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"...The crackdown on Palestinian-solidarity activists has
exposed the limits of the right’s hypocritical crusade for the
expansion of speech rights on campus. In the past several years,
Republicans in Texas have described a war against free speech on college
campuses and declared themselves the catalyst for changing it. The
University of Texas at Austin went so far as to even protect the rights
of students to engage in “hate speech.” As one official said, “Imagine
if the government at the whim of a political party could just decide at
any time what constitutes hate speech, and then just start arresting
people for engaging in it.” Although hate speech may be allowed,
Palestinian solidarity is apparently viewed as a threat. This past
March, the governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, signed an executive order
that directed colleges to update their free-speech policies to “address
the sharp rise in antisemitic speech.” It also pledged to “stand with
Israel” and to insure that “groups such as the Palestine Solidarity
Committee and Students for Justice in Palestine are disciplined for
violating” those policies. When, in April, antiwar students gathered to
march on campus, they were met by state troopers in riot gear and police
officers who deployed pepper spray and flash-bang explosives. Dozens
were arrested. U.T. Austin’s president, Jay Hartzell, claimed
that the police action was preƫmptive, intended to stop students from
“using the apparatus of free speech and expression to severely disrupt a
campus for a long period.”In
mid-March, House Republicans began advancing the Respecting the First
Amendment on Campus Act to staunch what they saw as “the longstanding
and pervasive degradation of First Amendment rights.” The bill
encourages colleges and universities to enshrine the so-called Chicago
Principles for free speech, which say, in part, that universities should not
“attempt to shield individuals from ideas and opinions they find
unwelcome, disagreeable, or even deeply offensive.” Then, reacting to
the encampment at Columbia University, House Speaker Mike Johnson and
Republican senators Tom Cotton,
of Arkansas, and Josh Hawley, of Missouri, called for Biden to send in
the National Guard. The double standard can hardly be lost on students.
Liberals and conservatives appear to converge on believing that the
strongest protections for speech are afforded only to those causes with
which they agree...."
https://www.newyorker.com/news/essay/the-kids-are-not-all-right-they-want-to-be-heard
[AS
ALWAYS PLEASE GO TO THE LINK TO
READ GOOD ARTICLES (or quotes or watch videos) IN FULL: HELP
SHAPE ALGORITHMS (and
conversations) THAT EMPOWER
DECENCY, DIGNITY, JUSTICE &
PEACE... and hopefully
Palestine]
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