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1999 U. Chi. Legal F. 133 (1999)
Sex Discrimination Laws Versus Civil Liberties

handle is hein.journals/uchclf1999 and id is 137 raw text is: Sex Discrimination Laws Versus
Civil Liberties
David E. Bernsteint
Many Americans believe in two ultimately conflicting princi-
ples: first, that civil liberties such as freedom of speech, freedom
of association, and freedom of religion, must be protected from
infringement by the government; and, second, that a broad anti-
discrimination principle requires government to intervene in civil
society in order to eliminate discrimination against a wide variety
of protected groups, including women.1 The tension between these
two ideals is increasingly apparent in cases involving the en-
forcement of sex discrimination laws.
Through the 1960s, most antidiscrimination activists consid-
ered civil liberties and civil rights to be complementary. When
southern state governments attempted to suppress civil rights
protests, activists found refuge in constitutional protections.2
Meanwhile, early civil rights enforcement actions generally were
targeted at large employers, places of public accommodation, and
other organizations that could not plausibly charge that their
civil liberties were being invaded to any significant degree.3
t Associate Professor, George Mason University School of Law. Email address:
dbernste@wpgate.gmu.edu. Richard Epstein, Andrew Koppelman, Eugene Volokh, and
Todd Zywicki provided helpful comments. Anyone who writes about the First Amendment
and hostile environment law owes a debt of gratitude to Professor Volokh for his ex-
tremely    useful    web     site,   which    is    available   online    at
<httpJ/www.law.ucla.edulfaculty/volokh/harass/index.htm> (visited Nov 11, 1998). This
Article benefited greatly from the research assistance of James Winn, Nathan Oman, and
Danielle Giroux. The author wrote this Article while serving as a John M. Olin Junior
Faculty Fellow for the 1998-99 academic year.
Perhaps the most profound work arguing for the importance of government en-
forcement of a broad antidiscrimination principle is Andrew Koppelman, Antidiscrimina-
tion Law and Social Equality (Yale 1996).
See, for example, NAACP v Alabama ex rel Patterson, 357 US 449, 453 (1958);
NAACP v Button, 371 US 415, 419 (1963). See also Samuel Walker, Hate Speech: The
History of an American Controversy 78 (Nebraska 1994). Walker notes that the major civil
rights groups traditionally opposed hate speech restrictions, in part out of self-interest.
Activists on behalf of racial equality often engaged in provocative and at times offensive
tactics that required constitutional protection.
' A few libertarian advocates of property rights and absolute freedom of association
raised objections to antidiscrimination laws that impacted the private sector. See, for
example, Ayn Rand, The Virtue of Selfishness; A New Concept of Egoism 134 (New Ameri-

133

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