Allahpundit:
I don’t know where to begin here. Right off the bat, unless I missed an important con-law lesson somewhere along the line, there is no such thing as a “First Amendment exception” to using national parks. You don’t get special access to public property because you want to make a political point. The whole idea of a “First Amendment exception” seems to have derived from the National Park Service’s policy on “First Amendment activities,” which they pointed to after they got in hot water for shutting vets out of the World War II Memorial. That policy, though, only says that if you’re at a park to protest or have a religious ceremony or do something else protected by the First Amendment, you might be forced to hold it in a particular area of the park set aside for things like that, not anywhere you like. Which, of course, has nothing to do with elderly veterans wanting to visit a memorial to pay their respects. The NPS simply needed a half-assed excuse to let them in so that they wouldn’t get any more bad press, so they decided to pretend that the vets were engaged in “First Amendment activities.” How that turned into a “First Amendment exception,” I have no idea. And how you’d go about enforcing a “First Amendment exception,” I have no idea. If I’m on vacation in D.C. during the shutdown and want to see the Lincoln Memorial, does the ranger have to wave me through if I lie to him and claim that I’m there to protest? Will he watch me when I’m inside the memorial to make sure that I do protest? Will I get arrested if I don’t? Dude?
But never mind that. How on earth could the First Amendment create an “exception” that allows access to only some shuttered national parks but not others? I have a right to protest on the National Mall but not to protest in, say, Yellowstone because the Mall is super-historic ‘n stuff and Yellowstone isn’t? Hello?
Rangers [in Washington D.C.] told visitors Wednesday that they could not deny entry to anyone who wanted to exercise First Amendment rights, and could not interrogate visitors, which effectively means the monument is open to those aware of the loophole.
“The First Amendment trumps all,” a Park Service ranger told visitors…
Michael Litterst, a National Park Service spokesman, said the First Amendment exception applies only to several Washington and Philadelphia parks related to the government and its history, “due to these parks’ long history of hosting First Amendment events, their expansive outdoor grounds, and their location in major metropolitan areas.”
“You could not host a First Amendment rally at Chaco Culture, Grand Canyon, Manassas or any one of the 395 other parks where such activities are prohibited during the shutdown. They can be held only at the National Mall and Memorial Parks, the areas of the White House administered by the NPS, and Independence National Historical Park,” he said.
Show of hands, legal eagles out there: Who’s heard of this policy before, where the First Amendment trumps restricted access because of one public space’s cultural pedigree and doesn’t trump the same restrictions if another space lacks that pedigree?
Anything is possible in the mind of a prog.
Tyrants make up law to go along with their own behavior.
Or with the behavior they want from others.
No, of course there is no “First Amendment exception.”
If a park has a 4th of July celebration, it still closes at closing time.
If it is closed, it is closed.
Even to a guy with a few sparklers and an American flag.
This whole exception thing-y is tyranny of the 1st order.
On the bright side…..
As of today the Federal Government owns or controls almost a third of the surface area of the United States.
Obama is not ceding ownership of any parks run with state money, but at least businesses associated with these parks and areas will be back in business!
I think what we are seeing today is only previews of coming attractions.