Civil Liberties
Related: About this forumOpinion: To fight antisemitism on campuses, we must restrict speech
This is her opinion, not mine.
Opinion | To fight antisemitism on campuses, we must restrict speech
By Claire O. Finkelstein
December 10, 2023 at 7:00 a.m. EST
Claire O. Finkelstein is Algernon Biddle professor of law and professor of philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania. She is a member of the schools Open Expression Committee and chair of the law schools committee on academic freedom. The views expressed here are the authors own.
The testimony of three university presidents before a House committee last week provoked outrage after they suggested that calls on their campuses for Jewish genocide might not have violated their schools free speech policies. One of them, Liz Magill, was forced to step down on Saturday as president of the University of Pennsylvania, where I am a faculty member.
But their statements shouldnt have come as a surprise. Congress could have assembled two dozen university presidents and likely would have received the same answer from each of them. ... This is because the value of free speech has been elevated to a near-sacred level on university campuses. As a result, universities have had to tolerate hate speech even hate speech calling for violence against ethnic or religious minorities. With the dramatic rise in antisemitism, we are discovering that this is a mistake: Antisemitism and other forms of hate cannot be fought on university campuses without restricting poisonous speech that targets Jews and other minorities.
University presidents are resisting this conclusion. Rather than confront the conflict between the commitment to free speech and the commitment to eliminating the hostile environment facing Jewish students on campus, many simply affirm their commitment to both or buy time by setting up task forces to study the problem. Some have attempted to split the difference by saying they are institutionally committed to free speech but personally offended by antisemitism. Others have said the answer to hate speech is education and more speech.
{snip}
Share
https://wapo.st/4ahnVn8
{snip the comments}
Think. Again.
(18,574 posts)...restricting free speech will not magically stop bigotry.
If anything, a rightwing wet-dream like that will only result in more harm done to each and every American, no matter which subgroups we belong to.
hadEnuf
(2,758 posts)Free speech has been twisted and abused to the point where it is simply being used as a cover to saturate us with any type of violence-inciting propaganda from the likes of Fox news and right-wing hate radio, etc. I do not think that was ever the intent of free speech.
Common sense tells us what free speech is and what hate speech is and it's about time we started using some common sense.
Wonder Why
(4,646 posts)Brandenburg v. Ohio in 1969, limited the scope of banned speech to that which would be directed to and likely to incite imminent lawless action and urging the killing of others would qualify, IMHO, as not meeting the meaning of free speech.
hadEnuf
(2,758 posts)The repeal of the Fairness Doctrine encouraged the garbage pit we now have today. A code of ethics in media reporting or even a defining code to follow would be something, but nothing has ever even been attempted along those lines. They lie, incite hate and stochastic violence at will.
With free speech comes responsibility.