in her writings in “Diana Evans: 'There's a ruthlessness in me towards writing'” https://www.theguardian.com/books/2018/mar/19/diana-evans-interview-ordinary-people in The Guardian (2018 Mar 19)
Non-Fiction, Homage to QWERT YUIOP: Selected Journalism 1978-1985 (1986)
"The H.A.C. in South Africa", by Erskine Childers and Basil Williams, Smith & Elder, (London, 1903), p. 72.
Literary Years and War (1900-1918)