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Nat Hentoff: Supreme Court Got āMartinezā Wrong

Nat Hentoff, an ardent, principled defender of the First Amendment and a member of ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½'s Board of Advisors, has written a about how last week's Supreme Court decision negatively impacts the First Amendment right to free association.
Hentoff laments the Court's "embrace of political correctness" in denying the Christian Legal Society (CLS) at UC Hastings College of the Law the right to set belief-based parameters for who can be a voting member or leader of the group. The Court had previously affirmed a right to set such parameters in Boy Scouts of America v. Dale. In that case, Hentoff reminds us, the Supreme Court acknowledged that if the majority can force a group to accept certain members, then that hampers the group's ability to express its own views. Hentoff asserts that the Court disregarded this point in Martinez when it declared constitutional a Hastings policy that requires all officially recognized student groups to accept "all comers."
Hentoff also praises FIREfor "staying fully and proudly with every American's First Amendment rights to be unpopular with any and all organizations and college officials." FIREsubmitted an amici brief to the Supreme Court on behalf of CLS in conjunction with FIREFor Liberty.
We recommend reading Hentoff's column in full for more of his insight on Martinez.
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