Skip to content
Chimera readability score 56 out of 100, Graduate reading level.

The United States of America recently turned 250 years old. What a spectacle! The fireworks were amazing, and millions of proud people celebrated across the nation — even around the world. France lit up the Eiffel Tower; Japan had fireworks. French fighter jets flew above New York City with trails of red, white, and blue — our first major ally streaking our shared colors through the sky. Meanwhile, shameful white nationalists paraded through our nation’s capital. This has always been a country of paradoxes.
America’s greatest idea is still under threat
As the United States turns 250 years old, we have work to do.
America’s greatest idea is still under threat
As the United States turns 250 years old, we have work to do.
Our 250th birthday counts back to the Declaration of Independence in 1776. The declaration was a radical and astonishing document that still serves as America’s soul. But the beating heart of the nation wouldn’t come until more than a decade later, when the Constitution was ratified. That document is why I’m able to write this to you today. And we need you to help protect it.
The First Amendment to the Constitution is so potent that people across the world who live in places untouched by US law often seem to think they have the same rights it establishes. The First Amendment is our day-one theory of what makes a free society. It’s literally the first cure by the framers for a project they knew would be forever imperfect and incomplete — fixable only by way of the right to free expression.
The Verge exists today because of this great project. We believe in it deeply. The First Amendment affords us the knowledge that we’re likely free from imprisonment from expressing our freedom to speak. But journalism and speech are always under assault. It’s one of the reasons why we’ll always need lawyers despite likely having the strongest editorial ethics policy in the industry.
Here’s what the First Amendment says:
Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.
This is a compelling and beautiful idea. But we’ve had to fight to keep it alive from the beginning..
John Adams, one of the fiercest revolutionaries who railed against British tyrrany and helped secure independence, completely fucked up the First Amendement when he became the second US president. Adams’ series of Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 look positively Trumpian in retrospect, railing against foreigners, expanding presidential power to arrest, imprison, or deport people, and perhaps most insidiously, making it a crime for American citizens to print “scandalous and malicious” writings against the government. Adams surely loved the country he created, but nonetheless shrunk before the magnitude of its liberties.
Fast-forward to World War I, when the First Amendment was again under attack, this time by the Supreme Court. The court’s fearful message about free speech still sticks with us. You’ve probably heard the phrase “you can’t shout ‘fire’ in a crowded theater” — not actually true. The misquoting and misinterpretation here is darkly funny: Trevor Timm, in The Atlantic, notes the court decision the phrase refers to was actually about whether an American socialist “could be convicted under the Espionage Act for writing and distributing a pamphlet that expressed his opposition to the draft.” It almost sounds ripped from contemporary headlines. (Nearly a century later, the Espionage Act would be used again to target, this time, a New York Times journalist.)
Misunderstandings about the First Amendment still abound. On the front lines we most readily see it in police confrontations where armed agents of the state bungle their constitutional duties with disastrous results.
Cops are routinely so terrible at understanding America’s foundational law that there’s now a cottage industry of streamers and influencers who work as “First Amendment auditors” — people who intentionally flex their right to record in public to bait dummies into abridging their freedom of speech. It’s easy to go down TikTok rabbit holes where you’ll find someone recording an illegal traffic stop from inside their car, or a fully kitted streamer recording harassment on a public sidewalk. When the police inevitably show up to hassle someone for exercising their rights, the stakes are immediately raised.
In a best-case scenario, a higher-ranking cop arrives and dispels their colleagues’ unconstitutional conduct. In other cases, someone ends up getting detained or arrested for completely protected behavior.
It’s even worse than usual in 2026, because we now live under an administration that’s flooding cities with barely trained federal agents who see constitutionally protected behavior as a threat. This has resulted in deaths, assaults on reporters, and an untold broader cost of regular people having to endure the immense burden of confronting the justice system simply for doing things they have the fundamental right to do. The right to speak and assemble is especially valid when it’s in protest of the government. That’s the whole point of this thing! And yet.
The latest assaults on the First Amendment have been encouraged by people all the way up the chain of command. We’re being betrayed by officials who are supposed to protect us, people who swore an oath to the Constitution and ought to know better. The FCC is not supposed to regulate speech but has nonetheless become a nightmare of incompetence and civil rights suppression. Do you miss Stephen Colbert on The Late Show? Thank the Trump administration, which now operates a mob-like patronage system that has cowed the billionaire princes who own America’s broadcast networks. Or ask Jimmy Kimmel, who got kicked off the air after conservatives went nuclear over his tame remarks about Charlie Kirk, a man who spent his time poisoning our national discourse with none of the grace or wit employed by national talk show hosts.
The Trump regime in general has an incredibly disturbing record on free speech, from science to the operations of the largest social networks. Donald Trump rails against anyone who doesn’t bow to him, and the list of his victims is too long to enumerate. But here’s an important one: The president once threatened to jail Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg for life. Zuckerberg is far more wealthy and powerful than Trump in many respects, but what did he do? Two years after the threat, Zuckerberg showed up on the White House lawn to celebrate Trump’s insane UFC fight show. He tapped out against a bully.
This is what makes everything really messy. We live in an age dominated by communication platforms that are so wealthy, powerful, and pervasive that they seem practically unrestrained by the US government, but paradoxically must still cozy up to a regime that has no actual respect for them or for their free speech. Trump once threatened to blow up the entire internet because he wanted platforms to censor things to his advantage. The CEOs of those companies still indulge him with flattery and photo ops.
This blurring of public and private interests has fueled a funhouse-mirror idea of “free speech culture” that’s actually designed to crack down on free speech. The loudest people crying about free speech culture do so as if theirs is not the freest ever in history, while simultaneously supporting actual government censorship, like banning books.
I can’t say it better than Ken White has, so just go read him on this point. White explains how “free speech culture” has emboldened the Trump admin and others to engage in real censorship. “When enough people think that all of free speech—including free speech law—is bullshit, then free speech rights won’t be enforced,” he writes.
Our constitutional punchbowl has been spiked by madmen who profit from confusion about our rights and the rule of law. It doesn’t have to be this way. Just remember: The First Amendment is a restraint on the government that prevents it from prohibiting your speech.
Moreover: Actual censorship is government suppression of speech. It’s entirely understandable that we’re confused about what censorship is because of how hard many people have worked to keep us confused. A social media platform moderating your post is not censorship — it’s actually free speech. Yes, that sounds completely counterintuitive, but it’s true. The alternative is a situation where the government forces private citizens to publish things they don’t want to, including hate speech.
Much was unsaid here, including the history of immense pain and suffering that has kept the First Amendment and our broader rights alive. I won’t claim to know what the fix is for our current mess, but I’ll say I really hate when our leaders say things like “this is not who we are” when they talk precisely about the things that define who we are. And part of who we are is a coalition that claims to want free speech in theory while simultaneously suppressing it in practice.
So what can you do? Yes, of course, vote. But there’s much more to do. Write or call your congresspeople (I promise this does matter). Participate in local elections, especially for school boards, which are on the front lines of book banning. And if you’re reading this, thank you for subscribing — but consider also supporting other newsrooms.

Facts Only

* The United States recently turned 250 years old.
* The First Amendment guarantees freedoms regarding religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition.
* John Adams' Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798 are mentioned as an example of actions against free speech.
* A Supreme Court decision during World War I is referenced concerning free speech.
* Streamers and influencers operate as "First Amendment auditors" by recording public actions to influence behavior.
* There are instances where law enforcement agents allegedly misinterpret constitutional duties.
* Some government officials are accused of encouraging assaults on reporters or suppressing speech.
* The author notes that the Trump administration operates a patronage system affecting broadcast networks and social media figures.
* Mark Zuckerberg reportedly showed support for Donald Trump following threats against him regarding jail time.
* A call to action is made to vote, contact representatives, participate locally, and support newsrooms.

Executive Summary

The text reflects on the 250th anniversary of the United States, focusing on the tension surrounding the First Amendment and freedom of expression. It posits that the First Amendment is foundational to American society, viewing free expression as a necessary cure for an imperfect political project. The text traces the history of the amendment through historical conflicts, citing John Adams' actions regarding the Alien and Sedition Acts and the Supreme Court's role in World War I. The author argues that misunderstandings about free speech persist, especially concerning law enforcement interactions and the influence of modern media and government actions. A central concern is the erosion of free speech rights, linking this to perceived government suppression, particularly in relation to political discourse and the power structures of the current administration.

Full Take

The narrative employs a pattern of establishing a foundational ideal (the First Amendment) only to immediately pivot into demonstrating its contemporary failure through a sequence of historical and current examples involving governmental actions, institutional betrayal, and media dynamics. The core mechanism operates by framing confusion—specifically around what constitutes censorship versus free speech—as the primary source of contemporary damage. This creates a dynamic where skepticism toward established institutions is channeled toward a specific target, allowing the author to position external forces (like political figures or communication platforms) as the active agents of suppression against rights. The appeal to cognitive sovereignty stems from asserting that understanding the history and structure of these conflicts reveals that current difficulties are not isolated incidents but part of a persistent struggle over defining the boundaries of liberty. The implication is that true resilience requires recognizing the systemic nature of perceived oppression, rather than focusing solely on singular events or blaming individuals. The argument suggests that the battle is less about abstract rights and more about controlling the definition of reality itself, demanding an active resistance against narratives designed to profit from ambiguity.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text is a highly opinionated essay that weaves historical constitutional arguments with contemporary social and political critiques, exhibiting a distinct, passionate, and idiosyncratic voice.

Signals Detected
low severity: Erratic sentence rhythm mixed with complex argumentation; use of strong, emotive rhetoric interspersed with specific legal/historical citations.
low severity: Strong, albeit polemical, central thesis connecting historical context (First Amendment) to contemporary issues (social media, law enforcement); exhibits a clear argumentative progression.
low severity: Specific references (Adams, Espionage Act, Trevor Timm, Ken White) are integrated into the argument to support specific claims rather than just being stated as general assertions.
low severity: The text relies heavily on referencing named experts and specific historical events, suggesting a foundation of research even if the synthesis is highly opinionated.
Human Indicators
Use of highly charged, emotive language ('shameful white nationalists,' 'fucked up the First Amendment') layered with precise legal and historical references suggests a specific authorial voice rather than generalized LLM output.
The inclusion of seemingly specific, niche references (Trevor Timm, Ken White) points toward an engaged reader or writer familiar with specific commentary.