Are universities complicit in muzzling free speech?
THOUGH I DON'T AGREE WITH ANN COULTER AT ALL ABOUT LIKELY ANYTHING I DO AGREE THAT UNIVERSITIES AND COLLEGES MUZZLE FREE SPEECH. It is sort of like we are training all our educated people to be diplomats and to lie with precision in this. It creates presidents who lie all the time like Trump! The end result of political Correctness is leaders who lie all the time about everything!
Conservative speakers are under fire on college
campuses, and critics say school officials who should be fostering a
climate of intellectual diversity are instead siding with violent groups
out to shut down free speech.
The ongoing controversy at University of California,
Berkeley involving a planned speech by conservative firebrand Ann
Coulter is the latest example of a school caught between provocative
speech and the threat of reactionary violence. And although the school,
which was the scene of violent protests earlier this year during an
aborted appearance by conservative Milo Yiannopoulos, claims it reversed
a decision to cancel Coulter’s April 27 remarks, Coulter insists she is
still be censored. The alternative date the school offered falls after
classes let out.
"You cannot impose arbitrary and harassing
restrictions on the exercise of a Constitutional right," Coulter told
Fox News’ Sean Hannity Thursday night. ANN COULTER REJECTS BERKELEY'S PROPOSAL TO RESCHEDULE HER SPEECH
School officials appear to be hoping to avoid a
replay of the Yiannopoulos incident, in which masked vandals did more
than $100,000 worth of damage, setting fires and breaking windows in
protest of the anticipated speech. That was followed by a violent attack
on conservative author Charles Murray during a speech at Vermont’s
Middlebury College and part of what critics say is a growing acceptance
of violence directed at conservatives on college campuses.
Many are blaming the violent protests targeting
conservative speakers on the left-wing agitator group Antifa. Critics
say Antifa, a group that calls itself “anti-fascist,” has sparked
violence on college campuses across the country to further its radical
agenda.
In the UC Berkeley riots that broke out recently,
pictures and video were tweeted out of rioters beating people with
“Antifa” flagpoles and then spraying them with pepper spray. Antifa
rioters often wear masks to conceal their identity. And to separate
themselves from anarchists in the black bloc, they often wave
distinctive red and black flags that were often seen at the Berkeley
riots.
“In no uncertain terms we are working in close
concert with local, regional, and national law enforcement agencies on
investigations concerning the group referred to as the black bloc,” UC
Berkeley Assistant Vice Chancellor Dan Mogulof told Fox News.
Kyle Shideler, director of the Threat Information
Office at the Washington D.C.-based think tank Center for Security
Policy, said Antifa proudly trace its roots back to Antifaschistische
Aktion, the street fighting wing of the German Communist party in the
1920s and 1930s.”
“Increasingly college campuses have become bastions
for radical leftist politics. If an individual’s free speech is viewed
as inherently ‘unsafe’ or ‘dangerous’ by these colleges, then it creates
a milieu where the violent resistance to such speech is viewed as
legitimate,” Shideler said. “Antifa routinely take credit for such
violent activities.” OH, SHUT UP: LET'S PROSECUTE CRIMINAL CAMPUS CRAZIES
Some wonder whether universities are doing enough to
stop the violence – and whether they are holding those responsible for
the violence accountable.
UC Berkeley told Fox News that the university
employee suspected of taking part in the February riots and even may
have tweeted a boast about beating up a Trump supporter at the event
remains employed.
“In the wake of a careful and comprehensive
investigation detectives were unable to develop sufficient evidence to
pursue criminal charges,” against Ian Dabney Miller, Mogulof told Fox
News. It’s unclear whether Miller was actually in control of his twitter
account at the time, and therefore responsible for the photos of an
unconscious man with accompanying captions about punching out a Trump
supporter.
By not taking the proper steps to stop the violence,
some say, universities are basically letting those suppressing free
speech win the war against the First Amendment.
Manhattan Institute fellow Heather MacDonald, who
writes about policing in America, said when she was on her way to
roundtable at Claremont McKenna College in Southern California, she had
to be escorted past throngs of protesters.
“There was a blockade of 300 to 400 students who
prevented other students from entering. I gave my talk to an almost
empty room. During the talk the protesters banged on the plate glass
windows,” said MacDonald. She said there was a Facebook posting ahead of
her event that called for protesters to “shut down the white
supremacist fascist Heather MacDonald.”
Ultimately, she said, they got their wish.
“It was the threat of brute force,” she said, “The
police decided they couldn’t guarantee our safety and I was told it’s
over and hustled out of the building under police protection.”
Some experts wonder whether it’s time for the Trump Administration or Congress to step in.
“I think an argument can be made that there is a
compelling government interest in restoring safety and free exchange of
ideas on college campuses, or at a minimum, in reducing or ending
government funding for institutions of higher education which refuse to
defend student and faculties free speech rights,” said Shideler of the
Center for Security Policy.
An inquiry to the Department of Education went
unanswered about potentially withholding funds from universities that do
not adequately address the concerns about violence and free speech on
campus.
As for whether the Department of Homeland Security is
checking into the actions of antifa on campus as a potential terrorist
threat, a high-ranking DHS official told Fox News, “We are not and
typically would not unless they were threatening critical
infrastructure.”
For MacDonald, the law enforcement expert, there is already a solution available to local and campus authorities.
“The only way to stop this is with swift certain
penalties for this sort of behavior,” MacDonald said. “If people get
away with quite literally fascist behavior without consequences we’re
going to see more of it.”
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