You can't be punished for opposing censorship — at least, not lawfully — as long as you don't break any laws or rules in how you choose to protest.
News
From the hotline: what do I do when I’m censored?
We spend a lot of time learning about how the First Amendment is supposed to work and very little time learning what to do when it doesn't.
Amendments to the US Constitution
This is an example file, testing for podcasts.
Copyright law protects U. of Missouri course syllabi from public disclosure, state court rules
The University of Missouri System does not have to release course syllabi because they are protected by copyright laws, a state appellate court ruled last week — a decision the National Council on Teacher Quality plans to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Burch v. Barker
As the 1983 school year wound down at Lindbergh High School in Renton, Washington, five seniors decided to print an underground newspaper.
Burch v. Barker
As the 1983 school year wound down at Lindbergh High School in Renton, Washington, five seniors decided to print an underground newspaper.
O'Brien v. Welty
Neil O’Brien, a conservative student activist attending California State University-Fresno, was disciplined in September 2011 after he confronted two professors at their offices, with a video camera rolling, asking questions about their involvement in a campus magazine that O’Brien believed to be liberally biased.
Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus
In a 2013 ruling, a federal appeals court in Cincinnati threw out a First Amendment challenge by an anti-abortion political committee that sought to invalidate an Ohio law penalizing factually false speech in the course of political campaigns.
People v. Marquan M.
The Mackey-Meggs case is part of the first wave of legal challenges to state statutes making it a crime to engage in “cyberbullying” or other acts of online cruelty.
Elonis v. United States
Convicted of making threats against his estranged wife and law-enforcement officers via posts on his Facebook page, Anthony Elonis challenged the conviction as a violation of his First Amendment rights.