Podcaster
Episoden
24.07.2025
1 Stunde 9 Minuten
Throughout his career, former Congressman Justin Amash has been a
strong advocate for freedom of speech, writing that “The value of
free speech comes from encountering views that are unorthodox,
uncommon, or unaccepted…Free speech is a barren concept if people
are limited to expressing views already widely held.”
In this special live episode, filmed in front of 200+ high
schoolers attending FIRE’s Free Speech Forum at American
University in Washington, D.C., Amash takes questions from the
audience and discusses his upbringing, his political career, the
state of American politics, and how the Constitution guided his
work in Congress.
Earlier this year, Congressman Amash joined FIRE’s Advisory
Council.
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
03:30 Upbringing
06:21 Law school
13:15 Time in Congress
15:59 Why Amash publicly explained each of his votes
26:30 On being the first libertarian in Congress
30:57 Connection between his principles and free speech
33:10 Trump’s first impeachment
42:48 Dealing with pushback from constituents
46:03 Term limits for members of Congress?
55:25 How high schoolers can pursue a career in politics
59:45 Has there been a regression in First Amendment protections?
01:07:32 What Amash is up to now
01:08:06 Outro
Read the transcript here:
https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/so-speak-podcast-transcript-justin-amash
Enjoy listening to the podcast? Donate to FIRE today and get
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thefire.org and would like access to Substack’s paid subscriber
podcast feed, please email sotospeak@thefire.org.
Mehr
10.07.2025
1 Stunde 11 Minuten
We’re checking in on the latest news in tech and free speech.
We cover the state AI regulation moratorium that failed in
Congress, the ongoing Character A.I. lawsuit, the Federal Trade
Commission’s consent decree with Omnicom and Interpublic Group,
the European Union’s Digital Services Act, and what comes next
after the Supreme Court’s Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
decision.
Guests:
Ari Cohn — lead counsel for tech policy, FIRE
Corbin Barthold — internet policy counsel, TechFreedom
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
02:38 State AI regulation moratorium fails in Congress
20:04 Character AI lawsuit
41:10 FTC, Omnicom x IPG merger, and Media Matters
56:09 Digital Services Act
01:02:43 FSC v. Paxton decision
01:10:49 Outro
Read the transcript here:
https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/so-speak-podcast-transcript-tech-check-ai-moratorium-character-ai-lawsuit-ftc
Enjoy listening to the podcast? Donate to FIRE today and get
exclusive content like member webinars, special episodes, and
more. If you became a FIRE Member through a donation to FIRE at
thefire.org and would like access to Substack’s paid subscriber
podcast feed, please email sotospeak@thefire.org.
Show notes:
“The AI will see you now” Paul Sherman (2025)
Megan Garcia, plaintiff, v. Character Technologies, Inc. et.
al., defendants, United States District Court (2025)
Proposed amicus brief in support of appeal - Garcia v.
Character Technologies, Inc. FIRE (2025)
“Amplification and its discontents: Why regulating the reach
of online content is hard” Daphne Kelly (2021)
“Omnicom Group/The Interpublic Group of Co.” FTC (2025)
Mehr
27.06.2025
47 Minuten
FIRE staff responds to the Court's decision in Free Speech
Coalition v. Paxton that addresses a Texas law requiring age
verification for accessing certain sexual material online.
Joining us:
Will Creeley — Legal director
Bob Corn-Revere — Chief counsel
Ronnie London — General counsel
Timestamps:
01:21 How the case wound up at the Supreme Court
06:57 Bob’s experience with arguing strict scrutiny in the courts
09:32 Ronnie’s perspective on the ruling
10:22 Brick + mortar stores vs. online sites
12:07 Has the Court established a new category of partially
protected speech?
13:36 What speech is still subject to strict scrutiny after the
ruling?
15:55 What does it mean to address the “work as a whole” in the
internet context?
17:24 What modifications to the ruling, if any, would have
satisfied FIRE?
18:06 What are the alternatives to address the internet’s risks
toward minors?
20:16 For non-lawyer Americans, what is the best normative
argument against the ruling?
22:38 Why is this ruling a “canary in the coal mine?”
23:36 How is age verification really about identity verification?
24:42 Why did the Court assume the need to protect children
without citing any scientific findings in its ruling?
26:17 Does the ruling allow for more identity-based access
barriers to lawful online speech?
28:04 Will Americans have to show ID to get into a public
library?
29:30 Why does stare decisis seem to mean little to nothing to
the Court?
32:08 Will there be a problem with selective enforcement of
content-based restrictions on speech?
34:12 Could the ruling spark a patchwork of state laws that
create digital borders?
36:26 Is there any other instance where the Court has used
intermediate scrutiny in a First Amendment case?
37:29 Is the Court going to keep sweeping content-based statutes
in the “incidental effect on speech” bucket?
38:14 Is sexual speech considered obscene?
40:33 How does the ruling affect adult content on mainstream
social media platforms like Reddit and X?
43:27 Where does the ruling leave us on age verification laws?
Read the transcript here:
https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/fire-reacts-supreme-courts-decision-free-speech-coalition-v-paxton
Show notes:
- Supreme Court
ruling: https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/24pdf/23-1122_3e04.pdf
- FIRE statement on FSC v. Paxton
ruling: https://www.thefire.org/news/fire-statement-free-speech-coalition-v-paxton-upholding-age-verification-adult-content
- FIRE’s brief for the Fifth
Circuit: https://www.thefire.org/news/supreme-court-agrees-review-fifth-circuit-decision-upholding-texas-adult-content-age
- FIRE’s amicus brief in support of petitioners and
reversal: https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/amicus-brief-support-petitioners-and-reversal-free-speech-coalition-v-paxton
Mehr
05.06.2025
1 Stunde 6 Minuten
We discuss the Supreme Court backing Maine lawmaker Laurel Libby,
NPR filing suit against Trump, a years-long dispute over a
student wearing a “there are only two genders” shirt, the Secret
Service investigation into James Comey, the latest on Harvard vs.
Trump, and more.
Guests:
Bob Corn-Revere — chief counsel, FIRE
Lee Levine — former senior counsel, Ballard Spahr
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
03:34 Censure of Rep. Libby
07:02 Supreme Court shadow docket
13:53 NPR lawsuit against Trump admin
19:07 Differences between NPR and Voice of America cases
30:50 Middle school student wearing “there are only two genders”
shirt
48:54 Recent investigation into former FBI Director James Comey
55:46 Latest updates with Harvard and Trump
01:05:27 Outro
Read the transcript here.
Enjoy listening to the podcast? Donate to FIRE today and get
exclusive content like member webinars, special episodes, and
more. If you became a FIRE Member through a donation to FIRE at
thefire.org and would like access to Substack’s paid subscriber
podcast feed, please email sotospeak@thefire.org.
Show notes:
“Ep. 56 have you been defamed?” Lee Levine’s previous
appearance on the show (2018)
“Supreme Court backs Republican lawmaker in Maine who was
punished for transgender athlete remarks” NBC (2025)
“NPR and Colorado public radio stations lawsuit against Trump
administration” NPR (2025)
“Ending taxpayer subsidization of biased media” The White
House (2025)
L. M. v. Town of Middleborough, Massachusetts Justia (2024)
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District
FIRE (1969)
“Secret Service is asking Comey about a photo of seashells
spelling ‘86 47’” The New York Times (2025)
“The promise of American higher education” Alan Garber (2025)
Harvard's lawsuit (complaint) (2025)
Mehr
22.05.2025
60 Minuten
Heather Mac Donald discusses the Trump administration’s free
speech record amidst its battles with higher ed, mainstream
media, law firms, and more.
Mac Donald is Thomas W. Smith Fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
Her most recent book is “When race trumps merit: How the pursuit
of equity sacrifices excellence, destroys beauty, and threatens
lives.”
Timestamps:
00:00 Intro
01:54 Mac Donald’s personal experience with being shouted down
05:34 Amy Wax, Carole Hooven, and other cancelled professors
11:04 Mac Donald’s support and concern on Trump’s free speech
approach
23:41 Rümeysa Öztürk situation
32:08 The problems of campus bureaucracy
36:40 Trump’s executive orders on law firms
43:14 Trump’s attacks on AP News, CBS, ABC, Paramount, and other
media companies
59:54 Outro
Read the transcript.
Enjoy listening to the podcast? Donate to FIRE today and get
exclusive content like member webinars, special episodes, and
more. If you became a FIRE Member through a donation to FIRE at
thefire.org and would like access to Substack’s paid subscriber
podcast feed, please email sotospeak@thefire.org.
Show notes:
“The White House’s clumsy attack on Harvard” (2025) Heather
Mac Donald
“Everyone knows that Harvard has “lost its way…” (2025)
President Trump via Truth Social
“Secretary of State Marco Rubio with Mike Benz” (2025) U.S.
Department of State
“Tufts student returns to Massachusetts after 6 weeks in
immigration detention” (2025) The New York Times
“Headlines compared: Kamala Harris’ multiple answers to ‘60
Minutes’ question” (2024) Straight Arrow News
Mehr
Über diesen Podcast
So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast takes an uncensored look at
the world of free expression through the law, philosophy, and
stories that define your right to free speech. Hosted by FIRE's
Nico Perrino. New episodes post every other Thursday.
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