Quote:
Originally Posted by willravel
It was totally wrong for those women to be removed. It was blatently unconstitutional.
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What part of the Constitution did it violate? The event was a private event. The Republicans had secured the use of the hall for their purposes at that time frame.
Time, place, and manner restrictions have LONG been upheld as Constitutional. That's black letter law.
Let me ask you this: If somebody went to see F 9/11 in the theater, and then stood up in the middle of it and started screaming about how it was all lies, would it be a violation of the person's First Amendment rights for the theater to kick them out? Of course not. So why is this any different?