<P> Clear and present danger was a doctrine adopted by the Supreme Court of the United States to determine under what circumstances limits can be placed on First Amendment freedoms of speech, press, or assembly . The test was replaced in 1969 with Brandenburg v Ohio's "imminent lawless action" test . </P> <P> Before the 20th century, most free speech issues involved prior restraint . Starting in the early 1900s, the Supreme Court began to consider cases in which persons were punished' after' speaking or publishing . The primary legal test used in the United States to determine if speech could be criminalized was the bad tendency test . Rooted in English common law, the test permitted speech to be outlawed if it had a tendency to harm public welfare . One of the earliest cases in which the Supreme Court addressed punishment after material was published was 1907's Patterson v. Colorado in which the Court used the bad tendency test to uphold contempt charges against a newspaper publisher who accused Colorado judges of acting on behalf of local utility companies . </P> <P> Antiwar protests during World War I gave rise to several important free speech cases related to sedition and inciting violence . In the 1919 case Schenck v. United States, the Supreme Court held that an antiwar activist did not have a First Amendment right to advocate draft resistance . In his majority opinion, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. introduced the clear and present danger test, which would become an important concept in First Amendment law; but the Schenck decision did not formally adopt the test . Holmes later wrote that he intended the clear and present danger test to refine, not replace, the bad tendency test . Although sometimes mentioned in subsequent rulings, the clear and present danger test was never endorsed by the Supreme Court as a test to be used by lower courts when evaluating the constitutionality of legislation that regulated speech . </P>

What does the clear and present danger test allow the government to do