Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes used the clear and present danger test to uphold the conviction of a man who actively opposed World War I, but he later rethought the meaning of
the clear and present danger test and joined Justice Louis Brandeis in a famous concurring opinion that advocated broader First Amendment safeguards for unpopular speech in:
a) Fiske v. Kansas; b) Gitlow v. New York; c) Brandenburg v. Ohio; d) Whitney v. California; e) Yates v. U.S.
D
Communication & Mass Media