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Monday, November 25, 2024
60 Minutes swallows nonsense campus-speech narratives
In an absurdly fawning piece on University of Austin as the answer to cancel culture and student self-censorship (uncited, but obviously based on FIRE's statistic nonsense) and thus the only place committed to open-minded and all-sides debate (as opposed to a politically one-sided grift).
The piece reveals the stickiness of the conservative narrative of censorious liberal students attacking conservative speakers and making them "feel" unwelcome while the right commits the free-and-open exchange of ideas. t never distinguishes between government censorship and one person's First Amendment desire to disassociate from another person because the latter spews hateful ideas. And it never mentions: 1) Florida's actual laws restricting what faculty and students can say, teach, and learn on campus and seeking to eliminate tenure or 2) four university presidents (whom the piece mentions at the outset as an example of left censorship) lost their jobs because Republican legislators and wealthy donor Bill Ackman (mentioned as a UATX supporter) believed they had failed to sufficiently restrict or sanction pro-Palestinian campus speech. It thus continues the narrative that the real threat to free speech is an offended sophomore at Oberlin and not the laws of a state.
Posted by Howard Wasserman on November 25, 2024 at 02:49 PM in First Amendment, Howard Wasserman | Permalink
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