In a survey released this week by the Newseum Institute, 34
percent of Americans say the First Amendment goes too far in the rights it
guarantees, up from 13 percent in last year's survey. This is the largest
single-year increase in the history of the State of the First Amendment
national survey.
The Newseum Institute's First Amendment Center-sponsored
survey has been conducted since 1997 to determine public knowledge and opinion
about the First Amendment and related issues. The results were released today
by First Amendment Center President Ken Paulson and Newseum Institute Chief
Operating Officer Gene Policinski.
Ken Paulson |
"It's unsettling to see a third of Americans view the
First Amendment as providing too much liberty," said Paulson, who also is
the dean of the College of Mass Communication at Middle Tennessee State
University.
"This underscores the need for more First Amendment education. If we truly understand the essential role of these freedoms in a democracy, we're more likely to protect them," Paulson said.
"This underscores the need for more First Amendment education. If we truly understand the essential role of these freedoms in a democracy, we're more likely to protect them," Paulson said.
On other issues, the survey found:
- Americans identified freedom of speech as the most important freedom that citizens enjoy (47 percent), followed by freedom of religion (10 percent), freedom of choice (7 percent), and the right to vote and the right to bear arms (both 5 percent).
- 80 percent agreed it is important for our democracy that the news media act as an independent "watchdog" over government on behalf of the public, up 5 percentage points from 2012; 46 percent believe that "the news media try to report the news without bias" — the highest number since the survey began asking the question in 2004.
- Only 4 percent of those surveyed could name "petition" as one of the five freedoms in the First Amendment, the lowest percentage this year for any of the five freedoms.
- Only freedom of speech was named by more than half of the respondents, 59 percent. Freedom of religion was named by 24 percent, while just 14 percent named freedom of the press and 11 percent named assembly.
- 75 percent believe high school students should be able to exercise their First Amendment rights just as adults do, while 23 percent disagreed.
Complete survey results are available at newseum.org .
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