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.
T
here 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).