Perhaps I'm overlooking something, but I think the "freedom of speech" passage of the US constitution only prevents you from the state suppressing it.
This is partially correct, in that the desire is unilateral enforcement of such principles by government power, whereas the originalist intent is to *prevent* the government from such enforcement in the first place.
What you refer to is very much like that which the Proggy fascists hate regarding "freedom of religion" and "freedom of assembly", plus "freedom to bear arms" and "freedom from surveillance" involving other clauses.
They establish laws which allow
them to incarcerate or financially ruin people attempting to exercise their freedoms, while proclaiming that anyone questioning any "freedom" to infringe on their own "freedoms" is beyond the pale. In other words, "freedom for me but not for thee".
That's how you get cases like the Christian baker targeted and ruined by queers demanding that they bake pornographic cakes, supported by government power, while at the same time Muslims refusing to provide taxi service to dog owners or possessors of alcohol is peachy keen.
Note the common thread? Use of government power to force the acceptance, acquiescence, or submission of others to one's
own moral views, rather than any common or traditionally recognized one. One can observe it with the Left's adoration of public funding for
"Drag Queen Story Hour" or police prevention of Christians having private religious services in their own homes.
It's why they've made such hay with the asinine claims of "insurrection", which were merely the arbitrary execution of an agitated, unarmed woman and several old people suffering heart failures or other diseases... including the lionized D.C. P.D. officer, Brian Sicknick, whose essentially natural death (he seems to have had a heart attack the day after the riots) was falsely portrayed as violent murder by Trump supporters.
Unable to defend their views, they desire violence using governmental force to oppress those with opposing viewpoints and beliefs.
Hence,
fascist Progressives.
Fascist because they want to use government power to force obedience to the State (i.e. themselves), Progressive because they want to force unification behind the concept of 'big Government is better Government'. The words aren't quite synonymous; Mussolini wanted voluntary adherence to the State while Proggies want to put the gun to your head right out of the gate, but they're essentially identical in intent.