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Unprecedented - Not Alone In My Own Body

Not Alone In My Own Body

02/24/22 • 41 min

1 Listener

Unprecedented

Emily Heiden was pregnant, in a panic, and looking for advice. An internet search yielded what she understood to be a secular clinic — one she assumed would discuss her options “without politics or hype,” as the website promised. But she soon discovered that the clinic wasn’t what she thought and felt deceived. And she wasn’t the only one.

California, concerned that too many religious pregnancy centers were misleading vulnerable women, passed a law requiring them to announce that low-cost prenatal care — including abortion — was available directly from the state. But the centers sued, arguing that First Amendment protections prevented them from having to advertise abortion services.

This week, we discuss whether a state can compel you to say something you disagree with on moral grounds — from the perspective of the 2018 case NIFLA v. Becerra.


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit unprecedented.substack.com
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Emily Heiden was pregnant, in a panic, and looking for advice. An internet search yielded what she understood to be a secular clinic — one she assumed would discuss her options “without politics or hype,” as the website promised. But she soon discovered that the clinic wasn’t what she thought and felt deceived. And she wasn’t the only one.

California, concerned that too many religious pregnancy centers were misleading vulnerable women, passed a law requiring them to announce that low-cost prenatal care — including abortion — was available directly from the state. But the centers sued, arguing that First Amendment protections prevented them from having to advertise abortion services.

This week, we discuss whether a state can compel you to say something you disagree with on moral grounds — from the perspective of the 2018 case NIFLA v. Becerra.


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit unprecedented.substack.com

Previous Episode

undefined - People Think They’re Living in a Free Country

People Think They’re Living in a Free Country

So much of what we do here at Booksmart Studios comes down to the power of speech. Lexicon Valley examines the words and phrases we use to convey ideas. Banished explores what happens when speech runs afoul of current orthodoxy. And on Bully Pulpit, Bob Garfield uses his megaphone to expose the hypocrisy and machinations of those who care more about insulating the entrenched power of the few than about safeguarding the fragile welfare of the many.

We’re proud to announce our newest offering, focusing on the very source of our freedom of speech. Unprecedented tells the raw and emotional stories of ordinary people who, as they pursued justice all the way to the Supreme Court, pushed the limits of our First Amendment rights.

In each episode, you’ll meet the accidental guardians of perhaps our most cherished liberty. They are war protesters and religious zealots, Ku Klux Klan members and internet trolls. They are Americans who, regardless of their social or political views — or even an awareness of the stakes — have helped us fill in the Constitutional gaps that our Founding Fathers left open to interpretation.

Through captivating interviews with the plaintiffs of precedent-setting cases — many of whom have never been interviewed before — you will learn about your right to be mean, to threaten others or to simply not say anything at all.

Hosted by Booksmart Studios executive producers Matthew Schwartz and Michael Vuolo, with special appearances by NPR’s Nina Totenberg, Unprecedented originally aired on Washington, DC’s NPR station in 2019.

Unprecedented begins with the story of a man who, nearly a half-century ago, committed a minor act of civil disobedience when he covered up the state motto on his license plate. George Maynard battled New Hampshire over the slogan Live Free or Die, which he found personally and religiously repugnant. His beliefs would land him in jail, cost him his job and carry him all the way to the Supreme Court.


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit unprecedented.substack.com

Next Episode

undefined - Terry Abrahamson’s Dirty Joke

Terry Abrahamson’s Dirty Joke

On today’s show, the dirty joke that made it to the Supreme Court.

When asked to pen some biting humor for the pages of Hustler back in 1983, writer Terry Abrahamson took aim at evangelical Christian preacher Jerry Falwell. The result was a vulgar parody of a real Campari ad — though instead of celebrities coyly talking about their “first time” tasting the Italian liqueur, Abrahamson wrote a fictional account of Falwell’s first time having sex (SPOILER: it was in an outhouse, with his own mother). Falwell sued Hustler for intentional infliction of emotional distress, and the Supreme Court had to decide: Does the First Amendment give us the right to parody a public figure?


This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit unprecedented.substack.com

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