Texas Vs Johnson Case Analysis

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How far does our freedom go? In the case of “Texas vs Johnson”, a man named Gregory Lee Johnson tried to test that limit. Johnson was part of a protest that was marching through the streets of Dallas, spray painting buildings and causing other types of property damage. During the protest, Johnson set an
American flag on fire. He was arrested and charged with one year in prison and a fine of 2,000$, but was let fee, because the court agreed to hear his case.

The U.S Supreme Court agreed to hear Johnson’s case, because questions about the First Amendment were being asked. Groups started forming, claiming that what he did was his own free doing, or that what he did was wrong. I would have joined the group that disagreed with the Supreme Court,
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Each color and star on the flag has a meaning that wasn’t just given to it.
Johnson should have had to pay his full sentence, because what he did was very disrespectful to the people who worked hard to earn that freedom.

The first Amendment shouldn’t be able to save a person who burns the American flag, because the
Amendment was made from the lives that fought for that freedom. Johnson’s actions of burning the flag was a disrespectful doing. The first Amendment states that “The practice in America must be entitled to much more respect. In every state, probably in every union, the press has exerted a freedom in canvassing the merits and measures of public men, of every description, which has not confined to the strict limits in the common law”, shouldn’t be able to protect Johnson’s act.

The American flag was created June 14th, 1777, by a man named Francis Hopkinson. Each color of the flag has a different meaning; White signifies purity and innocence, red means hardiness and valor, and blue shows vigilance, perseverance and justice. Johnson, when burning the flag showed no respect to any of these symbols and knowing what people have gone through just so he can hold a flag, burned