The U.S. Supreme Court will be getting an education on "the rhythmic, slangy — sometimes violent — poetry of rap music" as it considers the standard by which violent speech can be judged as a true threat this term, The National Law Journal's Tony Mauro reports. Elonis v. United States, which is set for argument December 1, "asks whether the online posting of threatening language like that found in rap lyrics violates a federal law against transmitting 'any threat to injure the person of another' across state lines," Mauro further reports. Anthony Elonis was convicted of threatening law enforcement, his spouse and others from the rap-like posts he made on Facebook. Elonis argues that pure speech must be judged by a subjective intent standard, but the government says it only needs to prove that a reasonable person would view speech as a true threat.