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February 23rd, 2026

Insight

Protecting the Speech We Hate

Judge Andrew P. Napolitano

By Judge Andrew P. Napolitano

Published Dec. 20, 2022

"Those who lack the courage to change history are sadly doomed to become its objects."

— Rev. Fr. Alfred Delp, S.J. (1907-1945)

Not too long ago, it was considered unfashionable to discuss the Nazis in Germany in the 1930s and '40s in terms of anyone's present-day behavior. The Nazis were the most depraved monsters in modern history, the argument went, whose horrors could not rationally be compared to anyone's behavior today.

Well, just last week, the infamous Ye — the rapper formerly known as Kanye West — told Alex Jones that he admired Hitler and liked the Nazis. This was shortly after Ye and his Holocaust-denying friend Nick Fuentes dined with former President Donald Trump. And the Trump/Ye/Fuentes dinner preceded by a week Trump's public call for the "termination" of the Constitution along with its guarantee of the freedom of speech. And all that preceded Ye's posting on Twitter of a Star of David superimposed upon a swastika, and Elon Musk's subsequent suspension of Ye's Twitter account.

What's going on here?

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What's going on are variants of hate speech. In Ye's case, it is hatred for the Jewish people and the natural law. In Fuentes' case, it is hatred for the Jewish people and the truths of history. In Musk's case, it is hatred of hatred, but also of the freedom of speech.

Is hate speech protected by the First Amendment? In a word: YES.

Here is the backstory.

Under natural law principles — the belief that our individual rights come from our humanity — all persons can think as they wish and say what they think and publish what they say, without a government permission slip and immune from the interference of anyone else. The signatories of the Declaration of Independence and the framers of the Constitution and the ratifiers of the Bill of Rights fervently believed this.

The Declaration pronounces our rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness as inalienable. The Constitution theoretically separates, divides, checks and balances government so as to deter the accumulation of too much power in one place. We all know how that has worked! And the Bill of Rights openly restrains the government from interfering with fundamental individual liberties, even liberties unarticulated in the Constitution.

So, the First Amendment doesn't grant the freedom of speech; it prohibits Congress from interfering with it. The 14th Amendment and definitive judicial interpretations have imposed the same prohibitions on all levels and all branches of government.

What about speech that hurts by its very utterance? What about hate speech?

Hate speech articulates an intense or passionate dislike of a person because of a group to which the person belongs. Membership in the group is often immutable, such as race, place of birth or ancestry; and the speech is often so intense as to be immediately intimidating or threatening. Hate speech is also hurled because of personal characteristics, some individually chosen and some chosen by nature.

I am not talking about acceptable hatred — hatred of sin or evil, or hatred of hatred. I am talking about hatred of human beings.

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