Deck 13: Civil Liberties

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Question
The fundamental rights of American citizens are found in the

A) Mayflower Compact.
B) Bill of Rights.
C) Declaration of Independence.
D) Articles of Confederation.
E) Ten Commandments.
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Question
Which of the following is NOT a civil liberty?

A) speech
B) religion
C) publishing
D) driving an automobile
E) due process
Question
Civil rights are protections against

A) home foreclosures.
B) dishonorable discharges from military services.
C) consumer fraud.
D) arbitrary discrimination.
E) voting fraud.
Question
The case of United States v. Carolene's footnote 4 expressing judicial interest in
Deciding Civil Rights and liberties cases actually dealt with Congress's regulation of

A) "filled milk."
B) gasoline.
C) alcohol.
D) movies.
E) money.
Question
Civil liberties have been expanded through

A) a series of Supreme Court decisions.
B) a collection of congressional statutes.
C) a number of executive orders.
D) riots in urban areas.
E) referendums.
Question
When was the Burger Court in existence?

A) 1932-1940
B) 1953-1960
C) 1969-1986
D) 1990-1996
E) 1996-2000
Question
Civil liberties were most notably expanded under the

A) Roberts Court
B) Rehnquist Court
C) Burger Court
D) Holmes Court.
E) Warren Court.
Question
In which of the following cases was the Fifth Amendment guarantee of eminent domain imposed upon the states?

A) NAACP v. Alabama (1958)
B) Palko v. Connecticut (1937)
C) Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railway Company v. Chicago (1987)
D) Powell v. Alabama (1932)
E) Near v. Minnesota (1931)
Question
The case of Barron v. Baltimore (1833)

A) failed to apply the Bill of Rights to the states.
B) had a tremendous impact upon the contemporary interpretation of the national constitution.
C) was not decided by the Supreme Court of the United States.
D) was overturned by the Civil Rights Cases.
E) was returned to the lower federal courts for decision.
Question
The Fourteenth Amendment was passed in

A) 1828
B) 1838
C) 1848
D) 1858
E) 1868
Question
The process whereby the Supreme Court found the protections of the Bill of Rights applies to states through the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process clause is known as

A) incorporation.
B) incapsulation.
C) integration.
D) interpretation.
E) intergovernmentalism.
Question
Prior to the incorporation process, the Bill of Rights

A) applied only to the national government.
B) applied only to the state governments.
C) applied only to the local governments.
D) was never invoked.
E) applied to international governments.
Question
When did the ratification of the Bill of Rights to the Constitution take place?

A) 1777
B) 1791
C) 1800
D) 1805
E) 1821
Question
Chief Justice John Marshall

A) favored states' rights.
B) was nationalist-oriented.
C) was successfully impeached.
D) only participated in relatively minor cases.
E) was racist.
Question
During the period beginning in the late 1880s and ending in the early 1900s, the Supreme Court was dominated by

A) conservatives.
B) liberals.
C) Civil War veterans.
D) socialists.
E) communists.
Question
The process of extending the national Bill of Rights to the states is called

A) no incorporation.
B) incorporation.
C) selective incorporation.
D) total incorporation.
E) nationalization.
Question
The first important case involving freedom of speech was

A) Barron v. Baltimore.
B) Garcia v. City of Chicago.
C) Marbury v. Madison.
D) Schenck v. United States.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
Question
The clear and present danger test was first argued by

A) John Marshall.
B) Bushrod Washington.
C) Oliver Wendell Holmes.
D) William Rehnquist.
E) John Roberts
Question
_______________ is a free speech test allowing states to regulate only speech that has an immediate connection to an action states are permitted to regulate.

A) The clear and present danger test
B) The imminent harm test
C) The double jeopardy standard
D) Selective incorporation
E) Total incorporation
Question
The Supreme Court ruled for the first time that the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech could be applied to the states in the case of

A) Gitlow v. New York.
B) Michael M. v. Sonoma County.
C) Powell v. Alabama.
D) Near v. Minnesota.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
Question
___________ refers to the trying of a defendant twice for the same crime.

A) Incorporation
B) Selective incoporation
C) Clear and present danger
D) Judicial redefinition
E) Double jeopardy
Question
In Powell v. Alabama (the Scottsboro case), the Supreme Court ruled the right to counsel, as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment, applied only to

A) civil cases.
B) capital cases with fact patterns just like this case.
C) divorce cases.
D) cases involving minors.
E) local cases.
Question
In the case of Palko v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court ruled that the Fifth Amendment prohibition against double jeopardy

A) was not a fundamental freedom and did not apply to the states.
B) was a fundamental freedom.
C) could only be invoked in civil cases.
D) was unconstitutional.
E) could only be invoked in capital cases.
Question
Which of the following is an example of symbolic speech?

A) shouting "fire" in a crowded theater
B) flag burning
C) political commentary on the evening news
D) libel
E) child pornography
Question
Which of the following amendments have NOT been incorporated?

A) the Sixth Amendment
B) the Fourth Amendment
C) the Third Amendment
D) the First Amendment
E) the Fifth Amendment
Question
The government accommodation position on religion was first articulated in the case of

A) Roe v. Wade.
B) Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township.
C) Plessy v. Ferguson.
D) City of Boerne v. Flores.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
Question
The _____________________ was best described in 1962 when the Court ruled that a brief nondenominational prayer led by a teacher in a public school was unconstitutional in Engel v. Vitale.

A) government accommodation position
B) high wall of separation doctrine
C) clear and present danger rule
D) double standard rule
E) double jeopardy rule
Question
In recent years, the Court has become

A) more accommodating toward religion.
B) less accommodating toward religion.
C) willing to hear more cases involving religious issues.
D) unwilling to hear cases involving religious issues.
E) refers all religious cases back to the federal courts.
Question
In which case did the Supreme Court rule that a nondenominational prayer led by a teacher in public school was unconstitutional?

A) Roe v. Wade.
B) Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township.
C) Plessy v. Ferguson.
D) City of Boerne v. Flores.
E) Engel v. Vitale
Question
The Lemon is used to determine the permissible level of separation between church and state for

A) religious schools.
B) homeless shelters.
C) colleges.
D) hospitals.
E) charities.
Question
The secular regulation rule holds that

A) a religious organization cannot accept donations from nonmembers.
B) a church cannot hold services after midnight.
C) there is no constitutional right to exemption on free exercise grounds from general laws dealing with nonreligious matters.
D) religious symbols cannot be displayed on public property.
E) a religious organization cannot accept donations from state government.
Question
The least restrictive means test is

A) a pro-religious revision of the secular regulation rule.
B) a nullification of the secular regulation rule.
C) the same as the secular regulation rule.
D) not at all related to the secular regulation rule.
E) None of the Above
Question
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act was partially overturned in the case of

A) Near v. Minnesota.
B) City of Boerne v. Flores.
C) Rotgut v. Taylor.
D) UCLA v. Griffith.
E) Mapp. V. Ohio
Question
The idea that public political speech must be absolutely protected was argued by

A) John Marshall.
B) Alexander Meiklejohn.
C) Thurgood Marshall.
D) Samuel Chase.
E) Oliver Wendall Holmes.
Question
The sliding scale test in Dennis v. U.S. (1951) made it

A) easier for a state to restrict speech.
B) more difficult for a state to restrict speech.
C) easier for an individual to prove discrimination.
D) more difficult for an individual to prove discrimination.
E) easier for the local government to restrict speech.
Question
In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens' United v. Federal Election Commission that:

A) money and politics do not mix.
B) corporations were like people whose Free Speech interests were protected in political campaigns.
C) only businesses could contribute to political campaigns.
D) individual contributions could only be spent on issue ads.
E) individuals would not be allowed to make private contributions.
Question
Not until _______ did the Court become willing to protect the speech of Communists as long as they were not actively plotting to overthrow the government.

A) 1865
B) 1902
C) 1957
D) 1998
E) 2001
Question
______________ involve[s] certain expressions that are so volatile that they are deemed to incite injury and are therefore not protected under the First Amendment.

A) Racist speech
B) Fighting words
C) Symbolic speech
D) Provocative speech
E) Pornographic speech
Question
_________ consists of speech or symbolic gestures intended to inflict emotional distress, to defame, or to intimidate people.

A) Pornographic speech
B) Fighting words
C) Symbolic speech
D) Provocative speech
E) Hate speech
Question
Laws prohibiting libel and obscenity are examples of

A) prior restraint.
B) subsequent punishment.
C) selective incorporation.
D) clear and present danger.
E) Hate speech
Question
Speech which damages a person's reputation is called

A) libel.
B) slander.
C) hate speech.
D) symbolic speech.
E) provocative speech.
Question
The Supreme Court established the "average person" applying "contemporary community standards" in the case of

A) Roth v. United States.
B) Buckley v. Valeo.
C) Sullivan v. New York Times.
D) Katzenbach v. McClung.
E) Near v. Minnesota
Question
The major obstacle to developing a definitive standard for obscenity cases is that obscenity is

A) very popular.
B) very difficult to define.
C) very rare.
D) clearly protected under the First Amendment.
E) none of the above.
Question
Congress passed the Communications Decency Act to

A) prohibit obscene materials from being sent through the mail.
B) prohibit obscene materials from being transmitted via fax machines.
C) prohibit obscene materials from being transmitted over the Internet.
D) prohibit obscene phone calls.
E) prohibit the sale of all obscene materials.
Question
The most significant case involving prior restraint was

A) the Pentagon Papers case.
B) the Watergate case.
C) the Des Moines School District case.
D) the Tinker case.
E) the Iran Contra Case
Question
The exclusionary rule was created in

A) 1846.
B) 1903.
C) 1914.
D) 1963.
E) 1954
Question
The exclusionary rule was not extended to the states until

A) 1935.
B) 1942.
C) 1955.
D) 1961.
E) 1979.
Question
The Fourth Amendment was extended to the states in the case of

A) Palko v. Connecticut.
B) Mapp v. Ohio.
C) Weeks v. United States.
D) United States v. Leon.
E) Weeks v. United States
Question
The good faith exception

A) has effectively gutted the exclusionary rule.
B) was developed in 1994.
C) has strengthened the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment.
D) violates the separation of church and state.
E) strengthens the first amendment.
Question
_________ is a reasonable belief that a crime has been, is being, or is about to be committed.

A) Probable cause
B) Double jeopardy
C) Prior restraint
D) Selective incorporation
E) Reasonably objective
Question
What amendment provides the right to a grand jury?

A) Third Amendment.
B) Fourth Amendment.
C) Fifth Amendment.
D) Sixth Amendment.
E) First Amendment
Question
The Miranda warning was established in

A) 1843.
B) 1936.
C) 1966.
D) 1973.
E) 1988.
Question
A significant case involving the right against self-incrimination was

A) the 1925 Gitlow v. New York case.
B) the 1940 Cantwell v. Connecticut case.
C) the 1949 Wolf v. Colorado case.
D) the 1964 Escobedo v. Illinois case.
E) the 2009 Herring v. United States case.
Question
Which group of the following groups of amendments form the zone of privacy within which the right to privacy may exist?

A) the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth
B) the Tenth, Eleventh, and Nineteenth
C) the Thirteenth, Fifteenth, and Seventeenth
D) the Twentieth, Twenty-third, and Thirtieth
E) the Third, Fifth, Sixth and Tenth.
Question
In which of the following cases did the Supreme Court establish that a state cannot prohibit a married couple from using birth control devices?

A) Romer v. Evans
B) Hardwick v. Bowers
C) Griswold v. Connecticut
D) Roe v. Wade
E) Herring v. United States
Question
Since the Roe decision, abortion rights have been

A) expanded.
B) more limited.
C) terminated.
D) unchanged.
E) None of the above.
Question
The case of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services was decided in

A) 1973.
B) 1980.
C) 1984.
D) 1989.
E) 1999.
Question
In what year did the Supreme Court rule that executing a minor was "cruel and unusual" punishment?

A) 2001
B) 2002
C) 2003
D) 2004
E) 2005
Question
According to the text, one of the most powerful, swing-vote Supreme Court Justices been 2006 and 2018 was:

A) Sandra Day O'Connor
B) Anthony Kennedy
C) Barrack Obama
D) Clarence Thomas
E) Neil Gorsuch
Question
By 2020, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was voting with the 5-4 majority in nearly ______ of cases

A) 12%
B) 29%
C) 66%
D) 88%
E) 100%
Question
George Floyd was initially arrested for:

A) Larceny
B) Rape
C) Using a counterfeit $20 bill
D) Smoking in public
E) None of the above
Question
Civil liberties and civil rights are synonymous.
Question
Civil liberties are best understood as freedom from government interference with individual freedoms.
Question
Civil rights may best be understood as negative freedoms.
Question
The constitutional basis for civil liberties is the Tenth Amendment.
Question
The history of civil liberties is one of gradual expansion of rights.
Question
The varying level of intensity by which the Supreme Court considers cases by which it protect civil liberties claims while also deferring to the legislature in cases with economic claims is known as double standard.
Question
In the early years of the nation's history, the Bill of Rights provided far less protection for individual rights than is the case today.
Question
Even the normally nationalist-oriented Chief Justice John Marshall refused to extend the Bill of Rights to protections to the states as occurred in the case of Barron v. Baltimore.
Question
The Fourteenth Amendment is considered a WWII amendment.
Question
The Fourteenth Amendment was designed to free slaves and protect their rights as citizens.
Question
Incorporation is the process whereby the protections of the Thirteenth Amendment are applied to the states.
Question
Justice John Harlan was a proponent of total incorporation.
Question
Total incorporation is the idea that the entire Bill of Rights should be applied to the states by absorbing them into the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Question
The Supreme Court has ruled that wartime crisis was an insufficient cause for restriction on the freedom of speech.
Question
In Gitlow v. New York, the Supreme Court upheld New York's Criminal Anarchy Act.
Question
Double jeopardy is prohibited by the First Amendment.
Question
Since the early 1980s, changes in the makeup of the Court have produced a shift toward a more accommodating position regarding state aid to religion.
Question
Free exercise cases usually involve a law that applies to everyone but is perceived as imposing a hardship on a particular religious group.
Question
The secular regulation rule was nullified in 1997.
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Deck 13: Civil Liberties
1
The fundamental rights of American citizens are found in the

A) Mayflower Compact.
B) Bill of Rights.
C) Declaration of Independence.
D) Articles of Confederation.
E) Ten Commandments.
B
2
Which of the following is NOT a civil liberty?

A) speech
B) religion
C) publishing
D) driving an automobile
E) due process
D
3
Civil rights are protections against

A) home foreclosures.
B) dishonorable discharges from military services.
C) consumer fraud.
D) arbitrary discrimination.
E) voting fraud.
D
4
The case of United States v. Carolene's footnote 4 expressing judicial interest in
Deciding Civil Rights and liberties cases actually dealt with Congress's regulation of

A) "filled milk."
B) gasoline.
C) alcohol.
D) movies.
E) money.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Civil liberties have been expanded through

A) a series of Supreme Court decisions.
B) a collection of congressional statutes.
C) a number of executive orders.
D) riots in urban areas.
E) referendums.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
When was the Burger Court in existence?

A) 1932-1940
B) 1953-1960
C) 1969-1986
D) 1990-1996
E) 1996-2000
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Civil liberties were most notably expanded under the

A) Roberts Court
B) Rehnquist Court
C) Burger Court
D) Holmes Court.
E) Warren Court.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
In which of the following cases was the Fifth Amendment guarantee of eminent domain imposed upon the states?

A) NAACP v. Alabama (1958)
B) Palko v. Connecticut (1937)
C) Chicago, Burlington, and Quincy Railway Company v. Chicago (1987)
D) Powell v. Alabama (1932)
E) Near v. Minnesota (1931)
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
The case of Barron v. Baltimore (1833)

A) failed to apply the Bill of Rights to the states.
B) had a tremendous impact upon the contemporary interpretation of the national constitution.
C) was not decided by the Supreme Court of the United States.
D) was overturned by the Civil Rights Cases.
E) was returned to the lower federal courts for decision.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The Fourteenth Amendment was passed in

A) 1828
B) 1838
C) 1848
D) 1858
E) 1868
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
The process whereby the Supreme Court found the protections of the Bill of Rights applies to states through the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process clause is known as

A) incorporation.
B) incapsulation.
C) integration.
D) interpretation.
E) intergovernmentalism.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Prior to the incorporation process, the Bill of Rights

A) applied only to the national government.
B) applied only to the state governments.
C) applied only to the local governments.
D) was never invoked.
E) applied to international governments.
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
When did the ratification of the Bill of Rights to the Constitution take place?

A) 1777
B) 1791
C) 1800
D) 1805
E) 1821
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Chief Justice John Marshall

A) favored states' rights.
B) was nationalist-oriented.
C) was successfully impeached.
D) only participated in relatively minor cases.
E) was racist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
During the period beginning in the late 1880s and ending in the early 1900s, the Supreme Court was dominated by

A) conservatives.
B) liberals.
C) Civil War veterans.
D) socialists.
E) communists.
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The process of extending the national Bill of Rights to the states is called

A) no incorporation.
B) incorporation.
C) selective incorporation.
D) total incorporation.
E) nationalization.
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
The first important case involving freedom of speech was

A) Barron v. Baltimore.
B) Garcia v. City of Chicago.
C) Marbury v. Madison.
D) Schenck v. United States.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
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Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
The clear and present danger test was first argued by

A) John Marshall.
B) Bushrod Washington.
C) Oliver Wendell Holmes.
D) William Rehnquist.
E) John Roberts
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
_______________ is a free speech test allowing states to regulate only speech that has an immediate connection to an action states are permitted to regulate.

A) The clear and present danger test
B) The imminent harm test
C) The double jeopardy standard
D) Selective incorporation
E) Total incorporation
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The Supreme Court ruled for the first time that the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of speech could be applied to the states in the case of

A) Gitlow v. New York.
B) Michael M. v. Sonoma County.
C) Powell v. Alabama.
D) Near v. Minnesota.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
___________ refers to the trying of a defendant twice for the same crime.

A) Incorporation
B) Selective incoporation
C) Clear and present danger
D) Judicial redefinition
E) Double jeopardy
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k this deck
22
In Powell v. Alabama (the Scottsboro case), the Supreme Court ruled the right to counsel, as guaranteed by the Sixth Amendment, applied only to

A) civil cases.
B) capital cases with fact patterns just like this case.
C) divorce cases.
D) cases involving minors.
E) local cases.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In the case of Palko v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court ruled that the Fifth Amendment prohibition against double jeopardy

A) was not a fundamental freedom and did not apply to the states.
B) was a fundamental freedom.
C) could only be invoked in civil cases.
D) was unconstitutional.
E) could only be invoked in capital cases.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following is an example of symbolic speech?

A) shouting "fire" in a crowded theater
B) flag burning
C) political commentary on the evening news
D) libel
E) child pornography
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k this deck
25
Which of the following amendments have NOT been incorporated?

A) the Sixth Amendment
B) the Fourth Amendment
C) the Third Amendment
D) the First Amendment
E) the Fifth Amendment
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The government accommodation position on religion was first articulated in the case of

A) Roe v. Wade.
B) Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township.
C) Plessy v. Ferguson.
D) City of Boerne v. Flores.
E) Mapp v. Ohio
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
The _____________________ was best described in 1962 when the Court ruled that a brief nondenominational prayer led by a teacher in a public school was unconstitutional in Engel v. Vitale.

A) government accommodation position
B) high wall of separation doctrine
C) clear and present danger rule
D) double standard rule
E) double jeopardy rule
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
In recent years, the Court has become

A) more accommodating toward religion.
B) less accommodating toward religion.
C) willing to hear more cases involving religious issues.
D) unwilling to hear cases involving religious issues.
E) refers all religious cases back to the federal courts.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
In which case did the Supreme Court rule that a nondenominational prayer led by a teacher in public school was unconstitutional?

A) Roe v. Wade.
B) Everson v. Board of Education of Ewing Township.
C) Plessy v. Ferguson.
D) City of Boerne v. Flores.
E) Engel v. Vitale
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
The Lemon is used to determine the permissible level of separation between church and state for

A) religious schools.
B) homeless shelters.
C) colleges.
D) hospitals.
E) charities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The secular regulation rule holds that

A) a religious organization cannot accept donations from nonmembers.
B) a church cannot hold services after midnight.
C) there is no constitutional right to exemption on free exercise grounds from general laws dealing with nonreligious matters.
D) religious symbols cannot be displayed on public property.
E) a religious organization cannot accept donations from state government.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The least restrictive means test is

A) a pro-religious revision of the secular regulation rule.
B) a nullification of the secular regulation rule.
C) the same as the secular regulation rule.
D) not at all related to the secular regulation rule.
E) None of the Above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The Religious Freedom Restoration Act was partially overturned in the case of

A) Near v. Minnesota.
B) City of Boerne v. Flores.
C) Rotgut v. Taylor.
D) UCLA v. Griffith.
E) Mapp. V. Ohio
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The idea that public political speech must be absolutely protected was argued by

A) John Marshall.
B) Alexander Meiklejohn.
C) Thurgood Marshall.
D) Samuel Chase.
E) Oliver Wendall Holmes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The sliding scale test in Dennis v. U.S. (1951) made it

A) easier for a state to restrict speech.
B) more difficult for a state to restrict speech.
C) easier for an individual to prove discrimination.
D) more difficult for an individual to prove discrimination.
E) easier for the local government to restrict speech.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In 2010, the Supreme Court ruled in Citizens' United v. Federal Election Commission that:

A) money and politics do not mix.
B) corporations were like people whose Free Speech interests were protected in political campaigns.
C) only businesses could contribute to political campaigns.
D) individual contributions could only be spent on issue ads.
E) individuals would not be allowed to make private contributions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Not until _______ did the Court become willing to protect the speech of Communists as long as they were not actively plotting to overthrow the government.

A) 1865
B) 1902
C) 1957
D) 1998
E) 2001
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
______________ involve[s] certain expressions that are so volatile that they are deemed to incite injury and are therefore not protected under the First Amendment.

A) Racist speech
B) Fighting words
C) Symbolic speech
D) Provocative speech
E) Pornographic speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
_________ consists of speech or symbolic gestures intended to inflict emotional distress, to defame, or to intimidate people.

A) Pornographic speech
B) Fighting words
C) Symbolic speech
D) Provocative speech
E) Hate speech
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 127 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Laws prohibiting libel and obscenity are examples of

A) prior restraint.
B) subsequent punishment.
C) selective incorporation.
D) clear and present danger.
E) Hate speech
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41
Speech which damages a person's reputation is called

A) libel.
B) slander.
C) hate speech.
D) symbolic speech.
E) provocative speech.
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42
The Supreme Court established the "average person" applying "contemporary community standards" in the case of

A) Roth v. United States.
B) Buckley v. Valeo.
C) Sullivan v. New York Times.
D) Katzenbach v. McClung.
E) Near v. Minnesota
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43
The major obstacle to developing a definitive standard for obscenity cases is that obscenity is

A) very popular.
B) very difficult to define.
C) very rare.
D) clearly protected under the First Amendment.
E) none of the above.
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44
Congress passed the Communications Decency Act to

A) prohibit obscene materials from being sent through the mail.
B) prohibit obscene materials from being transmitted via fax machines.
C) prohibit obscene materials from being transmitted over the Internet.
D) prohibit obscene phone calls.
E) prohibit the sale of all obscene materials.
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45
The most significant case involving prior restraint was

A) the Pentagon Papers case.
B) the Watergate case.
C) the Des Moines School District case.
D) the Tinker case.
E) the Iran Contra Case
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46
The exclusionary rule was created in

A) 1846.
B) 1903.
C) 1914.
D) 1963.
E) 1954
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47
The exclusionary rule was not extended to the states until

A) 1935.
B) 1942.
C) 1955.
D) 1961.
E) 1979.
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48
The Fourth Amendment was extended to the states in the case of

A) Palko v. Connecticut.
B) Mapp v. Ohio.
C) Weeks v. United States.
D) United States v. Leon.
E) Weeks v. United States
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49
The good faith exception

A) has effectively gutted the exclusionary rule.
B) was developed in 1994.
C) has strengthened the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment.
D) violates the separation of church and state.
E) strengthens the first amendment.
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50
_________ is a reasonable belief that a crime has been, is being, or is about to be committed.

A) Probable cause
B) Double jeopardy
C) Prior restraint
D) Selective incorporation
E) Reasonably objective
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51
What amendment provides the right to a grand jury?

A) Third Amendment.
B) Fourth Amendment.
C) Fifth Amendment.
D) Sixth Amendment.
E) First Amendment
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52
The Miranda warning was established in

A) 1843.
B) 1936.
C) 1966.
D) 1973.
E) 1988.
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53
A significant case involving the right against self-incrimination was

A) the 1925 Gitlow v. New York case.
B) the 1940 Cantwell v. Connecticut case.
C) the 1949 Wolf v. Colorado case.
D) the 1964 Escobedo v. Illinois case.
E) the 2009 Herring v. United States case.
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54
Which group of the following groups of amendments form the zone of privacy within which the right to privacy may exist?

A) the First, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth
B) the Tenth, Eleventh, and Nineteenth
C) the Thirteenth, Fifteenth, and Seventeenth
D) the Twentieth, Twenty-third, and Thirtieth
E) the Third, Fifth, Sixth and Tenth.
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55
In which of the following cases did the Supreme Court establish that a state cannot prohibit a married couple from using birth control devices?

A) Romer v. Evans
B) Hardwick v. Bowers
C) Griswold v. Connecticut
D) Roe v. Wade
E) Herring v. United States
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56
Since the Roe decision, abortion rights have been

A) expanded.
B) more limited.
C) terminated.
D) unchanged.
E) None of the above.
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57
The case of Webster v. Reproductive Health Services was decided in

A) 1973.
B) 1980.
C) 1984.
D) 1989.
E) 1999.
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58
In what year did the Supreme Court rule that executing a minor was "cruel and unusual" punishment?

A) 2001
B) 2002
C) 2003
D) 2004
E) 2005
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59
According to the text, one of the most powerful, swing-vote Supreme Court Justices been 2006 and 2018 was:

A) Sandra Day O'Connor
B) Anthony Kennedy
C) Barrack Obama
D) Clarence Thomas
E) Neil Gorsuch
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60
By 2020, Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts was voting with the 5-4 majority in nearly ______ of cases

A) 12%
B) 29%
C) 66%
D) 88%
E) 100%
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61
George Floyd was initially arrested for:

A) Larceny
B) Rape
C) Using a counterfeit $20 bill
D) Smoking in public
E) None of the above
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62
Civil liberties and civil rights are synonymous.
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63
Civil liberties are best understood as freedom from government interference with individual freedoms.
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64
Civil rights may best be understood as negative freedoms.
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65
The constitutional basis for civil liberties is the Tenth Amendment.
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66
The history of civil liberties is one of gradual expansion of rights.
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67
The varying level of intensity by which the Supreme Court considers cases by which it protect civil liberties claims while also deferring to the legislature in cases with economic claims is known as double standard.
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68
In the early years of the nation's history, the Bill of Rights provided far less protection for individual rights than is the case today.
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69
Even the normally nationalist-oriented Chief Justice John Marshall refused to extend the Bill of Rights to protections to the states as occurred in the case of Barron v. Baltimore.
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70
The Fourteenth Amendment is considered a WWII amendment.
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71
The Fourteenth Amendment was designed to free slaves and protect their rights as citizens.
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72
Incorporation is the process whereby the protections of the Thirteenth Amendment are applied to the states.
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73
Justice John Harlan was a proponent of total incorporation.
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74
Total incorporation is the idea that the entire Bill of Rights should be applied to the states by absorbing them into the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
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75
The Supreme Court has ruled that wartime crisis was an insufficient cause for restriction on the freedom of speech.
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76
In Gitlow v. New York, the Supreme Court upheld New York's Criminal Anarchy Act.
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77
Double jeopardy is prohibited by the First Amendment.
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78
Since the early 1980s, changes in the makeup of the Court have produced a shift toward a more accommodating position regarding state aid to religion.
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79
Free exercise cases usually involve a law that applies to everyone but is perceived as imposing a hardship on a particular religious group.
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80
The secular regulation rule was nullified in 1997.
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