The Non-Yogi Israel-Palestine war thread

225,704 Views | 2627 Replies | Last: 10 hrs ago by Edited by Staff
wifeisafurd
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Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
tequila4kapp
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wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
tequila4kapp
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Cal88 said:

So we hate campus cancel culture, but off with their heads if they dare protest the wholescale massacre in Gaza...
This is a patently absurd characterization, and I think you know it.

The questions were very specific - calling for genocide - which is not "protesting"

This is not hard.
Cal88
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tequila4kapp said:

Cal88 said:

So we hate campus cancel culture, but off with their heads if they dare protest the wholescale massacre in Gaza...
This is a patently absurd characterization, and I think you know it.

The questions were very specific - calling for genocide - which is not "protesting"

This is not hard.

Yes, it isn't hard. Protesting the mass killing by the Israeli army of tens of thousands of unarmed civilians is in fact protesting against genocide, the opposite of advocating genocide.

This congressional hearing is a shoddy and disingenuous attempt to conflate legitimate outrage at the shear scale of the ongoing war crimes committed by Israel with "calling for genocide". It's a cynical and heavy-handed attempt to shut down free speech on college campuses.
sycasey
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The hearing was indeed a cynical and heavy-handed attempt at politicking by the GOP leadership.

But also, the University Presidents gave some dumb answers that played right into the politicians' hands and should have known better.
tequila4kapp
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Cal88 said:

tequila4kapp said:

Cal88 said:

So we hate campus cancel culture, but off with their heads if they dare protest the wholescale massacre in Gaza...
This is a patently absurd characterization, and I think you know it.

The questions were very specific - calling for genocide - which is not "protesting"

This is not hard.

Yes, it isn't hard. Protesting the mass killing by the Israeli army of tens of thousands of unarmed civilians is in fact protesting against genocide, the opposite of advocating genocide.

This congressional hearing is a shoddy and disingenuous attempt to conflate legitimate outrage at the shear scale of the ongoing war crimes committed by Israel with "calling for genocide". It's a cynical and heavy-handed attempt to shut down free speech on college campuses.
Of course the hearing was stupid political theater. That is what politicians do. Duh. But if the Presidents and people like yourself could simply say the obvious - calling for genocide of any people is not protected speech per a university's code of conduct - then nobody would even know about the theatrics because the entire thing would be a non-story. The theatrics uncovered the inherent ant-semitism and double standard at these colleges, making the theatrics work. That makes the presidents stupid on multiple fronts.
bear2034
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"Death to the Palestinians" is not protected free speech?
Zippergate
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Even I think this is a bit harsh, but she's not expelled, merely forced to pay for her education. Perhaps Hamas will pick up the tab? In any case, play stupid games win stupid prizes. More of this please.
Unit2Sucks
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The pro-Hamas crowd has a new group of victims to ignore.

bearister
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Two months of Israel-Gaza war: How divided is the world? | Israel-Palestine conflict News | Al Jazeera


https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/12/7/two-months-of-israel-gaza-war-how-divided-is-the-world
Cancel my subscription to the Resurrection
Send my credentials to the House of Detention
I got some friends inside
wifeisafurd
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Genocide Joe said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Every now and then, there's a fall out of your chair moment when you are reading stuff online. That happened for me when I read WIAF's post.



Well done WIAF.




As David Sacks properly identifies, the problem became when new liberal thinking allowed the creation of victim groups and oppressor groups. Victim groups were protected from all speech that even insinuated the tiniest bit of criticism of their groups while it was open season on oppressor groups. The correct answer is to not pretend that words are violence and any of this other BS woke crap and not to have these speech codes in the first place.

The answer to objectionable speech will always be more speech, not the suppression of speech.

Also, Stefanik's questioning depending on her defining intifada as genocide while she is actively supporting Israel's genocide of Palestinians with American dollars and bombs, so for her to pretend she's some sort of moral champion here is hypocrisy at the higheset dajo9/Unit2Sucks kind of level.
Well I clearly got it wrong if I had been talking about Penn, the President resigned today. Up next probably is the Harvard President. Clearly I would make a crappy school President. I really think many of those in leadership that advocated for all these codes to be implemented will fall victim to the very same codes. I take no solace in the irony, I think GJ got this right, more speech is better.
Cal88
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oski003
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Cal88 said:




Did Axis troops primarily hide behind civilians like Hamas does?
tequila4kapp
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Cal88 said:


I hope this part isn't true:

"The study confirms an investigation 10 days ago by the Israeli-Palestinian publication +972 Magazine and the Hebrew-language outlet Local Call, which found Israel was deliberately targeting residential blocks to cause mass civilian casualties in the hope people would turn on their Hamas rulers."

Killing innocent civilians to achieve political gains is maybe the definition of terrorism.
bear2034
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What percentage of Palestinians are Hamas and what percentage of the remaining people are pro-Hamas?
cbbass1
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Big C said:

Cal88 said:

So we hate campus cancel culture, but off with their heads if they dare protest the wholescale massacre in Gaza...

I'm fine to see these "progressives" support the Palestinian people and condemn the Israeli govt, if they want, but when they start to sound like they are supporting Hamas and attacking Jews, that's when they leave me cold.

These extreme positions on both sides... that's why these people just can't stop fighting. It'd be nice if we could divest from that entire area. If we need to, give the Israelis one of the Dakotas or something.
BigC, your take sounds very reasonable, because as Americans, under Our Constitution, and with Our First Amendment, we can express our political opinions freely...

Except that we can't.

Thirty-nine states have passed laws against Boycott, Divestment, & Sanctions (BDS) against Israel. No other nation enjoys this protection from these tactics in the U.S.

So much for Academic Freedom on college campuses.

And soon, since the House passed HR 894, anyone who criticizes the Netanyahu / Likud / Zionist policies can be labeled "anti-semitic," and lose their job, their assistantship, or their livelihood.

This is preposterous. Anti-Zionism is NOT anti-Semitism. If it were, a fairly large percentage of the population of Israel, AND many Jewish people in the U.S., would be considered "anti-Semitic."

I'm not saying that there isn't anti-Semitism in the U.S.; there certainly IS. But protesting the massacre of innocent Palestinians in Gaza IS NOT "anti-Semitism." It's protesting Israeli / Netanyahu / Likud / Zionist policy.

Black Lives Matter.
White Lives Matter.
ALL Lives Matter.
Israeli AND Palestinian Lives MATTER.
Stop. The. Killing.

Any debate about speech on U.S. college campuses is a distraction. If we're talking about that, we're NOT talking about the hundreds of people in Gaza who are dying each day from the IDF's bombardment, still without food, water, sanitation, or medicine. Soon cholera will infect many of the survivors.

While private college presidents were being interrogated & chastised for NOT creating "safe space" for Jewish students, hundreds of innocent Palestinians were dying, from 2000-lb "bunker-buster" bombs, paid for by you & me.

Meanwhile, the 15-member UN Security Council voted on a resolution to stop the massacre in Gaza. The United States was the only NO vote. So the resolution did not pass.

We're on the wrong side of this, and we're increasingly on our own.



cbbass1
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bear2034 said:

What percentage of Palestinians are Hamas and what percentage of the remaining people are pro-Hamas?
That does not matter. They're either combatants, or civilians. If they aren't combatants, they're civilians.

And NO, Palestinian boys who throw rocks at tanks are NOT combatants. They're boys throwing rocks.

Many of the Israelis killed by Hamas on 10/7 were innocent civilians. So Hamas's 10/7 attack was both a military operation AND a act of terrorism. But Hamas's breach of the wall, and the attacks of the IDF's positions & barracks in the Kibbutz were both military operations -- NOT terrorism.

By asking that question, you're using Hamas's logic: that the civilians who support the actions of their military leaders are "fair game" as military targets. By that logic, Hamas is perfectly justified in launching rockets at Israeli citizens.

And by that logic, Osama bin Laden was perfectly justified in attacking U.S. civilians on 9/11, because so many Americans (but certainly not all) supported the illegal and unprovoked invasion of Iraq.

As Sen. Mitt Romney would say, "What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander."

Maybe it's just me, but I prefer to live in a world in which civilians are off limits. Because -- of all the world's nations -- the U.S. has killed more innocent civilians than any other since the 1949 Geneva Convention.
bear2034
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cbbass1 said:

bear2034 said:

What percentage of Palestinians are Hamas and what percentage of the remaining people are pro-Hamas?
That does not matter. They're either combatants, or civilians. If they aren't combatants, they're civilians.

And NO, Palestinian boys who throw rocks at tanks are NOT combatants. They're boys throwing rocks.

Many of the Israelis killed by Hamas on 10/7 were innocent civilians. So Hamas's 10/7 attack was both a military operation AND a act of terrorism. But Hamas's breach of the wall, and the attacks of the IDF's positions & barracks in the Kibbutz were both military operations -- NOT terrorism.

By asking that question, you're using Hamas's logic: that the civilians who support the actions of their military leaders are "fair game" as military targets. By that logic, Hamas is perfectly justified in launching rockets at Israeli citizens.

And by that logic, Osama bin Laden was perfectly justified in attacking U.S. civilians on 9/11, because so many Americans (but certainly not all) supported the illegal and unprovoked invasion of Iraq.

As Sen. Mitt Romney would say, "What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander."

Maybe it's just me, but I prefer to live in a world in which civilians are off limits. Because -- of all the world's nations -- the U.S. has killed more innocent civilians than any other since the 1949 Geneva Convention.

You don't know either? 40% of those killed in air strikes are Hamas per the Guardian article.
dajo9
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Genocide Joe said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Every now and then, there's a fall out of your chair moment when you are reading stuff online. That happened for me when I read WIAF's post.



Well done WIAF.




As David Sacks properly identifies, the problem became when new liberal thinking allowed the creation of victim groups and oppressor groups. Victim groups were protected from all speech that even insinuated the tiniest bit of criticism of their groups while it was open season on oppressor groups. The correct answer is to not pretend that words are violence and any of this other BS woke crap and not to have these speech codes in the first place.

The answer to objectionable speech will always be more speech, not the suppression of speech.

Also, Stefanik's questioning depending on her defining intifada as genocide while she is actively supporting Israel's genocide of Palestinians with American dollars and bombs, so for her to pretend she's some sort of moral champion here is hypocrisy at the higheset dajo9/Unit2Sucks kind of level.


New liberal thinking allowed the creation of what?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.rollingstone.com/feature/when-john-lennons-more-popular-than-jesus-controversy-turned-ugly-106430/amp/
wifeisafurd
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tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).





bear2034
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UPenn's president resigned last week. Now this.
Unit2Sucks
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wifeisafurd said:

tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).



Why would you invoke the first amendment unless Harvard's policy is intended to permit all first amendment protected speech?

I might be wrong, but isn't Harvard one of the schools that limits free speech that could be seen as harassing? And that it could even include micro aggressions?

Just spitballing, but if you aren't going to permit all 1A protected speech, why would you permit calls for genocide? That seems like one of the first things you would prohibit.

Saying that calls for genocide are not acceptable speech on a college campus which prohibits other protected speech is pretty easy.
wifeisafurd
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Unit2Sucks said:

wifeisafurd said:

tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).



Why would you invoke the first amendment unless Harvard's policy is intended to permit all first amendment protected speech?

I might be wrong, but isn't Harvard one of the schools that limits free speech that could be seen as harassing? And that it could even include micro aggressions?

Just spitballing, but if you aren't going to permit all 1A protected speech, why would you permit calls for genocide? That seems like one of the first things you would prohibit.

Saying that calls for genocide are not acceptable speech on a college campus which prohibits other protected speech is pretty easy.
I'm admittedly not sure, and in talking with some HLS alum, they are not either. I know as an employer, our employee handbook outlawed all sorts of conduct and speech, but always had an intro, which started except for constitutional or otherwise legally protected communication, you can't do [then came a long list]. Given all the lawyers running around the Harvard campus, it is hard to believe the college's codes of conduct would not carve out legally protected speech and conduct.
Unit2Sucks
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wifeisafurd said:

Unit2Sucks said:

wifeisafurd said:

tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).



Why would you invoke the first amendment unless Harvard's policy is intended to permit all first amendment protected speech?

I might be wrong, but isn't Harvard one of the schools that limits free speech that could be seen as harassing? And that it could even include micro aggressions?

Just spitballing, but if you aren't going to permit all 1A protected speech, why would you permit calls for genocide? That seems like one of the first things you would prohibit.

Saying that calls for genocide are not acceptable speech on a college campus which prohibits other protected speech is pretty easy.
I'm admittedly not sure, and in talking with some HLS alum, they are not either. I know as an employer, our employee handbook outlawed all sorts of conduct and speech, but always had an intro, which started except for constitutional or otherwise legally protected communication, you can't do [then came a long list]. Given all the lawyers running around the Harvard campus, it is hard to believe the college's codes of conduct would not carve out legally protected speech and conduct.
Eugene Volokh argued that sexual harassment policies violate the first amendment but you don't really have to be that extreme. Harvard's code prohibits bullying and it's hard to argue that jewish students aren't being bullied by chants of genocide.

As Laurence Tribe noted, this is pretty easy.


tequila4kapp
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wifeisafurd said:

The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.
***
Let me begin by saying my post used terribly imprecise language; your 1st Amendment focused critique is almost certainly correct. However, we have the confluence of 1st Amendment and school policies.

Harvard's Non-Discrimination Policy: https://provost.harvard.edu/files/provost/files/non-discrimination_and_anti-bullying_policies.pdf

The policy explicitly states that words alone can be bullying so President Gay was 100% wrong to say the speech had to cross over into conduct to be bullying. Easy.

The policy essentially invokes a "reasonableness" standard in assessing the severity of the speech as it relates to bullying and discrimination. In an environment where using the wrong pronoun and microaggressions can be a violation of a bullying policy and where students are given safe spaces to protect them from unwanted speech, calling for genocide of an entire religious group (ie, protected class) has to be pervasive enough to equal bullying. This is obvious and easy.

There are hypothetical variations of the question that would not be easy, would depend on judgment and context and which I personally would not consider bullying. For example, "Does calling for the genocide of Jews with the phrase 'From the river to the sea' constitute bullying?" Because the phrase can mean different things to different people it is in a different class than explicitly calling for the genocide of a religious group.

In any case, President Gay's subsequent statement makes this clear: "...calls for violence against our Jewish community threats to our Jewish students have no place at Harvard and will never go unchallenged."

So...my poor language couching this exclusively in the First Amendment was bad/wrong. But the overarching point was correct - this is not protected speech under the school's policies, and it really isn't even close.
calbear93
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wifeisafurd said:

Unit2Sucks said:

wifeisafurd said:

tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).



Why would you invoke the first amendment unless Harvard's policy is intended to permit all first amendment protected speech?

I might be wrong, but isn't Harvard one of the schools that limits free speech that could be seen as harassing? And that it could even include micro aggressions?

Just spitballing, but if you aren't going to permit all 1A protected speech, why would you permit calls for genocide? That seems like one of the first things you would prohibit.

Saying that calls for genocide are not acceptable speech on a college campus which prohibits other protected speech is pretty easy.
I'm admittedly not sure, and in talking with some HLS alum, they are not either. I know as an employer, our employee handbook outlawed all sorts of conduct and speech, but always had an intro, which started except for constitutional or otherwise legally protected communication, you can't do [then came a long list]. Given all the lawyers running around the Harvard campus, it is hard to believe the college's codes of conduct would not carve out legally protected speech and conduct.
I think we need to make sure we are not conflating issues.

Unless we view Harvard as a state actor, how does the first amendment apply to Harvard? Harvard can restrict speech as a private organization, could it not? Private employers restrict speech all the time. Heck, even UC Berkeley, which is a state actor, restricts speech that may offend certain people all the time. It's that they pick and choose as always who they want to protect and who they don't. It's about politics and picking who they like and who they don't. It's rarely about principle of the underlying right.

Also, even assuming that for whatever reason, Harvard is viewed as a state actor and therefor bound by the first amendment, couldn't we make the argument that there is compelling state interest that is narrowly tailored to prohibiting speech that makes members of the of the community in danger of physical violence?
sycasey
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Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Unit2Sucks
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sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."

While I think the massive increase in expressions of anti-semitism is hugely troubling, I think the perpetrators are also largely just useful idiots going along for the ride.



(quotes from the WSJ).
sycasey
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Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."
For the majority of these students I absolutely believe that they just use it because it's a catchy slogan and they broadly support Palestinians having their own nation. Most people in America are not aware of how the phrase has been used by terrorist groups.
Unit2Sucks
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sycasey said:

Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."
For the majority of these students I absolutely believe that they just use it because it's a catchy slogan and they broadly support Palestinians having their own nation. Most people in America are not aware of how the phrase has been used by terrorist groups.
Spitballing here, but would it be crazy if hypothetically a place that was created to educate young people would use all of that power they have to ... educate young people. Rather than throwing their hands up at people using genocidal chants casually, Harvard could like inform students that "from the river to the sea" is a chant for the destruction of israel and the death of all jewish people and that it's not cool.

These schools took stronger stances against people chanting "all lives matter" and I think we can all agree that merely saying "all lives matter" is certainly first amendment protected speech.

We're 2 months in, it's probably time to let these children know what they're actually calling for.
oski003
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Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."
For the majority of these students I absolutely believe that they just use it because it's a catchy slogan and they broadly support Palestinians having their own nation. Most people in America are not aware of how the phrase has been used by terrorist groups.
Spitballing here, but would it be crazy if hypothetically a place that was created to educate young people would use all of that power they have to ... educate young people. Rather than throwing their hands up at people using genocidal chants casually, Harvard could like inform students that "from the river to the sea" is a chant for the destruction of israel and the death of all jewish people and that it's not cool.

These schools took stronger stances against people chanting "all lives matter" and I think we can all agree that merely saying "all lives matter" is certainly first amendment protected speech.

We're 2 months in, it's probably time to let these children know what they're actually calling for.


Careful before you get labeled a white supremacist here.
calbear93
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sycasey said:

Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."
For the majority of these students I absolutely believe that they just use it because it's a catchy slogan and they broadly support Palestinians having their own nation. Most people in America are not aware of how the phrase has been used by terrorist groups.


But Tlaib using that phrase is unconscionably hateful. And for the rest of Squad to basically approve the usage is idiotic. And the far right who cozy up with White Nationalist to now act all offended is also transparently disingenuous.

And I don't excuse college students' ignorance, even if true. They google everything on their phone. How difficult is it to look up the meaning of that chant?

Everyone should be calling out bigotry from either side. No one should be persecuted for their religion or ethnicity. Period. No exceptions because it's expedient and politically excused by the party. Just be human and stand up for what is right even if you disagree with those who are being persecuted.
Cal88
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sycasey said:

Unit2Sucks said:

sycasey said:

Honestly, I think the better answer to the questions they were getting from Stefanik is not too hard to come by:

1. Yes, actively calling for genocide of Jews would be against our conduct policies.

Then after the obvious follow-up question:

2. No, just using the word "intifada" or the phrase "from the river to the sea" is not automatically an example of that. It depends on context.

The problem was in jumping to the second answer without clarifying the first part. They fell right into Stefanik's trap. These people assumed a general audience was already familiar with the fraught internal politics they've been dealing with for a while and would make that leap too. It doesn't work that way.
Just to double click on the "from the river to the sea" chant, there is reason to believe that most college kids chanting it have no idea that it's closer to "heil, hitler" than it is to "let my people go."
For the majority of these students I absolutely believe that they just use it because it's a catchy slogan and they broadly support Palestinians having their own nation. Most people in America are not aware of how the phrase has been used by terrorist groups.

The slogan was originally coined in the1970s as part of the founding charter of the Likud Party, which has been the ruling party in Israel for decades now:

"The context and the intent is key. The founding charter of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud party trolls: "Between the sea and the Jordan there will only be Israeli sovereignty."

This slogan essentially denies any sovereignty to Palestinians in historic Palestine, and calls for the complete colonization of Palestine.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/oct/31/from-the-river-to-the-sea-where-does-the-slogan-come-from-and-what-does-it-mean-israel-palestine
wifeisafurd
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tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.
***
Let me begin by saying my post used terribly imprecise language; your 1st Amendment focused critique is almost certainly correct. However, we have the confluence of 1st Amendment and school policies.

Harvard's Non-Discrimination Policy: https://provost.harvard.edu/files/provost/files/non-discrimination_and_anti-bullying_policies.pdf

The policy explicitly states that words alone can be bullying so President Gay was 100% wrong to say the speech had to cross over into conduct to be bullying. Easy.

The policy essentially invokes a "reasonableness" standard in assessing the severity of the speech as it relates to bullying and discrimination. In an environment where using the wrong pronoun and microaggressions can be a violation of a bullying policy and where students are given safe spaces to protect them from unwanted speech, calling for genocide of an entire religious group (ie, protected class) has to be pervasive enough to equal bullying. This is obvious and easy.

There are hypothetical variations of the question that would not be easy, would depend on judgment and context and which I personally would not consider bullying. For example, "Does calling for the genocide of Jews with the phrase 'From the river to the sea' constitute bullying?" Because the phrase can mean different things to different people it is in a different class than explicitly calling for the genocide of a religious group.

In any case, President Gay's subsequent statement makes this clear: "...calls for violence against our Jewish community threats to our Jewish students have no place at Harvard and will never go unchallenged."

So...my poor language couching this exclusively in the First Amendment was bad/wrong. But the overarching point was correct - this is not protected speech under the school's policies, and it really isn't even close.

There are a couple of comments that need to take a step back, because they are flat wrong in the case of Harvard. The harassment codes arise out of requirements set by Title 9 Regulations, and by legislative action apply to all private schools. So the question Unit 2, you and others are asking is why does Harvard through a Congressional action not get to override the first amendment. The answer from the courts has constantly been it doesn't for various reasons.

But let's take a further step further back. Harvard (as opposed to the HLS which told the Dept. of Education what they could do with their regulations) did pass codes which outlaw even micro-aggressions. So technically the answers to Stefanic is yes. But that doesn't mean the First Amendment rights don't apply. The Presidents clearly had been told they do, which is why you got all the word salad about repetitive actions, content, etc. Otherwise why not simply say yes and get yourself off the hot seat?

Private universities are not directly bound by the First Amendment, which limits only government action. However, the vast majority of private universities have traditionally viewed themselvesand sold themselvesas bastions of free thought and expression. Accordingly, private colleges and universities are constantly held by the courts to be government actors. Harvard is one such school. Then there is the another major problem, that state law forbids all private, nonreligious universities in California, Massachusetts (under the Massachusetts Civil Rights Act) and any most other states from disciplining students for speech that is protected by the First Amendment or the State Constitution. We have all been through this issue with Stanford, where the Law Dean wrote a very long letter to alumni and students telling them the !st Amendment applies and that the Diversity Dean who told the Judge that the students could stop the Judge from speaking (I appreciate this is loose language) denied both the Judge and the student group inviting the Judge their 1st amendment rights to speak. Students and faculty may also be able enforce as a matter of contract law\ academic freedom policies that state in broad terms that members of the faculty and student body have the right to engage in scholarship, teaching, and expression that can clash with the views of the institution.

The premise that these codes of conduct somehow supersede the First Amendment in the case of Harvard are simply wrong, and so is the analysis that arises from that premise. Nice try.
wifeisafurd
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calbear93 said:

wifeisafurd said:

Unit2Sucks said:

wifeisafurd said:

tequila4kapp said:

wifeisafurd said:

Zippergate said:

Two thoughts. It doesn't sound like Harvard alum Stefanki will be making her donation this year. The other is I'm glad I'm not the President of a major college these days. There is a move by Harvard alums to dump the current President, as she runs the gauntlet between pissing off students or alums.

I dunno. Harvard could set sane, reasonable standards of conduct and discourse and dismiss any student who refuses to abide by them. Problem solved.
This is a generational thing to some degree. Students want safe spaces to not be offended, yet the right to protest and offend. Then there are Harvard alums, who trend towards being ultra establishment, and don't find anything students do or say to be reasonable. And then there is the pesky right of free speech thing in the constitution. All problems once you go down the slippery road of restraining speech with "reasonable standards." What is reasonable then will always depend on context, which is exactly what all 3 Presidents said. .
Disagree. Free speech is not absolute. It is never okay to call for the genocide of a race of people. Change the terms just a tiny bit…could there ever be a context in which it would be okay for white people to call for the death of all African Americans? This isn'teven close to being a tough free speech question.

This is such as easy one. "Students are allowed to peacefully protest and express themselves in virtually all circumstances, but it is never okay to call for the murder of others, much less others based on a protected class. That is not protected speech." The fact the 3 presidents couldn't say anything close to that and instead had the "context" answer, which implies that there is some instance where it is okay…well, they deserve every ounce of whatever professional consequences that comes their way.
The fact that 3 Presidents of our top Universities, including one who is Jewish, couldn't say that was offensive or wrong is problematic. No problem with that.

But this may come as a shock, but calling for genocide is protected speech, despite your comments to the contrary.

There is no First Amendment exception for hate speech, and clearly that is at odds with your thoughts when you start saying well what happens if you use another group, much less when you go down the path of "protected classes". Students are allowed to have and expouse racist or sexist opinions (interestingly sexual obscene such as pornography is not protected). (This may not be the case for an employee such as a faculty member). The First Amendment fully protects speech that is unpopular, offensive or wrong. It is black letter law that racist, misogynist, homophobic, and [fill in a protected group speech] is protected, and Stefanki didn't give any specifics in the hypothetical that would fit an exception. Now there are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions to try and stop have speech. But when litigated, as discussed below, the broadly drafted college codes are found wanting (see the discussion of harassment below).

I also disagree with your views on this not being a tough free speech question because you can never call for the geocode of people -the law actually says you can. Look there is free speech for hate mongers and those the utter offensive speech, as a general rule. Calling for the death of all police, faculty, schools administrators, the French (been watching some British comedies lately), the Saudi Royals, Jews (even while dressed in a Ku Klux Klan or Nazis dress while walking though a Jewish neighborhood) or screaming death to all black people while in a moving car in Harlem is in fact protected speech, and there is plenty of case law to back that-up (okay, not the French commentary in British comedies). Mere advocacy of lawbreaking, violence or death is in fact protected speech as long as it is not intended to and likely to provoke immediate unlawful action. Brandenburg v. Ohio. Chanting something in a demonstration, or yelling something stupid is protected. You even can give charged speech (including to do away with a race of people) to a restless crowd. Terminiello v. Chicago. Again, Stefanki didn't provide any context how saying the genocide for Jews meets this exception.

There is also no general First Amendment exception for "harassment," and courts have struck down anti-harassment regulations and laws for overbroad language reaching a substantial amount of protected speech. In the educational context, the Supreme Court held in the Davis vs, Monroe County that student-on-student harassment consists only of unwelcome, discriminatory conduct (which may include expression) that is "so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victim-students are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities." By definition, this includes only extreme and usually repetitive behavior behavior so serious that it would prevent a reasonable person from receiving his or her education. The college Presidents kept trying to insert language into Stafanki's base hypothetical, to meet the exception for repetitive behavior, because the wanted to say yes, calling for genocide violates our Codes, and got in trouble for it. But absent an exception which could not be deduced from Stafanki's simple question, that is protected speech.

Those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular group of individuals is also an exception..The problem again with Stafanki's hypothetical is she didn't provide context, and made such a general if someone says something inquiry where the SCOTUS, in its wisdom, has said context is required.

Finally, there are fighting words are those that, by the very act of being spoken, tend to incite the individual to whom they are addressed to respond violently and to do so immediately, with no time to think things over. Basically, you have to have face-to-face physically imposing communications (think a demonstrator that seeks out a counter demonstrator and gets into it) that would obviously provoke an immediate and violent reaction from the average listener. One of the Presidents mentioned that and got shot down by Stefanki.

There are exceptions to the protected speech and the codes of conduct, at least at a place like Harvard, make use of these exceptions. At the risk of being repetitive, the Presidents kept trying to fit Stafanki's base hypothetical within one of the narrow exceptions so they could say yes, it fits our code, but the bottom line is calling for the genocide of people is protected speech, absent there exceptions.

And the other part about the present situation (which didn't hit the media) is that a lot of people at these demonstrations are not students or employees, but outsiders who the University has no jurisdiction over with respect to their codes of conduct.

The Presidents also talked about physical acts in hopes of being able to say yes. The First Amendment does not protect civil disobedience, violent of peaceful, and the School can place time, place and manner restrictions that are issue or group nuetral, and again the Presidents wee trying to button hole Stafanki into providing facts on which President's could act. She didn't rise to the bait.

You might ask why this is allowed in our democracy? Silencing others doesn't often work. Other groups on campus have the same right as you to make their voices heard, even if you don't agree with them. You can always learn from talking and debating with people who disagree with you. The speech codes deprive students of their right to invite speech they wish to hear, debate speech with which they disagree, and protest speech they find offensive. The best way to challenge calls for genocide is to challenge those calls, not suppress them. In that regard, the 3 Presidents failed (see my first sentence).



Why would you invoke the first amendment unless Harvard's policy is intended to permit all first amendment protected speech?

I might be wrong, but isn't Harvard one of the schools that limits free speech that could be seen as harassing? And that it could even include micro aggressions?

Just spitballing, but if you aren't going to permit all 1A protected speech, why would you permit calls for genocide? That seems like one of the first things you would prohibit.

Saying that calls for genocide are not acceptable speech on a college campus which prohibits other protected speech is pretty easy.
I'm admittedly not sure, and in talking with some HLS alum, they are not either. I know as an employer, our employee handbook outlawed all sorts of conduct and speech, but always had an intro, which started except for constitutional or otherwise legally protected communication, you can't do [then came a long list]. Given all the lawyers running around the Harvard campus, it is hard to believe the college's codes of conduct would not carve out legally protected speech and conduct.
I think we need to make sure we are not conflating issues.

Unless we view Harvard as a state actor, how does the first amendment apply to Harvard? Harvard can restrict speech as a private organization, could it not? Private employers restrict speech all the time. Heck, even UC Berkeley, which is a state actor, restricts speech that may offend certain people all the time. It's that they pick and choose as always who they want to protect and who they don't. It's about politics and picking who they like and who they don't. It's rarely about principle of the underlying right.

Also, even assuming that for whatever reason, Harvard is viewed as a state actor and therefor bound by the first amendment, couldn't we make the argument that there is compelling state interest that is narrowly tailored to prohibiting speech that makes members of the of the community in danger of physical violence?
Several problems:

1) Harvard is recognized as a state actor by the courts
2) Harvard must provide first amendment rights by state law
3) Harvard holds itself out for academic freedom and contractually allows its employees to exercise 1st amendment rights
4) The physical violence part already is a SCOTUS made exception, which is why the Presidents started talking about context. You really just can't say protester chanting is going to cause violence. You need imminent risk of violence, and given the overall lack thereof, I think that is a leap the courts will be unwilling to make. See my several posts above.

Otherwise, I thought it was a great post (having fun with you).

BTW, it looks like the bueracracy at Harvard is supporting the President, so we get to see who wields more power, alums and pols or the campus.
 
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