Skip to content

Flashstack

Severity weighted live coverage

CriticalLead signal100% confidenceUpdated now

Shooting at lake near Oklahoma City leaves at least 10 wounded, police say

Alert me
VistoaGuestSign in to save
HomeTopicsSearch
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me
Saved
Me
Now trendingMethodologySettingsHelp

Reason

May 2, 2026

Court Upholds Ban on Military Retirement Home Residents' Wearing Political Clothing in Public Spaces
Reasonby Eugene Volokh·May 2, 2026

Court Upholds Ban on Military Retirement Home Residents' Wearing Political Clothing in Public Spaces

Political leancenterSource quality75/100Factual ratio90/100Framing0/100

The Court has in the past upheld restrictions on political activity (such as candidate speeches) on military bases, see Greer v. Spock (1976), and lower courts have upheld restrictions on speech by outsiders on various kinds of government property, including military bases. But when may the government restrict speech by people who actually live on government property—military bases or otherwise—and who aren't active duty military or even other government employees? The issue has come up fairly rarely, but at least some cases have recognized that residents of various kinds of public housing retain broad constitutional rights on that property. Resident Action Council v. Seattle Housing Authority (Wash. 2008) is one example; that case struck down a "[public] housing regulation prohibiting the posting of signs on the exterior of resident apartment doors" by the residents. See also, e.g., Walker v. Georgetown Housing Authority (Mass. 1997). But in Friday's Fuselier v. RisCassi, Chief Judge Halil Suleyman Ozerden (S.D. Miss.) upheld a limit on wearing political clothing in public spaces at a military retirement home. An excerpt: Plaintiff … is a Vietnam War veteran and long-term resident of the Armed Forces Retirement Home—Gulfport, a gated, guarded, all-inclusive residential retirement home located on the

Read at ReasonCompare full coverage

Lean: 0.000 · Source quality 75/100 · Factual vs opinion 90/100.

Full coverage

See full cluster →

Left 0

  • No coverage

Center 2

  • Court Upholds Ban on Military Retirement Home Residents' Wearing Political Clothing in Public Spaces

    Reason · 37h

  • Court Upholds Ban on Military Retirement Home Residents' Wearing Political Clothing in Public Spaces

    Reason · 37h

Right 0

  • No coverage

Score signature

Political lean

Political leancenterSource quality75/100Factual ratio
90/100
Framing0/100

Methodology

v2-canonical
50
Source diversity
across 1 outlet
Compare full coverage