Texas v. Johnson Brennan's case cited several first amendments to show that Brennan is set to include speech protection rather than verbal or written. It is to protect symbolic actions such as wearing arms and sitting to protest conflict. The quoted case including the current case is influenced by the O'Brien test. This is a measure to judge whether national regulation can be regarded as valid. I'm interested. .
Despite obvious similarities, the differences between William J, Brennan, Ronald J Allen's "American flags represent tolerance" and "Texas versus Johnson majority vote" are very striking. Since "Texas v. Johnson Majority Opinion" is a Supreme Court document, it focuses on concrete topics, but "American Flag for Tolerance" is an editorial story, and various recent events and comparisons We will provide documents. For example, "The American flag states tolerance." "Therefore, if this exchange is forbidden, Article 1 of the amendment states that we can protect the expression only when no harm is done to anyone" (54-56). This article refers to the first amendment, "Texas vs. Johnson majority vote" does not help to reply with other documents and comparisons, it remains about the problem of burning the national flag. "To convince them that they are wrong" (37-39). In the article that "The American flag expresses tolerance," the text says "frustration is controversial."
Texas v. Johnson's case, 491 US 397 (1989) was the decision of the US Supreme Court which prohibited the ban on the US flag in 48 out of 50 states. Judicial William Brennan stated that for five judicial majority, according to the first amendment of the US Constitution, Gregory Lee Johnson's criticism flag is a protected statement. Johnson is represented by lawyer David D. Cole and William Künstler. Gregory Lee 'Joy' Johnson is a member of the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade and participated in the Dallas Republican National Convention in 1984, the Reagan administration and the political demonstration of certain companies in Dallas. They walk across the street, cry hymns, destroy property, destroy the windows, throw trash cans, beer cans, dirty diapers and a variety of other things, and outside the offices of some companies I had a sign.