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Home » How Civil Rights Activists use the Fourteenth Amendment to Bypass the First Amendment

How Civil Rights Activists use the Fourteenth Amendment to Bypass the First Amendment

Adam Green By Adam Green October 15, 2025 9 Min Read
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How Civil Rights Activists use the Fourteenth Amendment to Bypass the First Amendment

This article was originally published by Wanjiru Njoya at the Mises Institute. 

A federal court in Virginia recently ruled that the name of Confederate General Stonewall Jackson, who is regarded as a great hero by many Americans, violates the free speech rights of black students. As summarized by the judge,

The complaint alleged that the name [Stonewall Jackson] created “an unlawful and discriminatory educational environment for Black students,” and accused the school board of violating the First and 14th Amendments of the U.S. Constitution, Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, and the Equal Education Opportunities Act.

The judge’s reasoning was that where a school is named after a Confederate hero, families who consider Confederate history offensive have a cause of action against the school board for the violation of their First Amendment right to free speech because school names and symbols are “compelled speech.” Although the First Amendment protects the right of anyone—including, in this case, a school in the Shenandoah Valley—to express freely their respect for their Confederate heritage, black people also have a free speech right not to be subjected to “compelled speech” and can get such symbols struck down. By what form of convoluted reasoning did the courts manage to turn the right to free speech into a power vested in civil rights activists to silence the expression of Confederate heritage?

This is where the Fourteenth Amendment comes in. Most people would not immediately associate the Fourteenth Amendment with free speech, which is better known as a First Amendment right. In this case, the judge relied on the case of Stromberg v. California, 283 U.S. 359, 368 (1931), which, according to the judge, held that “Plaintiffs have a cause of action for the violation of their federal rights, including those under the First Amendment as incorporated through the Fourteenth Amendment, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983” (emphasis added). The judge explained that the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection clause protects the right to free speech, and Confederate names, in his view, amount to compelled speech because students who attend the school cannot avoid “expressing” the school name and showcasing the school’s mascots. Hence, the judge ruled that,

By reinstating the name “Stonewall Jackson High School” and thereby compelling students to advance the School Board’s chosen message favoring “Stonewall Jackson” through the conduct of extracurricular activities rendered expressive by that name, the School Board has violated plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights, as incorporated by the Fourteenth Amendment, against compelled speech.

In this way, the Fourteenth Amendment bypasses the First Amendment, in cases involving complaints that the free speech rights of some (expressing Confederate heritage) violate the protection from compelled speech “as incorporated through the Fourteenth Amendment” for civil rights groups demanding the equal protection of the law. This is by no means an accidental outcome—thwarting the First Amendment is the hallmark strategy of those who believe that free speech does not include “hate speech,” meaning any speech they hate. The roots of this strategy lie in legislation from the Reconstruction era, when the aim of the Radical Republican government was to give the newly-enfranchised freedmen, who were the guarantors of Republican power and control in the post-war South, legislative tools to challenge hostile state authorities for violating federal law.

The belief, at the time, was that state authorities in the South were “white supremacist” and the only way freedmen could enjoy the equal protection of the law would be through federal law enforcement. Based on this belief, the power of the federal government was enhanced to give it greater oversight over what were seen as “racist” state governments. Civil rights activists still view this as a major tool in their endless war against “white supremacy”:

The tool is known as Section 1983 of Title 42 of the U.S. Code. It originally was Section 1 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871, better known as the Ku Klux Klan Act, one of the most important civil rights laws in U.S. history. That act was intended to protect Black Americans from white supremacist violence in the post-Civil War South.

Section 1983 allows an individual to sue a state or local government official [in this case a public school board] who has violated his or her constitutional rights. A violation could involve freedom of speech, freedom of religion, due process, and more.

Readers will be familiar with Murray Rothbard’s argument that civil rights—which he pointedly referred to as “phony civil rights”—violate the rights of self-ownership and private property. There could be no clearer example of this than people claiming a “civil right” to destroy anything which, in their opinion, is an emblem of “white supremacy.” In the Virginia case, the complainants relied on a long list of previous cases in which schools had been held to have the right to ban Confederate-themed apparel on grounds that it would provoke racial conflict among the students. While that may, arguably, fall within the discretion of the school authorities, it is a long way from saying the school authorities have discretion over what is necessary to keep order in the school to saying that students have a veto power over the school name if they consider the name offensive. The self-defined “victims” of civil rights violations argue that under the “equal protection” clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, they are entitled to be protected from psychological “harm.” In this case, they complained that Confederate names are “discriminatory and harmful.”

When Black students are compelled to attend schools that glorify the leaders and ideals of the Confederacy, they are subject to a racially discriminatory educational environment, which has significant psychological, academic, and social effects.

When students are required to identify as members of student bodies or teams named to honor Confederate leaders in order to participate in school activities, they are required against their will to endorse the violent defense of slavery pursued by the Confederacy and the symbolism that these images have in the modern White supremacist movement.

Leaving aside the partisan view of history exhibited by the complaint and the fact that psychological “harm” could easily be avoided by going to a different school whose name is more pleasing to the complainants, the result of courts upholding these complaints is that the civil rights regime effectively gives its protected groups a veto over the liberties of others. This is yet another reason why there are good grounds to argue that the Fourteenth Amendment should be abolished:

The Fourteenth Amendment has had precisely the effect that its nineteenth-century Republican party supporters intended it to have: it has greatly centralized power in Washington, DC, and has subjected Americans to the kind of judicial tyranny that Thomas Jefferson warned about when he described federal judges as those who would be “constantly working underground to undermine the foundations of our confederated fabric.”

Read the full article here

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