74 comments

  • bandyaboot 15 hours ago ago

    The author seems to underestimate this Supreme Court’s willingness to make nakedly partisan rulings.

    Edit: oh here we go. Partisan first amendment issues were perfectly fine to discuss here when it was about Twitter. But, different ox being gored now, so we’re going to flag this into oblivion. Absolute frauds.

    • nick__m 15 hours ago ago

      I would not blame dang for keeping that flagged. The quality of the one on Gaza was appalling, it must have been really hard to moderate one and this one wasn't going to be much better.

    • soganess 4 hours ago ago

      If only; he is not.

      Huq is a U Chicago professor of con law and understands what is happening [1]. He is just having a really bad lawyer brain moment as the eroading rule of law crosses the line he probably uses in class as an example of "too far."

      1: https://www.law.uchicago.edu/news/aziz-huq-writes-about-libe...

  • tptacek 15 hours ago ago

    Just noodling on this:

    He has better-than-typical odds of clearing the standing hurdle. He was directly harmed, right.

    But he's going to have some pretty high evidentiary hurdles, right? Discovery may well turn up that Nextar pulled his shows preemptively, both because of political affiliation and because of an upcoming merger. They didn't need to be "jawboned", and there's not much indication that they were even contacted by the FCC.

    When the largest affiliate network in the country pulls your show, it's harder to make the case that ABC itself was responding directly to the FCC, which is what Kimmel will need to establish.

    These are positive and not normative arguments and my confidence level is extremely low.

    • xnx 15 hours ago ago

      > there's not much indication that they were even contacted by the FCC

      Brendan Carr: "This is a very, very serious issue right now for Disney. We can do this the easy way or the hard way. These companies can find ways to take action on Kimmel, or there is going to be additional work for the FCC ahead."

      Nice merger you have planned there, sure would be a shame if something were to happen to it.

      • xtiansimon 2 hours ago ago

        Exactly! From the article: “This principle is both simple and sound: The government can’t do indirectly, through shadowy threats and mafia-like intimidation, what it is barred from doing directly.”

      • tptacek 15 hours ago ago

        I agree there's lots of smoke, but he'll have to prove fire in court. The distinction this article is drawing is that he'll likely be able to see the inside of a courthouse if he pushes, because it's a case with such clear standing.

      • 10 hours ago ago
        [deleted]
    • hirsin 15 hours ago ago

      There's at least the appearance of causation here, with the FCC Chairman publicly saying that broadcasters could get their licenses yanked if they didn't drop Kimmel, and later that suddenly occurring.

      https://www.cnn.com/2025/09/18/entertainment/abc-jimmy-kimme...

      I imagine a smoking gun will be demanded by this SCOTUS though, and this kind of stochastic "would be nice if someone..." pressure/threat will get a pass.

      • cosmicgadget 14 hours ago ago

        As I understand it, a jury will determine whether this was a coincidence or mafia-style doublespeak and the courts will typically respect their finding of fact.

    • benmmurphy 15 hours ago ago

      The supreme court punted with Murthy vs Missouri (https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/23pdf/23-411_3dq3.pdf) but it would be harder for them to use the standing excuse in this case. Also, Alito and Gorsuch were dissenting in this case so presumably you would hope that if a similar case appeared they would be consistent and side with the plaintiffs. I think for those in favour of a free speech ruling there is real hope for a positive outcome.

      • _DeadFred_ 10 hours ago ago

        Supreme Court case 22-842 last year, National Riffle Association of America, Petitioner v. Maria T. Vullo

        "Government officials cannot attempt to coerce private parties in order to punish or suppress views that the government disfavors."

        This gives the legal grounds that he KNEW what he was doing is a violation of law/the Constitution. It is not a grey area and the Trump admin would not be unaware of a case that the NRA WON last year.

        https://bsky.app/profile/barbarasobel.bsky.social/post/3lz4u...

    • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

      > he's going to have some pretty high evidentiary hurdles

      Hmm, with ABC or the government? (Can individuals claim damages in court against the government for First Amendment violations?)

      If it were found Carr was acting unconstitutionally, and thus clearly outside the colour of law, could he be found personally liable?

      (Side note: thank you, this is what I was hoping for when I posted this here.)

      • hackingonempty 15 hours ago ago

        Yes, you can sue government officials for violating your well established constitutional rights.

        https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/42/1983

        • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

          Oh, I really like this!

          • hackingonempty 15 hours ago ago

            IANAL but I'm pretty sure there's massive amounts of litigation around this statute and the law is a lot more complex than it looks on its face.

            • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

              There may honestly be a public interest in distracting as many of this administration’s officials as legally possible, at least until midterms can roll around.

    • cosmicgadget 14 hours ago ago

      Emails from ABC, Nexstar, and the FCC may shed some light on things. See also: Dominion and Fox.

      • tptacek 14 hours ago ago

        Right. My guess, though, is that those emails don't exist --- not because the intent wasn't there on the administration's part (without getting too deep into my politics: "lol") but because the FCC wouldn't need to have.

        There's also just a large affiliate station ownership that is conservative, and a large number of affiliates in markets that are themselves very conservative, and Kimmel did say something really dumb that probably did piss a lot of people off in a diffuse, organic way.

        Again: I hope he sues, I hope he gets to the inside of a courtroom, and obviously I hope he wins. But speaking descriptively, rather than just what I want to see happening: he has bigger problems than standing ahead of him.

    • defrost 14 hours ago ago

      FWiW Carr won't even (yet, at least) be bought to testify before the Oversight Committee despite his comments that were clearly in breach (regardless of whether they had influence in the decision to suspend).

      See: Republicans Kill Attempt to Subpoena FCC Chair After Jimmy Kimmel Suspension https://talkingpointsmemo.com/where-things-stand/republicans...

      and other sources.

    • mieses 12 hours ago ago

      Berenson v. Biden was dismissed.

    • _DeadFred_ 10 hours ago ago

      [flagged]

      • tptacek 10 hours ago ago

        Yeah, you got me, I'm a secret Republican.

  • jjtheblunt 15 hours ago ago

    Since that was written, Disney evidently published the back story that, days earlier, they were looking to fire Kimmel themselves (before any FCC threat), because he alienated the viewer base repeatedly, costing advertisers.

    Hard to know if that's true, of course.

    • cosmicgadget 14 hours ago ago

      Haha not only is Disney submitting to the bullying they are now making up a story to protect the bully.

    • yongjik 14 hours ago ago

      Riiiiiiiiight, I totally believe that.

    • queenkjuul 9 hours ago ago

      Turns out corporate merger > constitution

    • lawlessone 15 hours ago ago

      >Since that was written, Disney evidently published the back story that, days earlier, they were looking to fire Kimmel themselves

      source?

  • starchild3001 15 hours ago ago

    I've seen this happen before. President ordering people to be sued, and even jailed. There's a name for this kind of system and it isn't congressional democracy.

  • Skullfurious 15 hours ago ago

    The States have become a third world shithole what other lows can you reasonably expect from them?

  • throw0101a 13 hours ago ago

    See perhaps:

    > Anna Gomez, the FCC’s lone Democratic commissioner, tells TNR that chairman Brendan Carr’s move violates both the First Amendment and the Communications Act. Democrats must extract consequences.

    * https://newrepublic.com/article/200649/trump-ouster-kimmel-a...

  • hypeatei 2 hours ago ago

    If we can award $5M to the family of a January 6th insurrectionist, then we sure as hell can award money to Kimmel for unconstitutional threats made by Brendan Carr. Right?

  • daft_pink 6 hours ago ago

    I’m confused. It would be the broadcaster that was harmed right? Jimmy Kimmel wouldn’t have standing?

    The Supreme Court can’t order a private company to give Jimmy Kimmel back his job?

  • incomingpain 2 hours ago ago

    >The constitution doesn’t guarantee Kimmel a talk show, but it does guarantee that the government won’t quash his speech because of what he chooses to say. Kimmel now has a straightforward suit for damages and forward-looking relief that he can and should file — not just against ABC, but also against the government officials who were the driving force for his embarrassing public disciplining.

    The threat made by the government to censor him is a tool that has been there since 1992. A tool made by George H Bush and used often by every administration since. Oddly enough, nobody ever challenges it and I see 0% chance Kimmel has any chance of winning. Absolutely no way Kimmel has any odds of winning in court.

    I consider as well, lets say he does win and this rule is thusly struck down. It's going to be a nightmare situation for everyone in the usa after.

  • throw0101a 13 hours ago ago

    Except that Roberts et al are basically on Trump's side. "The umpire who picked a side: John Roberts and the death of rule of law in America":

    * https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2025/aug/...

    "The Rule of Law Is Dead in the US":

    * https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/the-rule-of-law-i...

    • suzdude 10 hours ago ago

      Yes, but Roberts really doesn't want to be worse than the Taney court. Throwing out freedom of speech with the first amendment would probably put him down there.

  • eth0up 15 hours ago ago

    I could say a lot of mean things about Jimmy. But what good would it do? I can't stand him. But I will stand up for his right to say whatever he says. If this country, this side or that side, on a razor's edge or done gone cosmic can't see what looms in this direction, just take a chance and oppose it while you can. You don't want to live the alternative.

    Quite seriously

    • FredPret 15 hours ago ago

      He has a right to say whatever he says, but surely his private employer have a right to fire him for it?

      He has a right to speak his mind, not to have a show.

      • queenkjuul 9 hours ago ago

        The FCC does not have the legal right to threaten him for what he said

      • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

        > surely his private employer have a right to fire him for it?

        Short answer: depends on his contract.

        Longer answer: if ABC fired him because of illegal threats from Carr, one could construct the argument that ABC and Carr conspired illegally to subvert Kimmel’s First Amendment rights. (Whether this is legal nonsense is beyond me.)

        • FredPret 15 hours ago ago

          That would be wrong, but I think the conservative backlash was such that he'd have been very much fired anyway, FCC or no. People were publishing lists of his advertisers on X to organize a boycott.

          • cosmicgadget 15 hours ago ago

            Murder of someone with late stage cancer is still murder.

      • bandyaboot 15 hours ago ago

        Did you even read the piece?

    • pixxel 9 hours ago ago

      [dead]

  • bmitch3020 14 hours ago ago

    Assuming Kimmel wins a lawsuit, if that lawsuit is against government officials, couldn't Trump immediately pardon those officials, overriding the courts?

    • hackingonempty 13 hours ago ago

      No, lawsuits are civil and pardons are criminal.

  • macinjosh 15 hours ago ago

    Kayfabe all around.

    Late night has been dying for a decade. Disney gets cover to end the show.

    Kimmel knows it’s over. He gets to go down looking like he’s fighting instead of unentertaining.

    Trump gets to claim he took down Kimmel, red meat for his base.

    News and Social Media gets something to boost their numbers.

    • TYPE_FASTER 13 hours ago ago

      > He gets to go down looking like he’s fighting instead of unentertaining.

      Even better: he uses the opportunity to make it clear that any kind of comment that is out of line with the administration will not be tolerated.

      He didn't go down fighting. He went out demonstrating the consequence of not agreeing.

    • avidiax 14 hours ago ago

      How does any other media personality know that it's "kayfabe"?

      The chilling effect is not "kayfabe".

    • cosmicgadget 15 hours ago ago

      On the other hand, this fits a very consistent pattern with the administration and businesses or personalities that it deems critical.

      Plus of you're going out in a blaze, it's something more substantive than what he said.

    • UncleMeat 3 hours ago ago

      Kayfabe is when the events are scripted by people who are working together even as they play enemies in the show and where everybody involved knows it is fake and plays along anyway.

      Do you believe that Trump and Kimmel are actually coordinating this behind the scenes? Do you believe that the large majority of both of their audiences understand this to be a show rather than reality?

    • thisisit 12 hours ago ago

      It’s amazing to me that every time something like this happens some people paint it as some grand conspiracy and 4D chess move involving a large set of people. It’s like 4chan leaking all over the Internet.

  • mrangle 15 hours ago ago

    [flagged]

    • lawlessone 15 hours ago ago

      What's antifa? have they arrested the antifa leader yet?

      Did this antifa compile lists of "enemy" professors in colleges and media for their supporters to attack?.. No, that was Charlie that did that.

      >As is comparing it to a recently assassinated political leader.

      Charlie wasn't a political leader he was podcaster making money off advertising. I realize the line is a little blurred for you but the difference is a politician is someone that runs in elections.

      • carlosjobim 15 hours ago ago

        Guerrilla warfare doesn't need hierarchical structures and one specific leader. Nor flags, headquarters, protocols or a lot of other things commonly associated with conflict. A guerrilla can still be a terrorist organization.

        • mcphage 13 hours ago ago

          What do they have, exactly?

          • carlosjobim 4 hours ago ago

            They have organization, as evident in their capability to bring together their troops at determined times and places. They have common goals, and a common method to achieve those goals.

      • burnt-resistor 14 hours ago ago

        It's the evidence-free, FUD MacGuffin to rationalize brutality, authoritarianism, and wiping one's behind with America's former professed values.

      • mrangle 15 hours ago ago

        [flagged]

      • mrangle 15 hours ago ago

        [flagged]

        • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

          > Terrorists

          Terrorists do terrorism. What terrorism has Antifa done? (Answer: little to none [1].)

          I’m not a fan of them. But they’re about as obnoxious as several far-right groups that have been legally sanctioned by both parties.

          [1] https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/27/us-rightwing-e...

          • mrangle 15 hours ago ago

            [flagged]

            • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

              > Who are you trying to debate, exactly?

              I guess my case is made by the hysterical nature of this comment. The people arguing Antifa are terrorists aren’t working with facts, but hyperactive emotions.

              • mrangle 12 hours ago ago

                [flagged]

                • orwin 6 hours ago ago

                  Helldivers is antifa now, we should arrest their Devs I guess :/

                  Antifascists is an adolescent and violent ideology, to match their declared opponents. But if you push too much against it, you might create an united front that is ideologically way more dangerous (especially with how low the confidence in capitalism is) and the US will have to go full McCarthyism again.

        • lawlessone 15 hours ago ago

          where's their hq? who's their leader?

          • JumpCrisscross 15 hours ago ago

            To be fair, neither of these are gating requirements for a terrorist group.

          • mrangle 15 hours ago ago

            [flagged]

            • 15 hours ago ago
              [deleted]
            • jjulius 15 hours ago ago

              [flagged]

  • RickJWagner 14 hours ago ago

    [flagged]