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Friday, May 3, 2024

Academic freedom and free speech are essential. Universities must protect them. - ACLU's Open Letter to College and University Presidents on Student Protests

five basic guardrails to ensure freedom of speech and academic freedom while protecting against discriminatory harassment and disruptive conduct:
1️⃣ Schools must not single out particular viewpoints for censorship, discipline, or disproportionate punishment
2️⃣ Schools must protect students from targeted discriminatory harassment and violence, but may not penalize people for taking sides on the war in Gaza, even if expressed in deeply offensive terms
3️⃣ Schools can announce and enforce reasonable content-neutral protest policies, but they must leave ample room for students to express themselves
4️⃣ Schools must recognize that armed police on campus can endanger students and are a measure of last resort
5️⃣ Schools must resist the pressures placed on them by politicians seeking to exploit campus tensions

A faculty rally in favor of academic free speech is held in the main quad at Columbia University in New York.
 

Open Letter to College and University Presidents on Student Protests

Academic freedom and free speech are essential. Universities must protect them.
 

 

Anthony D. Romero,
ACLU Executive Director
David Cole,
ACLU Legal Director

Dear College and University Presidents:

We write in response to the recent protests that have spread across our nation’s university and college campuses, and the disturbing arrests that have followed. We understand that as leaders of your campus communities, it can be extraordinarily difficult to navigate the pressures you face from politicians, donors, and faculty and students alike. You also have legal obligations to combat discrimination and a responsibility to maintain order. But as you fashion responses to the activism of your students (and faculty and staff), it is essential that you not sacrifice principles of academic freedom and free speech that are core to the educational mission of your respected institution.

The ACLU helped establish the right to protest as a central pillar of the First Amendment. We have defended those principles for more than a century. The First Amendment compels public universities and colleges to respect free speech rights. And while the Constitution does not apply directly to private institutions, academic freedom and free inquiry require that similar principles guide private universities. We approach this moment with appreciation for the challenges you confront. In the spirit of offering constructive solutions for a way forward, we offer five basic guardrails to ensure freedom of speech and academic freedom while protecting against discriminatory harassment and disruptive conduct.

Schools must not single out particular viewpoints for censorship, discipline, or disproportionate punishment

First, university administrators must not single out particular viewpoints — however offensive they may be to some members of the community — for censorship, discipline, or disproportionate punishment. Viewpoint neutrality is essential. Harassment directed at individuals because of their race, ethnicity, or religion is not, of course, permissible. But general calls for a Palestinian state “from the river to the sea,” or defenses of Israel’s assault on Gaza, even if many listeners find these messages deeply offensive, cannot be prohibited or punished by a university that respects free speech principles.

These protections extend to both students and faculty, and to speech that supports either side of the conflict. Outside the classroom, including on social media, students and professors must be free to express even the most controversial political opinions without fear of discipline or censure. Inside the classroom, speech can be and always has been subject to more restrictive rules to ensure civil dialogue and a robust learning environment. But such rules have no place in a public forum like a campus green. Preserving physical safety on campuses is paramount; but “safety” from ideas or views that one finds offensive is anathema to the very enterprise of the university.

Schools must protect students from discriminatory harassment and violence

Second, both public and private universities are bound by civil rights laws that guarantee all students equal access to education, including Title VI of the Civil Rights Act. This means that schools can, and indeed must, protect students from discriminatory harassment on the basis of race or national origin, which has been interpreted to include discrimination on the basis of “shared ancestry or ethnic characteristics,” or “citizenship or residency in a country with a dominant religion or distinct religious identity.”

So, while offensive and even racist speech is constitutionally protected, shouting an epithet at a particular student or pinning an offensive sign to their dorm room door can constitute impermissible harassment, not free speech. Antisemitic or anti-Palestinian speech targeted at individuals because of their ethnicity or national origin constitutes invidious discrimination, and cannot be tolerated. Physically intimidating students by blocking their movements or pursuing them aggressively is unprotected conduct, not protected speech. It should go without saying that violence is never an acceptable protest tactic.

Speech that is not targeted at an individual or individuals because of their ethnicity or national origin but merely expresses impassioned views about Israel or Palestine is not discrimination and should be protected. The only exception for such untargeted speech is where it is so severe or pervasive that it denies students equal access to an education — an extremely demanding standard that has almost never been met by pure speech. One can criticize Israel’s actions, even in vituperative terms, without being antisemitic. And by the same token, one can support Israel’s actions in Gaza and condemn Hamas without being anti-Muslim. Administrators must resist the tendency to equate criticism with discrimination. Speech condoning violence can be condemned, to be sure. But it cannot be the basis for punishment, without more.

Schools can announce and enforce reasonable content-neutral protest policies but they must leave ample room for students to express themselves

Third, universities can announce and enforce reasonable time, place, or manner restrictions on protest activity to ensure that essential college functions can continue. Such restrictions must be content neutral, meaning that they do not depend on the substance of what is being communicated, but rather where, when, or how it is being communicated. Protests can be limited to certain areas of campus and certain times of the day, for example. These policies must, however, leave ample room for students to speak to and to be heard by other members of the community. And the rules must not only be content neutral on their face; they must also be applied in a content-neutral manner. If a university has routinely tolerated violations of its rules, and suddenly enforces them harshly in a specific context, singling out particular views for punishment, the fact that the policy is formally neutral on its face does not make viewpoint-based enforcement permissible.

Schools must recognize that armed police on campus can endanger students and are a measure of last resort

Fourth, when enforcement of content-neutral rules may be warranted, college administrators should involve police only as a last resort, after all other efforts have been exhausted. Inviting armed police into a campus protest environment, even a volatile one, can create unacceptable risks for all students and staff. University officials must also be cognizant of the history of law enforcement using inappropriate and excessive force on communities of color, including Black, Brown, and immigrant students. Moreover, arresting peaceful protestors is also likely to escalate, not calm, the tensions on campus — as events of the past week have made abundantly clear.

Schools must resist the pressures placed on them by politicians seeking to exploit campus tensions

Finally, campus leaders must resist the pressures placed on them by politicians seeking to exploit campus tensions to advance their own notoriety or partisan agendas. Recent congressional hearings have featured disgraceful attacks by members of Congress on academic freedom and freedom of speech. Universities must stand up to such intimidation, and defend the principles of academic freedom so essential to their integrity and mission.

The Supreme Court has forcefully rejected the premise that, “because of the acknowledged need for order, First Amendment protections should apply with less force on college campuses than in the community at large.”

“Quite to the contrary,” the court stated, “the vigilant protection of constitutional freedoms is nowhere more vital than in the community of American schools.” In keeping with these values, we urge you to resist the temptation to silence students or faculty members because powerful voices deem their views offensive. Instead, we urge you to defend the university’s core mission of encouraging debate, fostering dissent, and preparing the future leaders of our pluralistic society to tolerate even profound differences of opinion.

Which is worse, Israel’s lies about Gaza or its western backers who repeat those lies? ... Useful idiots keep parroting provably false Israeli talking points. Mehdi Hasan in The Guardian

After a relentless anti-Unrwa campaign which culminated in the unproven accusations … 16 donor countries suspended … funding to the agency.

Since the horrific 7 October attack, the far-right Israeli government and its army of propagandists have deceived and fooled Western politicians and journalists not once or twice, but multiple times.

There are almost too many lies, distortions and falsehoods to keep track of. Forty babies beheaded by Hamas? Never happened. Babies baked in ovens or hung on clothes lines? False. A Bond-villain-style lair hidden under al-Shifa hospital? Nope. Palestinians in Gaza caught on camera faking their injuries? A complete fabrication. The list of Hamas hostage-takers found on a wall in the al-Rantisi children’s hospital? Sorry, no, it was just the days of the week on a calendar in Arabic.

How about the atrocities that Israeli forces have been credibly accused of, that they then loudly denied, and then later … were found to be responsible for? The flour massacre in February? The bombing of the refugee convoy last October? The white phosphorus attack in southern Lebanon, also in October?

As my friend the Palestinian-American analyst Omar Baddar laid out in a now-viral tweet:

Timeline on repeat:

• Israel commits massacre

• Israel denies massacre

• Media says we don’t know who committed massacre

• investigation reveals Israel committed massacre

• News cycle moves on

• average person doesn’t know Israel systematically committing massacres.

Yet the Israelis keep telling lies and our political and media elites in the west keep getting fooled. Shame on them.

Perhaps no Israeli lie, however, has been more damaging, more destructive, more deadly, than the claim that Unrwa – the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East, the main organization responsible for providing aid in Gaza... READ MORE  https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/article/2024/may/02/israel-gaza-lies-western-backers

[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]

No Freedom Without Free Press #WorldPressFreedomDay - Last week another Palestinian journalist was killed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza, taking the death toll to 142 media personnel since October 7, 2023

#PVA - International org. with Special Consultative Status 
 
@UN - ECOSOC. Ensure human rights and improving lives affected by poverty and emergencies. 
 
 
UNRWA

The war in #Gaza continues to be a war on women. 

Over 10,000 women have been killed & 19,000 injured 

37 children lose their mother every single day.

 UNRWA
Accessing even the most essential items is a huge challenge in #Gaza
 
@UNRWA  continues to deliver diapers & essential sanitary items for women & babies- but it’s nowhere near enough We need MORE access & supplies to effectively counter the devastating effects of this war & siege

PVA reposted

Around the world, media workers are more & more risking their lives to bring us the news. 
 
The recognizes the invaluable work of journalists to ensure that the public is informed & engaged. Without press freedom, we won't have any freedom.  


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

#BREAKING UNESCO awards press prize to Palestinian journalists in Gaza

Palestinian journalists win World Press Freedom Prize for Gaza war coverage

UNESCO pays tribute to "courage" of journalists facing "dangerous circumstances" in besieged Gaza where Israel has killed more than 140 journalists since October last year.

Israel’s war on besieged Gaza has become the deadliest, most dangerous conflict for journalists in recent history, UN experts say.  / Photo: AA

UNESCO — the UN body that promotes world peace and security — has awarded its World Press Freedom Prize to all Palestinian journalists covering the war in Gaza, where Israel has launched a brutal invasion for more than six months, killing tens of thousands of civilians and turning the tiny enclave into the "deadliest" place for journalists in recent history.

"In these times of darkness and hopelessness, we wish to share a strong message of solidarity and recognition to those Palestinian journalists who are covering this crisis in such dramatic circumstances," Mauricio Weibel, chair of the international jury of media professionals announced on Thursday.

"As humanity, we have a huge debt to their courage and commitment to freedom of expression," he added.

Audrey Azoulay, director general at UNESCO, said the prize paid "tribute to the courage of journalists facing difficult and dangerous circumstances."

Last week a Palestinian journalist was killed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza, taking the death toll to 142 media personnel since October 7, 2023, according to Anadolu Agency.

Salem Abu Toyor, a reporter for Al-Quds TV, and his son lost their lives when Israeli fighter jets struck their home in the Nuseirat camp in central Gaza, the TV station said.

The pair were buried in the central city of Deir al Balah.

Palestinian journalists covering Gaza awarded the 2024 / Guillermo Cano World #PressFreedom Prize. unes.co/7x4ftp #WorldPressFreedomDay

'No journalist in Gaza is spared'

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) — a global body that promotes press freedom worldwide — says journalists in Gaza face particularly high risks as they try to cover the conflict during the Israeli assault, including devastating Israeli airstrikes.

Christophe Deloire, the secretary general of Reporters Without Borders, Paris-based non-governmental organisation focused on safeguarding the right to freedom of information, said, "If the numbers show anything, it is that since October 7, no place in Gaza is safe, no journalist in Gaza is spared, and the massacre has not stopped. We reiterate our urgent appeal to protect journalists in Gaza."

For 108 days, Palestinian photographer Motaz Azaia risked his life in #Gaza to tell the story of the war to millions of followers on Instagram as friends and family members were killed around him. He has now left his native Gaza.

 

Only UN prize for journalists

World Press Freedom Prize honours an outstanding contribution to the defence and/or promotion of press freedom anywhere in the world, especially when this has been achieved in the face of danger.

It is the only such prize awarded to journalists by the UN.

The ongoing Israeli war on Gaza has resulted in devastating casualties. Israeli military has killed at least 34,596 Palestinians, with a staggering 70 percent being babies, children, and women, Palestinian officials say.

Additionally, more than 77,816 individuals have been wounded, while over10,000 people are feared buried under the debris of bombed structures.

 

 

Irish Artists For Palestine- Beautiful Resistance 9th May 2024 Dublin & Shine on Palestine: The Alternative Eurovision May 10th 2024

Irish Artists For Palestine

 


Our hearts are with the many Palestinian communities who have been forced to flee their homes, traditions, and livelihoods in the rural West Bank due to escalating Israeli settler and military violence.

Our hearts are with the many Palestinian communities who have been forced to flee their homes, traditions, and livelihoods in the rural West Bank due to escalating Israeli settler and military violence. Many of those who remain do so at extreme risk, with 700 recorded settler attacks since 7 October alone. In the majority of cases, Israeli soldiers were also present. Even before the war, 2023 saw the highest rate of settler violence since records began.
 
"Palestinians who want to stand up to injustice or who wants his freedom must pay a heavy price in exchange for raising the voice of truth. There are those who die, there are those who are imprisoned, and there are those whose homes are destroyed." Sabah, Bethlehem
 
‼️ Keep raising the voice of truth about #Palestine. State-backed violence must end. Visit www.eyewitnessblogs.com for more eyewitness stories and the latest actions.
 

Sending British and Irish human rights monitors to Palestine and Israel to monitor human rights and an end to the military occupation of Palestine.  https://www.eyewitnessblogs.com/


Teachers for Palestine #LetsTalkAboutPalestine ... 29th April-10th May 2024

 

Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign IPSC - Flight of Return Kites for Palestine 2024

Irish Palestine Solidarity Campaign IPSC - Flight of Return Kites for Palestine
 

Hereford Palestine Solidarity Campaign 2024 for Gaza

 









About Hereford Palestine Solidarity Campaign

Hereford PSC was set up to campaign for the rights of the Palestinian people and raise awareness of the appalling situation for Palestinians living under Israeli occupation. 

 • We lobby our MPs & put pressure on the Government to work towards a just settlement 

• We support boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) until Israel ends its illegal occupation 

 • We are affiliated to the National Palestine Solidarity Campaign (PSC) 

• We oppose all forms of racism, including anti-Jewish prejudice 

• We host speakers, show films, plan activities and join national PSC Campaigns 

• We support Palestinian farmers by selling olive oil, dates, herbs etc. from Palestine

Thursday, May 2, 2024

"The Zionist is not the Jew, The time before Zionism in Palestine, When people lived together in peace and harmony, Jews, Samaritans, Christians, Muslims, Druze, Baha’i, and many others of these spiritual and religious in Palestine, Who lived together for many centuries, before colonialism arrived to our land,, Zionism is not Judaism"

The time before Zionism in Palestine, when people lived together in peace and harmony

From the time of pre-Zionism in Palestine,
When people lived together in peace and harmony,
Jew, Samaritan, Christian, Muslim, Druz, Baha'is, and many more of these spiritual and religious destinations in Palestine,
Those who lived together for long centuries, before colonialism arrived to our country,
Apart from talking about any political solutions, we see that the only, natural and appropriate solution is to return to the pre-occupational greed.
The day we were together living together,
When the Palestinian Jew was living with Muslims, Christians, Samaritans, and others, in Nablus, Safed, Jerusalem, Hebron, and some other cities and villages, in harmony and harmony, when the Jew was with the Christian and the Muslim participated in sports teams and played on the name of the Palestinian national team, when the Jewish was with the Christian, and the Muslim and others, in the Palestinian political parties,
It is a stage before the Zionist movement comes and spoils this harmony and this state of common living
The Zionist is not the Jew,
The time before Zionism in Palestine,
When people lived together in peace and harmony,
Jews, Samaritans, Christians, Muslims, Druze, Baha’i, and many others of these spiritual and religious in Palestine,
Who lived together for many centuries, before colonialism arrived to our land,,
Zionism is not Judaism


Wednesday, May 1, 2024

Universal Echo poem by Anne Selden Annab from 2008 "Every time you unlock any door any where any one you are Al-Awda. Any time you fit a key into any ignition of any vehicle you are Al-Awda. Any time you write a poem (or a grocery list)..."


...Universal Echo


Every time
you unlock any door
any where
any one
you are Al-Awda

Any time
you fit a key
into any ignition
of any vehicle

you are Al-Awda

Any time
you write a poem
(or a grocery list)
you are Al-Awda
as the ink shapes
in every language
spell out
what was
is and always will be
Al-Awda

When you read a book
When you fall in love
When you buy a ring
When you leave home
When you return
all Al-Awda

Every time
you flick a switch
turn on a light
Al-Awda

Every time
you close your eyes
and dream
Al-Awda

Every pillow you fluff
every penny you drop
every street you stroll
every garden
every step
even every stumble
All Al-Awda

And now knowing Al-Awda
know that all roads now
lead home
....to Palestine



poem & photo copyright ©2008 Anne Selden Annab