Court term to hear tobacco, TV dirty words cases
Amid a presidential race that may decide its future direction, the Supreme Court begins a new term on Monday with cases about tobacco company lawsuits, protecting whales from Navy sonar and a government crackdown on dirty words on television. This term's docket includes Federal Communications Commission v. Fox Television Stations, a challenge by broadcasters to the FCC's policy on "fleeting expletives." The commission, in a sharp reversal, started imposing large fines for television programming with brief profanities — like a Golden Globe awards show in which the singer Bono uttered a single offending word. A federal appeals court rightly struck down the policy, which seriously infringes on free speech. The New York Times hopes the court sides with the broadcasters
Court term to hear tobacco, TV dirty words cases The Supreme Court's New Term (New York Times) The Supreme Court's new term (Los Angeles Times)