To the European eye the idea of allowing any and all public utterance feels like a free ticket to disaster.
Deliberate and carefully crafted representation of "reality", and indirect communication via various "trusted channels" is part of winning elections anywhere.
The carefully and orchestrated use of mass media in the 1920s and 1930s, skillfully crafted to lead the electorate to certain political choices, was later used to even accept certain political atrocities (internment camps in the beginning, war and industrial mass murder later).
So to protect the electorate (!) from being grossly misled, many European countries in the aftermath of the 1940s decided to counterbalance the freedom of speech with rules what is not freedom of speech.
And yes, the details are tricky and courts have to decide.
Is that ever in the public debate in the USA? Reasonable limits to free speech?
Here is a fairly straightforward example from the German penal code:
https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_stgb/englisch_st...