While national attention focused on the arrest of a high-profile journalist, another reporter was taken into custody with far less notice. Georgia Fort, an independent journalist, was arrested in connection with the same protest—raising urgent questions about whose press freedom is defended, whose arrests become invisible, and how easily constitutional protections erode at the margins of public attention.
Tag: First Amendment
When Journalism Becomes a Crime
The arrest of Don Lemon is not just a legal dispute over protest coverage—it is a test of how far the state may go in redefining journalism itself. When documenting dissent is reframed as participation, and observation becomes suspect, the boundary between press freedom and criminal liability begins to erode. What happens next will matter not only for one journalist, but for anyone whose role is to bear witness when power would rather not be seen.
U.S. Supreme Court LGBT Ruling Demonstrates the Ongoing Necessity of the Equal Rights Amendment II
On June 4, 2018, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in the case of Masterpiece Cakeshop, Ltd., et al. v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission et al. This ruling demonstrates the continuing need for the Equal Rights Amendment II.
Republicans/Democrats Continue War Against Animals
Having voted unanimously for the AETA, Republicans/Democrats are continuing their war on animals with renewed vigor. At least four state … More
