Question 1
Threat or Speech?
Classify the line.
Learn the difference between protected political speech, actual threats, and incitement without needing a law degree.
Score: 0/5
Question 2
“86 the policy.”
Question 3
“I am going to hurt him at a specific place and time.”
Question 4
“Remove the 47th president from office.”
Question 5
“Someone should use violence against him tomorrow.”
Legal anchor
Brandenburg protects even inflammatory advocacy unless it is directed to producing imminent lawless action and likely to produce it. Watts shows why courts must distinguish political hyperbole from true threats.
