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How Free Speech Died On Campus

theodp writes "The WSJ catches up with FIRE's Greg Lukianoff and his crusade to expose how universities have become the most authoritarian institutions in America. In Unlearning Liberty, Lukianoff notes that baby-boom Americans who remember the student protests of the 1960s tend to assume that U.S. colleges are still some of the freest places on earth. But that idealized university no longer exists. Today, university bureaucrats suppress debate with anti-harassment policies that function as de facto speech codes. FIRE maintains a database of such policies on its website. What they share, lifelong Democrat Lukianoff says, is a view of 'harassment' so broad and so removed from its legal definition that 'literally every student on campus is already guilty.'"

530 comments

  1. Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    This guy is advocating racism and sexual harassment! Shall we defeat him, PC gang?

    1. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You're saying that the Wall Street Journal is a no-name site?

    2. Re:Yeah! by ColdWetDog · · Score: 0, Troll

      You're saying that the Wall Street Journal is a no-name site?

      Oh, I've got a name for it all right....

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yet in this one instance, it has a point. Even the right wing has freedom of speech.

      In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of homophobic, sexist, and racist non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the left.

    4. Re:Yeah! by kenj0418 · · Score: 4, Funny

      In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of homophobic, sexist, and racist non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the left.

      And somewhere in suburban Missouri, Todd Akin gets as the strange feeling that someone on slashdot is talking about him.

    5. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not by chance is "homophobic" intoned first here, which effectively means "Not conforming 100% to each and every demand of gay activists".

    6. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

      The problem with that argument is... the right isn't actually homophobic, sexist, or racist. That's just left wing propaganda trying to secure the votes of those groups.

    7. Re:Yeah! by Toonol · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have many views that you would probably label as right-wing and extreme, and yet I'm not the slightest bit sexist, racist, or homophobic. Will that truth affect your gross caricaturizations in the future? Probably not.

    8. Re:Yeah! by sg_oneill · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of homophobic, sexist, and racist non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the left.

      The problem with this view is that its logical, but it also doesn't really work like that. Humans have awful psychology when it comes to political views and crowds. If you have a large group of people chanting racists slogans, very quickly people around them , onlookers, can find themselves chanting along, and believing those slogans and not asking themselves why. The cronulla riot in australia left many people who had joined in the racist violent asking themselves "What the hell did I just do? I dont understand it? I was just in cronulla for shopping and next thing I'm in a crowd of people bashing lebanese shopkeepers". The inverse of this is the "spiral of silence" effect where once a view becomes popular, everyone starts changing their view to the popular one because its popular, and the less popular view becomes more and more rare and dangerous to express.

      Finally there is a large part of the population that research shows find themselves attracted to angry conservative type opinions and actually become MORE attracted to the opinion when evidence of its incorrectness is presented. Witness the absolute insanity of the anti gay-marriage league, or the "teach creationism in schools" league. It seems the more evidence as to why these guys are loons is presented to them, the more it convinces them that evolution/climate-change/drug-reform/gay-marriage/etc is some sort of evil communist plot.

      There are so many sociological factors involved with why people adopt political positions that are not at all related to rationality or free/open speech.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    9. Re:Yeah! by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Need I remind you that on the scale of evil to good, good is an extreme?

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    10. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 0, Troll

      Yeah, that's why so many gays, blacks and females voted for the right-wing candidates! Riiiiight...

    11. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Anecdote" is not the singular form of "data."

    12. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 0

      And if my suggestion is taken, you'll have ample opportunity to prove or disprove that by your speech.

    13. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your assertion here is that if one group votes one way (minorities), then the other group (conservatives) must be everything bad that's said about them?

      Sorry, is this really how you think??? If so, it's terrifying.

      The point of the article being that the major institutions of higher learning in this country are affectively hugely intolerant of anything that might offend others (remember the movie PCU anyone??) especially political belief if it goes against the grain.

      Your comments above indicate a similar intolerance of apposing views, and a desire to silence those views by demeaning them. Maybe you should re-evaluate your own feelings towards others and practice tolerance of others.

    14. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh man, he's persecuting minorities as well?

    15. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 2

      We can only hope the people involved in cronulla will become less likely to be fooled again now that they have been driven to introspection.

      The other cases will tune in to wingnut radio anyway no matter what we do. Blocking them from hearing it will, by your argument, cement them even firmer still in their crazy position.

      I understand your concerns, but I don't see suppression of free speech as being at all helpful. It is, however, quite the slippery slope.

    16. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe you should go back to grade school and learn the meanings of words like "tolerance" and "silencing". My assertion is that there is are reasons why blacks, gays and women are not voting for conservative candidates, and these reasons are not attached to any sort of "librul media propaganda". Maybe they think being treated like full human beings is worth more than getting tax cuts for rich people?

      Also, given the results of the election, it would seem these "minorities" aren't so "minor" after all. Maybe the GOP planners and leaders will realize there are more human beings in the USA than just the white straight male ones.

    17. Re:Yeah! by Tore+S+B · · Score: 1

      In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of homophobic, sexist, and racist non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the left.

      In my experience that's a fallacy. If you say that spewing hate-filled bullshit is "okay" and "harmless", it will catch on.

      Dismissing dangerous political ideas as somehow "inherently self-destructing" flies in the face of all experience with human history, which includes a lot of dangerous political ideologies - like Communism and Nazism.

      The reason preposterous or dangerous ideologies tend not to catch on in developed societies is because people react to them. If people stop reacting to them, they catch on.

      --
      toresbe
    18. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Witness the absolute insanity of the anti gay-marriage league, or the "teach creationism in schools" league. It seems the more evidence as to why these guys are loons is presented to them, the more it convinces them that evolution/climate-change/drug-reform/gay-marriage/etc is some sort of evil communist plot.

      The main justification for this viewpoint is that whatever city or county implement these policies (and many others such as "sanctuary cities" and public sector pension schemes), they invariably end up with budget deficits, rising taxes, which invariably lead to declaring bankruptcy.

    19. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds.

      I'm really sorry to Godwin this one... but that's what the Germans thought when they handed over power to Hitler.

      Godwin --> anonymous coward

    20. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      er... cool story, bro...

    21. Re:Yeah! by Troyusrex · · Score: 1

      Finally there is a large part of the population that research shows find themselves attracted to angry conservative type opinions and actually become MORE attracted to the opinion when evidence of its incorrectness is presented.

      It's not just "angry conservative type opinions" but ALL opinions are potentially affected by this form of confirmation bias. Left wing, right wing, social conventions, even food preferences. Here's an excellent book on the subject.

    22. Re:Yeah! by Quakeulf · · Score: 2

      If you, or anyone, think this has anything to do with "left" or "right" you are perhaps a bit too naive to be discussing this. This has to do with simple human power grabbing and using that power to stay on top regardless of considerations for you and me. Be it the left or the right it is all a means to power to control what you will say and do, and those in charge they love it, just like the stereotypical Bond-villain. Politicians are sadly no different, using their charisma to get their points across rather than pointing to results, which is really not the way it should be.

    23. Re:Yeah! by Troyusrex · · Score: 1

      In my experience that's a fallacy. If you say that spewing hate-filled bullshit is "okay" and "harmless", it will catch on.

      Dismissing dangerous political ideas as somehow "inherently self-destructing" flies in the face of all experience with human history, which includes a lot of dangerous political ideologies - like Communism and Nazism.

      The reason preposterous or dangerous ideologies tend not to catch on in developed societies is because people react to them. If people stop reacting to them, they catch on.

      My problem is that it'll be those in authority deciding what is "hate-filled bullshit" and, as has happened again and again in history, ultimately the definition will be "anything that is a threat to my power". Don't forget, "Democracy" was also a "dangerous idea" to governments, especially in 19th century Europe.

      Ultimately, while the "will of the people" worries me at times, I'd much rather people be able to express their opinions, even ones I don't favor, than trust the government (or University, or other authority) as to what I can and can not say.

    24. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ... angry conservative type opinions ... evidence of its incorrectness ...

      got bias much?

    25. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think what this proves is that most people really aren't capable of thinking for themselves.

      Some of us are, thankfully, immune to this ape limitation.

    26. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But, if you silence those with views you disagree with, you also risk alienating those who may not necessarily agree with them but are somewhat sympathetic.

      Honestly, I think that's how Fox News got to be so successful. For the large part, mainstream media does tend to lean left at best while deriding those who lean right. Of course those who were even moderately right-winged felt slighted and is it any wonder they would fall under the sway of a station claiming 'hey, we understand. We don't think you're bad or wrong,' even to the point of accepting more extreme views than they originally held?

      People will always find reasons to fight and hate each other, there's nothing we can really do about that. Censorship and silence can be a tempting salve but history has shown it to be toxic.

    27. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds"

      I take it you've never seen Lord Munchkin of Chigley or Antony Watts or Bill OReilley speak and how they're perceived by the public that listen to them, right?

      Hell, despite the "legitimate rape" bollocks the republicans freely spoke about, they still garnered 48% of the votes.

    28. Re:Yeah! by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you have a large group of people chanting racists slogans, very quickly people around them , onlookers, can find themselves chanting along, and believing those slogans and not asking themselves why.

      Perhaps you could give an example? I've never seen this alleged effect myself.

      The cronulla riot in australia left many people who had joined in the racist violent asking themselves "What the hell did I just do? I dont understand it? I was just in cronulla for shopping and next thing I'm in a crowd of people bashing lebanese shopkeepers".

      There's this behavior called the "lie". There's also this substance called "alcohol". The combination leads to stories like what you heard. In other words, I don't believe the story at all. It's just an excuse made up after the fact for what the person did, probably in an attempt to weasel out of some vandalism charges.

      Also, didn't this protest have the opposite effect of what you claimed? It publicly embarrassed the anti-"Lebanon shopkeeper" crowd, especially when no evidence for the alleged racist attacks which provoked the riot could be found (there was no change in the incident of racist attacks, just a change in the perception of those attacks).

      Also, it's my view that free speech addresses the other "social factors" you referred to. The "spiral of silence" is addressed simply by people being allowed to say unpopular opinions. When those opinions aren't shared, nothing happens. But when they are, it breaks the spiral of silence.

      Finally there is a large part of the population that research shows find themselves attracted to angry conservative type opinions and actually become MORE attracted to the opinion when evidence of its incorrectness is presented.

      "Conservative type" opinions? I think this is the result of half-assed arguments. When you use a bunch of crude and poorly thought out "ad hominem" attacks (such as labels like "angry conservative type"), you increase the audience's sympathy for the target. A really high profile and incompetent foe can be more valuable than a rhetorically skilled advocate. It is a perverse sociological factor, but not what you thought it was.

    29. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 0

      My assertion is that there is are reasons why blacks, gays and women are not voting for conservative candidates

      Free phones? Or simply buy-in to the propaganda that Democrats will help them, even though 40 years of liberal policies have made them worse off? Or have they now been thoroughly convinced by the left's rhetoric that they are inferior and will require government help?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    30. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      'I have many views that you would probably label as right-wing and extreme, and yet I'm not the slightest bit sexist, racist, or homophobic.'

      "I'm totally not a racist, 'cause my best friend is black, but..."

    31. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 3, Interesting

      How about I name a few names for you: Todd Akin, Michelle Bachmann, Rick Santorum... A quick google search of some of their quotes will tell you immediately why women and gays vote for any party they are not a part of. Being treated like a human being should be something everyone can expect from a politician they're going to vote for. Blacks have voted democrat for ages, it's not a new development due to Obama being on the ticket. And Mitt "flip flop" Romney and his "wait till I get elected, I'll tell you my plans then" sell just didn't move many people who might have voted red. Better the devil you know and all that jazz.

    32. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a load of crap.

      The Cronulla riots left a lot of Muslim thugs thinking "What ?..hang on....we've been able to abuse schoolgirls and bash life guards and anyone else we can outnumber 10 to 1 for years. Now we're getting some of our own medicine, What happened here ? Why aren't the locals just rolling over as I beat up their grandmothers ??"

      You sir, are a sniveling piece of shit.

      The Cronulla riots were the actions of law abiding, decent, hard working citizens fed up with the lawlessness of a criminal thug Muslim gang who thought they could sexually assault young girls and brutally batter anyone who tried to stop them. And all this after YEARS of the police and politicians adopting a "softly softly" politically correct approach regarding them for fear of "offending muslim sensibilities".

      You disgust me. Go move to Saudi Arabia you traitor.

    33. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 1

      I suspect they would have gotten more if they had spoken a little less freely.

    34. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 1

      I didn't say you have to agree with it or not make it clear that the ONLY reason you don't run them off is your respect for free speech. For that matter, it's probably a good idea to use your own free speech to point out the failures in their reasoning.

      Inherantly self destructing isn't the same as harmless. The Soviet Union DID self-destruct. Unfortunately, it did a lot of damage first.

    35. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 1

      Handing power to someone goes a little bit beyond respecting free speech, I'd say.

    36. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      will tell you immediately why women and gays vote for any party they are not a part of.

      I suggest you check again. I'm not familiar with how women feel about which party their "lady parts" should choose (invoking fear of the other party helps, of course, regardless of the basis), but it is well-understood that LGBT voters do NOT vote along party lines - they are issue voters and vote based on their issues. Period. They pay no attention to party, and that is precisely WHY they are so politically influential even though they are such a small voting bloc. Partisan voters never have that kind of influence, because they vote for "their" party, no matter how they are treated by it.

      If black people voted like the LGBT folks, they would be a force to be reckoned with. Politicians would have to pay attention to them, and get focused on their issues. But it's not like that - they have all been fooled into continuing to support a single party, no matter how bad their situation gets. That means Democrats ignore their issues, because they will get their vote anyway, and Republicans ignore their issues, because they won't get their vote no matter what.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    37. Re:Yeah! by dywolf · · Score: 1

      You heard it here first folks:
      There are no sexist leftists.
      There are no racist leftists.
      There are no homophobic leftists.

      Thank you sjames for bringing these wonderful factoids to our attention.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    38. Re:Yeah! by sjames · · Score: 1

      Seems like something hit a bit close to home for someone!

    39. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      What is loony about defending traditional marriage?

    40. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, let's see... believing, in spite of contrary evidence, that:

      * Your tradition has always been the same
      * Your tradition is the only one, only possible one, or the "right" one
      * Your tradition will never change
      * Your tradition suits everyone and should apply to everyone
      * Your tradition is biblically based (it isn't)
      * Your tradition will be harmed, lessened, or interfered with if other traditions are respected (it won't)
      * Your tradition is more important than someone else's right to pursuit of happiness
      * It's any of your business who marries anyone but you

      I could go on, but seriously, take a reality pill.

    41. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "What the hell did I just do? I dont understand it? I was just in london for shopping and next thing I'm in a crowd of people robbing london shopkeepers".

      London had the same problems when blacks decided they wanted free stuff.

    42. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      I suggest you check again. I'm not familiar with how women feel about which party their "lady parts" should choose (invoking fear of the other party helps, of course, regardless of the basis), but it is well-understood that LGBT voters do NOT vote along party lines - they are issue voters and vote based on their issues. Period. They pay no attention to party, and that is precisely WHY they are so politically influential even though they are such a small voting bloc. Partisan voters never have that kind of influence, because they vote for "their" party, no matter how they are treated by it.

      As long as the religious right holds sway in the Republican party, no self-respecting gay person will vote republican. Also, thanks to recent revelations of how the religious right view women's bodies and autonomy (i.e, that they're just cum receptacles and baby vats), many women are not going to vote for them either.

      If black people voted like the LGBT folks, they would be a force to be reckoned with. Politicians would have to pay attention to them, and get focused on their issues. But it's not like that - they have all been fooled into continuing to support a single party, no matter how bad their situation gets. That means Democrats ignore their issues, because they will get their vote anyway, and Republicans ignore their issues, because they won't get their vote no matter what.

      This is a quote from Lee Atwater:

      You start out in 1954 by saying, "Nigger, nigger, nigger." By 1968 you can't say "nigger" — that hurts you. Backfires. So you say stuff like forced busing, states' rights and all that stuff. You're getting so abstract now [that] you're talking about cutting taxes, and all these things you're talking about are totally economic things and a byproduct of them is [that] blacks get hurt worse than whites. And subconsciously maybe that is part of it. I'm not saying that. But I'm saying that if it is getting that abstract, and that coded, that we are doing away with the racial problem one way or the other. You follow me — because obviously sitting around saying, "We want to cut this," is much more abstract than even the busing thing, and a hell of a lot more abstract than "Nigger, nigger."[8][9]

      He was one of the Rpublican Party leaders in the 60's, and the party hasn't looked back from a lot of those positions. Do you think it is rational for black people to vote for a party that actively hates them (R) rather than a party that takes them for granted(D)? Because I certainly don't.

    43. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      I won't respond to everything because you are trying to perform a "war of attrition". I will respond to only two.

      * Your tradition is more important than someone else's right to pursuit of happiness

      No one is denying other people the right to pursue happiness. If redefining marriage was the "right to pursue happiness", then it would also apply to incestuous copules, to group marriage, etc.

      * It's any of your business who marries anyone but you

      Ridiculously wrong. Marriage has plently of legal cosnequences on society - tax benefits, forcing health insurance companies to treat the spouses as a family, allowing the spouses to adopt children together (and forcing orphanages to cooperate with it), etc. It also gives a state stamp of approval to the marriage. For this reason, we prohibit unhealthy and unnatural "marriages" such as group marriage, incestuous "marriage", bestiality and same-sex "marriage".

    44. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is denying other people the right to pursue happiness.

      When you deny someone something that would make them happy, and doesn't affect your life at all, for no reason except that you don't want them to have it for your own personal religious reasons, then yes, you are. It's disgustingly selfish.

      If redefining marriage was the "right to pursue happiness", then it would also apply to incestuous copules, to group marriage, etc.

      There is incest and group marriage in the bible. At some point, someone (in "your tradition") decided to "redefine" marriage at least before.

      Marriage has plently of legal cosnequences on society

      There is absolutely no evidence that same-sex marriages are any more or less damaging to "society" than opposite-sex ones. You guys just keep telling yourself that because you equate "I don't like it" with "harmful."

      I don't have time to pursue the finer points of this argument, but I strongly recommend you read this book - you sorely need it.

    45. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I have many views that you would probably label as right-wing and extreme, and yet I'm not the slightest bit sexist, racist, or homophobic

      Yea that what they all say but it doesn't make it the truth...

    46. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      As long as the religious right holds sway in the Republican party, no self-respecting gay person will vote republican.

      As I already mentioned, they can and do. That is, they are not partisans, they vote based on their issues. Your stereotyping all gay people as ignorant party loyalists is demonstrably false and a blatant insult to their intelligence. They have already demonstrated political savvy far beyond your myopic view of them.

      If you're going to go back 60 years to find racist quotes from dead Republicans in order to claim the Republican party hates blacks, you might as well go back 70 years to find quotes from Democrats that practically rioted to keep the blacks they hated from attending their white schools. This type of marketing of party politics is certainly effective, but inaccurate, and will likely fail in the long term. You can't keep an entire race in check solely by propaganda - I know that the Democrats are also working to keep them ignorant as well, but eventually enough will wake up and realize that they are being treated like chattel.

      Do you think it is rational for black people to vote for a party that actively hates them

      No, I don't, and many of them are turning away from the Democratic party for that very reason. Most are still buying the kind of bullshit you are spouting, though, even as their poverty gets worse with every election that they support them.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    47. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      As I already mentioned, they can and do. That is, they are not partisans, they vote based on their issues. Your stereotyping all gay people as ignorant party loyalists is demonstrably false and a blatant insult to their intelligence. They have already demonstrated political savvy far beyond your myopic view of them.

      Thats.... Not what I said. Everyone votes based on issues. Most gay people voted democrat because the religious right within the republican party hates them. Women voters skewed more democrat because of the lovely rape-alicious comments coming out of the religious fundies mouths that the republican party loves promoting, coddling and sheltering from criticism.

      If you're going to go back 60 years to find racist quotes from dead Republicans in order to claim the Republican party hates blacks, you might as well go back 70 years to find quotes from Democrats that practically rioted to keep the blacks they hated from attending their white schools. This type of marketing of party politics is certainly effective, but inaccurate, and will likely fail in the long term. You can't keep an entire race in check solely by propaganda - I know that the Democrats are also working to keep them ignorant as well, but eventually enough will wake up and realize that they are being treated like chattel.

      Wow that's quite an interesting interpretation of what I said. Come on, shelve the talking points and be real. The Republicans succeed in the South because of a certain strategy, and that strategy is racial anxiety and coded stoking of anti-black sentiment. Why would a black person vote for a party actively trying to denigrate and discredit them as a race? Democrats have definitely failed black people, but the Republicans are actively against black communities and people. They have no good options to vote for, because the USA is not and has never been a country that is friendly to black people

      No, I don't, and many of them are turning away from the Democratic party for that very reason. Most are still buying the kind of bullshit you are spouting, though, even as their poverty gets worse with every election that they support them.

      Turning away to where? The Republicans? Don't make me laugh. The Libertarians? I think not. Greens? Possibly. But in a two party system, there are only two realisitc choices for blacks. A Republican party whose southern stronghold must be pandered to via racebaiting or a Democrat party who have so long taken their vote as a given it doesn't even try to do anything for them.

      I am a crackpot

      Oh. I see.

    48. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      The Republicans succeed in the South because of a certain strategy, and that strategy is racial anxiety and coded stoking of anti-black sentiment.

      Incorrect. That's propaganda from the DNC, nothing more. Successful propaganda, I'll grant you, but pure propaganda without basis. They keep talking about these strange "codes" that Republicans have - do you have the code book, I'd really like to see those codes. The truly divisive rhetoric comes exclusively from the mouths of partisan Democrats.

      the Republicans are actively against black communities and people

      No - it's Democrats that will do ANYTHING to keep blacks voting Democrat, and their primary strategy for that is to keep them poor, ignorant (by trapping them in failing schools), dependent on government handouts, and convinced that they are too inferior to get by without government support. This is the most insidious and psychologically damaging activity that could be perpetrated against a group, and it is done willfully and without regard for the people harmed.

      Turning away to where? The Republicans? Don't make me laugh. The Libertarians? I think not. Greens?

      Maybe they need to learn a lesson from the LGBT community, and learn to figure out which politicians will support their issues, instead of voting along party lines.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    49. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      > "When you deny someone something that would make them happy, and doesn't affect your life at all"
      Wrong premise. See below.

      > "for no reason except that you don't want them to have it for your own personal religious reasons"
      It is not just about religion. It is also about natural law.

      > "then yes, you are. It's disgustingly selfish."
      Oh, the people who lost their jobs in California to defend traditional marriage are "selfish"?

      > "There is incest and group marriage in the bible. At some point, someone (in "your tradition") decided to "redefine" marriage at least before."

      Can you possibly be serious? The bible also features a man killing his brother, yet no one says that the Bible supports fratricide. Please learn the difference between "describe" and "command".

      > "There is absolutely no evidence that same-sex marriages are any more or less damaging to "society" than opposite-sex ones"
      It gives tax benefits without any good reason; therefore it makes other people pay more taxes.
      It forces people (health insurance companies, bead&breakfast owners, etc.) to recognize the "marriage" and have their sheets stained with blood and feces (in the case of the bed&breakfast owners).
      It promotes a behavior which is intrinsically disordered and is associated with mental problems and lower life expectancy.
      It forces orphanages to give children to same-sex pairs.

      > I don't have time to pursue the finer points of this argument, but I strongly recommend you read this book [archive.org]

      Absolutely irrelevant. Very few people defend punishing people who practice buggery. It is _precisely the opposite_. We are simply asking the State to refrain from forcing same-sex "marriage" on us (see above).

    50. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You shouldn't be "quoting" something if the "person" you "replied to" didn't say what you are "quoting".

    51. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      Maybe they need to learn a lesson from the LGBT community, and learn to figure out which politicians will support their issues, instead of voting along party lines.

      I'm curious. Which republican politicans support black people and black issues? I really want to know. And what level of seniority do they have in the GOP? Can you rustle up any names? Because all you're doing is recycling boring rightwing talking points without actually discussing anything specific that a republican politician or the GOP itself has done for black people.

      Another thing, LGBT people voted overwhelmingly democrat as well. Why is it a smart thing when LGBT voters do it, but black people are dumb for doing the same? And why would it be smarter for black people to vote Republican? What have the GOP ever done for them? There was a president who passed the Civil Rights Act against strident opposition from southern whites. That president was LBJ. Where is the Republican LBJ and what has he done?.

    52. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Which republican politicans support black people and black issues?

      I can name a few, but you want "seniority in the GOP", and no major politicians support black people and black issues, not even Obama. Many pander to them, and then stab them in the back, but that's about it. That's the current dynamic. Black Democrats are elected in majority-black districts, and portray their entire constituency as victims that he will "fight for" - then they use that rhetoric to gain power for themselves. Much has been written about this, so I'm sure it's no surprise to you. I worked hard this year on Dean Longo's campaign, but despite a much better message for his community and a do-nothing zombie opponent, he couldn't get even 30% of the vote. Can't do anything if you can't get elected.

      There was a president who passed the Civil Rights Act against strident opposition from southern whites. That president was LBJ.

      You have a skewed version of history in your head. Public school? Try learning a little history on your own about the "parties" (oh, there are 2 of them, right?) and about LBJ. Note the president supporting Civil Rights legislation 10 years earlier - a Republican.

      What have the GOP ever done for them?

      Emancipation Proclamation ring a bell? What have the Democrats done for them? I mean, really, not just rhetoric.

      And, sorry, you're just wrong about LGBT voters. They are not partisans as a group. Sure, they voted in the 70% range for Obama, but fairly split on parties in general. Several Republicans in the recent election won the LGBT vote over their Democratic opponents. That's why they have real political power, while black (voting in the 95% range for Democrats) do not.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    53. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      Again I have to ask, why are black people partisan for voting Dem, but LGBTs are not? What is the difference? Also the lgbt vote is not split on parties. It votes liberal, which in nearly every case, is a Democrat rather than a Republican. I don't think further discussion is very useful, because our frames of reference are just too different. Also, I love how you provide an example from the Civil War era to show an example of Republicans doing something for black people, yet gave me hell for mentioning the much more recent Lee Atwater admission.

    54. Re:Yeah! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Again I have to ask, why are black people partisan for voting Dem, but LGBTs are not? What is the difference?

      You're just wrong about this - the LGBT community votes on issues regardless of party - they don't vote party. Yes, they are split on parties, and as I mentioned, several Republican candidates won the gay vote in the most recent election. You're just refusing to accept facts.

      The Republican-majority New York state house voted for gay marriage. The Republican party has a gay coalition (the "Log Cabin Republicans PAC", GOProud Inc., etc.).

      Also, I love how you provide an example from the Civil War era to show an example of Republicans doing something for black people, yet gave me hell for mentioning the much more recent Lee Atwater admission.

      It's a pretty big one, don't you think, ending slavery? I also mentioned Eisenhower pushing for Civil Rights legislation over LBJ's objections to it in the Senate, but you forgot that real fast, didn't you? And that's the real problem with most of the electorate: they too quickly forget history.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    55. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a pretty big one, don't you think, ending slavery?

      I for one think it's a big deal. I think it makes it all the funnier, as the party that ended slavery have fallen so far from what they used to be, that the people they were trying to free would rather choose the Democrats over them.

      It's like seeing a successful guy end up being a failure and losing everything, and his girlfriend dumps him/cheats on him for an asshole which she claimed to have hated (but now she just LOVES it)

      And that's the real problem with most of the electorate: they too quickly forget history.

      Nah, that's not a problem. That's how things have been since the beginning, the US still chugged on.

      Most of the electorate didn't understand the higher concepts of freedom, rights, and economics (as most people aren't 300 years ago, they were used to having kings and lords over them, having masters, have no "rights"). They just listened to the Founding Fathers who promised them nice sounding things ("all men created equal", "life, liberty and pursuit of happiness", "freedom", "liberty", etc), no different than promises of free phones

      That's history for most of humanity really. The masses are forgetful, ignorant, apathetic, petty, short sighted, etc. It's the few elites who convince (by pen or by sword) and direct the masses to some grander goal, be it a grander goal that benefits everybody or just a grander goal to make the elite rich even richer.

    56. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Defending the institution against people who want to get married!"

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bja2ttzGOFM

    57. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      So the best you got is ad hominem, sarcasm, and no logical arguments?

    58. Re:Yeah! by samoanbiscuit · · Score: 1

      The Republican party has a gay coalition (the "Log Cabin Republicans PAC", GOProud Inc., etc.).

      OMG, stop talking. Right now. Those quislings, forgiving towards homophobes, willing to sacrifice marriage equality and discrimination protections for their pieces of silver. You'll find that members of GOProud skew white, rich and most often originating from the South. If that's your view of how "gays are split on parties" then that's a very distorted view. There are much more LGBT people (in fact, I doubt there are many T of LGBT people in the log cabin) who are against GOProud than there are GOProuders.

      It's a pretty big one, don't you think, ending slavery? I also mentioned Eisenhower pushing for Civil Rights legislation over LBJ's objections to it in the Senate, but you forgot that real fast, didn't you? And that's the real problem with most of the electorate: they too quickly forget history.

      Something tells me Abraham Lincoln and Eisenhower would be Democrats today if they were transported through time to this era. Your skewed view of events makes sense once you mentioned the log cabin. Have a nice time in there (assuming you're LGBT).

    59. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like I said, I don't have time to pursue this, but rest assured I will fight tooth and nail against people like you who think government is a tool for enforcing your religious beliefs on everyone.

      Marriage as a civil institution crosses religious boundaries and you are on the losing side of history. Years from now when gays have won their fight for equal rights, you will be looking back and bitching while the rest of the country wonders what the big deal was.

    60. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      > "Like I said, I don't have time to pursue this, but rest assured I will fight tooth and nail against people like you who think government is a tool for enforcing your religious beliefs on everyone."

      This was simply an empty ad hominem attack. No one is forcing other people in America to follow a religion they don't want.

      > "Marriage as a civil institution crosses religious boundaries and you are on the losing side of history."

      Ridiculous. I don't care one bit about the "losing side of history". I fight for what is good and just, instead of cheerleading for whatever is popular and politically correct.

    61. Re:Yeah! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was simply an empty ad hominem attack. No one is forcing other people in America to follow a religion they don't want.

      Okay, then "marriage is between one man and one woman" based on what? If you say the Bible, you're not only wrong, you're injecting your beliefs into law.

      Ridiculous. I don't care one bit about the "losing side of history". I fight for what is good and just, instead of cheerleading for whatever is popular and politically correct.

      Good for you, not for gays. Just for you, not for gays. You should really practice the Golden Rule and visit someplace where you're denied your rights to see what oppression feels like.

      Rest easy in your self-righteous arrogance, it may not last much longer.

    62. Re:Yeah! by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      Okay, then "marriage is between one man and one woman" based on what? If you say the Bible, you're not only wrong, you're injecting your beliefs into law.

      Based on moral philosophy.
      Also, even if we have religion-based opinions on law, it does not remotely mean that we are "forcing our religion on others". By your logic, whenever a DEM politican makes a law enforcing an environmental rule, he is "forcing environmental progressivism on others". We have the same right to make judgements based on religion that other people have to make judgements based on progressivism, feminism, etc.

      Good for you, not for gays. Just for you, not for gays. You should really practice the Golden Rule and visit someplace where you're denied your rights to see what oppression feels like.

      You unilaterally decreed that "redefining marriage" is a human right.
      If you support that false "human right" for homosexuals but not for the practicers of incest or group marriage, then you are enormously inconsistent.

  2. Wow, don't have opinions online.. by slashkitty · · Score: 5, Informative

    Norfolk State: "The policy broadly prohibits using any university internet technology resources "to further personal views" or "religious or political causes." It also prohibits downloading or transmitting "inappropriate messages or images," without defining "inappropriate."

    --
    -- these are only opinions and they might not be mine.
    1. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      That was a major issue at my University, StFX.

      The entire "community code" was so vague, you were in violation of something at any given time. They put fines on student accounts for violations, and don't release transcripts unless they're paid.

    2. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DavidClarkeHR · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Norfolk State: "The policy broadly prohibits using any university internet technology resources "to further personal views" or "religious or political causes." It also prohibits downloading or transmitting "inappropriate messages or images," without defining "inappropriate."

      Unfortunately, most universities don't have an explicit policy in place. If you're an undergraduate, rather than tell you they don't want opposing viewpoints, they'll just graduate you quickly with average marks. But if you're a graduate student? Your advisory commity will they'll revoke your funding (after the first year), your review committee will slow-walk your research, your lab-coordinator will have difficulty finding you space to work and - if you're lucky - you'll be forced to write massive changes into your thesis before you graduate. If you're not lucky? That's 3-5 years of study with no degree.

      Graduate studies costs 4-5x more than undergrad studies, and carry a stigma of "Well, you couldn't cut it there, why would we accept you here?".

      --
      - Nec Impar Pluribus, or so I'm told.
    3. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Norfolk State: "The policy broadly prohibits using any university internet technology resources "to further personal views" or "religious or political causes."

      If you use taxpayer funded university resources to promote religious causes, that arguably violates the establishment clause.

      If you want to promote your personal views, pay for your own website or attend and pay for a private university, don't do it with tax dollars.

    4. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't actually have a huge problem with this one. It's not saying you can't say that kind of stuff online, just not to use thier stuff to do it. It's kind of like asking the person who borrowed my phone not to make death threats, if they want to do it do it with their own phone.

    5. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by RobertLTux · · Score: 5, Insightful

      so if you are using your personal computing device you need to go off campus to post your opinions??

      also btw you are using the normal WRONG reading of the first amendment.

      this should not be used to force me to be atheist.

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    6. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Any "university" or "college" that can't tolerate non-PC opinions isn't a college at all. Instead, it's an indoctrination center. Which, apparently, is fine with you, as you support the goals of the indoctrination.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    7. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Poor analogy. The students are paying customers, who have the right to free speech. These universities might as well publish the fact that they require their students to be politically correct, or they are unwanted on campus.

      Christian Bible colleges basically do that. If you're an atheist, a muslim, or maybe a wicca, Bob Jones University doesn't really want you studying on their campus.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    8. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Any "university" or "college" that can't tolerate non-PC opinions isn't a college at all.

      The policy we're talking about isn't about "tolerating" opinion, it is about using taxpayer funded resources to promote and advertise those opinions. That is not OK.

      In class, you should be able speak your mind in whatever PC or non-PC way you like.

    9. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by durrr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Stop promoting your personal view on slashdot and start commenting on your own site.
      Hypocrite douchebag.

    10. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I suspect that runs afoul of contract law.

    11. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 0, Troll

      so if you are using your personal computing device you need to go off campus to post your opinions??

      You shouldn't use public university networks or university web sites to promote your religious or political views. If that means you have to go outside campus to update your Bible website, like the rest of us, then so be it. I don't see why I should pay taxes so that you can promote your religion.

      this should not be used to force me to be atheist.

      It doesn't force you to "be" anything. The policy simply prohibits taxpayer funded resources or the name of a publicly funded university to promote your religious views, whatever they may be.

    12. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Runaway1956 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "Taxpayer funded" means almost nothing in this context. Many, even most, students are "paying customers" who have the right to use the resources for which they are paying.

      Neither the university, nor the public, has the right to curtail those rights by claiming that the internet belongs to them. In fact, they only own a few pieces of gear that interface with the internet.

      --
      "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    13. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 2

      Any "university" or "college" that can't tolerate non-PC opinions isn't a college at all.

      The policy we're talking about isn't about "tolerating" opinion, it is about using taxpayer funded resources to promote and advertise those opinions. That is not OK.

      In class, you should be able speak your mind in whatever PC or non-PC way you like.

      Actually, it is okay, up to a point. Constitutional Law has rules about what you're allowed to do at a limited public forum. And about what you're allowed to do in a fully public forum, like a sidewalk. Sidewalks are also taxpayer funded resources, but they still enjoy constitutional protection. The same goes for a plaza or public park, like Boston Common. There are limit on free speech that apply even in those places, but the rule isn't a cut-and-dried taxpayer funding issue.

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    14. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Your advisory commity will they'll revoke your funding (after the first year), your review committee will slow-walk your research, your lab-coordinator will have difficulty finding you space to work and - if you're lucky - you'll be forced to write massive changes into your thesis before you graduate. If you're not lucky? That's 3-5 years of study with no degree.

      This is true, I've seen this. But usually it's not because you are in the wrong party. In the cases I've seen, it's been some kind of weird personal vendetta.

      In one case I knew a physics student failed his oral exams because he was too confident. In another case, for a music degree, a professor didn't like the student because he didn't take enough notes in his class. The student complained to other professors, and the answer he got was, "Yeah, it's not fair, but we have to live and work with him, we don't have to deal with you, so we're not going to do anything about it."

      It's a lousy system, and it's as if professors feel they need to fail somebody, and if there isn't anyone bad enough to fail, they'll find some other reason to fail them.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    15. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Tax payers pay for a large part of these universities, that's what makes them public universities. If you don't like the restrictions that come with that, attend a fully privately funded university; there are enough of them around, and they can adopt whatever policies they like.

    16. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 4, Funny

      Slashdot is private; if the people who pay for it don't like what I post, they can ban me and I have no problem with that.

    17. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Teancum · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Note that the 1st amendment also says that the government can't prohibit the free exercise of religion either, including its expression through speech and the press. There is a world of difference between a student or ordinary citizen expressing themselves in a voluntary manner (aka offering a prayer right before a test on their own or holding a prayer vigil on Christmas Eve in a public area... even on public property) as opposed to having the government mandate that you must pray to a certain god or have tithing extracted from your paycheck as a tax.

      I don't have a problem with a student setting up a web page expressing their religious opinions using government funds... as long as you offer that same opportunity to all of the students on a reasonable basis to express whatever their opinion is including having no opinion or even being against organized religions in general. The problem is the censorship, and this attitude that religious expression is something that should be feared.

      I think it would even be healthy to have a "debate corner" on a college campus where any student could express any political opinion they may have... including "hate speech" full of bigotry, sexism, and racism. If you think some sort of speech should be censored, you definitely don't understand the purpose or the philosophy behind the 1st amendment and why it was ratified in the first place. Suggesting that university websites, dorm doors, or even bulletin boards should be off limits to religious expression completely misses the mark... especially at a public school. Private schools have a little more latitude to ban some forms of speech as there is a contractual relationship to even attend. It definitely shouldn't be the other way around.

    18. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 0

      Fuck that, to leave campus, they have to use TAXPAYER funded roads. If they want to update their bible website, they can build their own roads to do it with.

    19. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by VAElynx · · Score: 2

      Wrong
      I'm all for banning someone from presenting their own views as institutional views. However, using university facilities to present their views is something completely different.
      Your analogy works on that - someone making death threats from your phone is a problem because you, not him will be the one to get in trouble for the illegal act. A better example would be someone running public phone booths (you pay for college, after all) and basically stating the list of allowed conversation topic to take place while using his phones.

    20. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by elfprince13 · · Score: 1

      because nobody pays to attend a state school?

    21. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 5, Interesting

      It's a lousy system, and it's as if professors feel they need to fail somebody, and if there isn't anyone bad enough to fail, they'll find some other reason to fail them.

      I had a prof who said 'I know what it takes to be a real physicist, and none of you have it' and failed the entire class.

      We were all asked to leave after appealing.

      Professors are high level employees, even though they seem relatively low in the university hierarchy they have a lot of independent authority and judgment, and the entire system is setup around professors being both professionally and ethically responsible to their discipline as a whole. If they don't think you've demonstrated the right behaviour they can be rid of you as a drain on that community, and as someone who would tarnish the universities reputation. The upshot of this is that professors can break all sorts of soft rules to get whomever they want as grad student, pay them past funding periods, run labs the way they want, run their own IT etc. But it also means the occasional asshole has quite a lot of authority to make your life miserable, and well, every department has at least one prof you just don't want to go near.

      I'm in Comp sci, and we have a prof who repeatedly insists (via e-mail) that we should cut off internet access to the department. The last place I was had a professor who's entire workload was teaching 2 courses (no committees, no research), and he liked to teach courses on whatever was 'cool' (as defined by his teenage daughter I guess), even if this had nothing to do with the broader programme goals. Getting rid of a tenured professor is really really hard, it's expensive, and usually they don't go completely crazy until they're towards the end of their careers, so you don't want to fire someone with health problems etc. There's a huge legal expense, and bad press. And students sometimes love the crazy ones because they are certainly interesting.

    22. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by jhoegl · · Score: 2

      Also, they cant use Taxpayer subsidized internet lines. They must install their own lines to the server to connect to it and then post.
      What? People forget that the internet was subsidized through taxes?
      In fact, all of the inventions we enjoy were either publicly researched or subsidized through taxes. Get your head out of your ass people.

    23. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no using municipal power supply to run the servers either

    24. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't actually have a huge problem with this one. It's not saying you can't say that kind of stuff online, just not to use thier stuff to do it.

      Except that's making the implicit assumption that because you're using school resources to speak, that you represent the opinions of the school, which is not remotely the case.

      In fact, when I worked at University of Humbug, it was typical for every e-mail I received from a U employee to have a disclaimer at the bottom reading "opinions expressed in this message are my own and do not represent the views of the U. of Humbug."

    25. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      said crazy prof let a student do a presentation on integrated circuits using interpretive dance.

      And yes, I, and the entire class, were lousy physics students. That's why we failed. Comp sci is easier and it pays better anyway.

      Though I should clarify, this was grad school, not undergrad, I don't think he could have pulled that in undergrad.

    26. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well yes... you do get dickhead professors.

      The tenure system is there to guard a professors academic freedom (something considered very important). They are hard to get rid off... and that's a good thing in general... as dochebags running universities generally do want to rid themselves of awkward fuckers who teach free-thinking.

      However, it does mean that occasional asshat professors can get away with murder. Think carefully before you flush the baby with the bathwater though.

    27. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by hemo_jr · · Score: 1

      You exercise broad control over people by making policies so inclusive that everyone can and should feel guilty. You exercise specific control by picking out examples to be persecuted and vilifying those that are already unpopular. This puts the fear of retribution in the back of everyone's mind and makes them easier to control.

    28. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by mpe · · Score: 1

      I think it would even be healthy to have a "debate corner" on a college campus where any student could express any political opinion they may have... including "hate speech" full of bigotry, sexism, and racism. If you think some sort of speech should be censored, you definitely don't understand the purpose or the philosophy behind the 1st amendment and why it was ratified in the first place.

      Even if you think such censorship is a good idea in principle there are at least two practical issues. The first is that people will make false accusations for all sorts of reasons. The second is that bigotry which is "politically correct" tends to be ignored (even encouraged).

    29. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by j33px0r · · Score: 1

      You are not describing the typical graduate degree. The typical graduate degree does not include serious research, is 30-40 credit hours, and costs about 50% more per hour than an undergrad. They are handed out like hotcakes nowadays.

      A doctoral degree, as you describe, does require the student to learn how to work within the system. This is partially because you will have a very hard time getting tenure or funding otherwise. This is also because students need to learn save their opinions for after they get published and have tenure. You can run your mouth in politics, literature, poetry, etc. without the need for a degree but you can't do that when your opinion is supposed to be based upon "objective" research.

      I'm a bit curious what schools charge 4-5x for graduate credits. That seems surprisingly high though not inconceivable considering the direction that Academia has been going in terms of tuition prices.

    30. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by gtall · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yep, but it is worse than that. Universities these days want to hire young stars that will essentially bring in enough money to pay their own salary and keep a phalanx of students. This makes the department look like they are on the cusp of whatever passes for research in their area.

      The emphasis is on "young" too. Age discrimination starts early in academia. If you aren't a star by 35, good luck. And if you get rejected for tenure at one place, expect the same at the next. Many professors only get to their really good research until their 50s when they've acquired a lot of experience and depth of thought.

      I wish I had a fix for this system, but I don't. Every time I think of something, I can argue why it wouldn't work or even make things worse. There does need to be some sort of oversight. But professors won't agree to any oversight unless it is by their peers...who probably find nothing wrong with any professors behavior.

    31. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by gtall · · Score: 0

      Take a look at the state funding for many of what you think of as state universities. Years of budget cuts have made them state supported in name only. The professors are pretty much left to run the asylum as they see fit. And that usually means hiring other professors that share the same group think.

    32. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sconeu · · Score: 1

      You're joking, right?

      At any UC campus, tuition alone is over $10000 per annum. Add in room, board, books, etc, and you're looking at close to $30000.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    33. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Larryish · · Score: 2

      ... occasional asshat professors can get away with...

      ... having both ankles smashed with a ball-peen hammer, in a dark place with no witnesses, by someone wearing nondescript clothes, gloves, and a ski mask?

    34. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by BanHammor · · Score: 1

      He was making a point that "state-run" does not mean "free."

    35. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by mpe · · Score: 1

      The students are paying customers, who have the right to free speech. These universities might as well publish the fact that they require their students to be politically correct, or they are unwanted on campus.
      Probably better if they clearly state what they consider to be "politically correct". Otherwise potential students will be left guessing if they and the university in question have the same definition.

    36. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by fredprado · · Score: 1

      There doesn't need to be one or the other. The way it is they have too much power and no one to answer to. It would be considerably better if they had less power and mechanisms to defend themselves from people they answer to, as in every other profession.

    37. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Professors are hired on their ability to do research. Most professors spend 39 hours a week doing teaching, administrative duties at the university, applying for grants and service to the field (peer review, organizing conferences, etc.). So when do they do their research? Well, they find time for research by working more than 39 hours a week. If you think about that for a moment, you will realize that most professors do research exclusively in their free time, yet their research ability is what they were hired for. There are only two positions that sometimes actually are research positions at universities: PhD student and postdoc. Also, there are far more postdoc positions than there are professor positions. So you end up with a rarefied group of people who were selected for research ability, luck and ruthlessness in pursuing their goals, and then you task them to a job's capacity with administration and teaching without much oversight. I don't know how anyone can think that the result of that should be good for research, for students or for professors.

    38. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Also a violation of due process rights, assuming a public uni.

    39. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by shentino · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Nice thing about laws that make everyone guilty is that you get to selectively prosecute those you don't like.

    40. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure if your post is serious or not.
      But, in case you are, my anecdotal evidence is actually the opposite of yours. I've taken grad courses in physics and comp sci and the physics courses were easier, at least for me(I took these during undergrad while I was completing my honours).

      I doubt that the two are night and day in difficulty for most people, I've managed to get grades of A in the physics, math, and comp sci grad courses I took, and I didn't find a stark difference in difficulty between them, though I did find the math courses harder than physics and cs. I find topics like measure theory(math) and dynamic logic(cs) more difficult than electromagnetism.

    41. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by aztracker1 · · Score: 1

      Well, that pretty much precludes anything other than consuming... so any posting on web forums is against the rules...

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    42. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by timeOday · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Well, it is certainly easier to find a career in computer science than physics. CS is great because there is such a wide and forgiving spectrum of success - you could earn tenure at a prestigious university and then perhaps get hired into a top corporate research group for big bucks; you could end up at the other end of the scale doing boring business programming, but still make a decent living; or (most likely) somewhere in between, doing technical development on reasonably interesting projects at a big company, or carrying a heavy teaching load.

      In physics, it seems to me there is very little in the way of consolation prizes, at least within the field. (But in the end they always seem to do well enough outside their own field).

    43. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by nbauman · · Score: 2

      Not so crazy. Google "Dance Your PhD".

    44. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is not a hypocrite. Slashdot is not funded by tax dollars.

    45. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Mr.CRC · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Isn't that the whole point?

    46. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet people find it unfeasible that climate research could ever be influenced by politics. It's all science.

    47. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not describing the typical graduate degree. The typical graduate degree does not include serious research, is 30-40 credit hours, and costs about 50% more per hour than an undergrad. They are handed out like hotcakes nowadays.

      Fine, the typical NON-USA (or Indian) graduate degree. Other parts of the world still make us work hard for them.

    48. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As someone who works (in IT) at a public land-grant university that has a "free-speech zone", I find it strange that more 1st Amendment issues aren't brought up.
       
      That being said, in IT we have historically had administrators who understand that we are a public institution, and as such we do not filter, monitor, or censor the internet access of students or staff. The only way you hear from us is if you are doing something illegal (if we receive a DMCA notice or you are proven to be using resources to harass someone) or something which significantly impacts the performance of a system we manage. Last time I checked, we were even forwarding the "John Doe" requests to /dev/null.
       
      However, the old timers are all retiring or leaving, and the new crowd (mostly coming on board, strangely enough, from military backgrounds or corporate environments) doesn't seem to be as freedom friendly. If there is a silver lining to the financial crisis, it's that it keeps the admins busy enough due to lack of resources and staff that they don't have time to implement anything truly damaging, at least at this point in the game. We'll see how it all shakes out.

    49. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Only about 13% of the UC budget comes from tuition. As long as a substantial amount of funding comes from tax payers, UC and its students and employees may not use the UC name or resources to promote private political or religious views.

    50. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      In any decent university there is an academic appeals committee where, if the professor isn't abiding by the terms laid out in the course syllabus, the professor's evaluation can be overruled. Furthermore, consideration of such cases often involves independent evaluation of student work. In my experience, if a student really is being treated unfairly, the situation usually gets corrected. I've sat on such a committee. It usually went 40:60 student versus prof's stories. I've evaluated plenty of examples where students thought they were being treated unfairly, but actually they were not.

      The key in both situations is not to base it on "They don't like me", but "They said I'd be evaluated this way, and, here, take a look at this work for yourself and compare it to the rest of the class to see for yourself." The worst when sitting on that committee was hearing the student's story, then asking to see the work, and they've lost it or some other lame reason that may as well be equivalent to "the dog ate it". Well, I sympathize, but if it was that important and you were being shafted, you better keep that stuff or we can't help you.

      I've also helped a student at graduate level who really was being treated unfairly. As it started to turn sour I told them to meticiously document the time they spent on their work, perform outstandingly in all their course work, keep copies of their work, records of e-mail exchanges, everything. The idea was that if it did come to the point where they had to make a case to others, they could show to any impartial person what went wrong (and that it wasn't them). When the time came they found plenty of support from other faculty, because the evidence was kind of obvious.

      Profs can be unfair assholes, just like anyone else can, but on the whole most of them aren't. It's unpleasant and risky to deal with a situation like that as a student, because the prof is in a position of power. However, 9 times out of 10 the problem *is* with the student, and blaming the prof is just a convenient excuse. I know this, because I *strive* to be fair, yet I've heard all sorts of unjustified complaints. I don't mean the "prof is a hardass kind", but "prof said it would be X, but actually it was Y", even though I can go back to the syllabus and point at the part that does indeed say I'm expecting "X". Statistically, these aren't many cases anyway (most students are satisfied), but the ones that aren't, well, a lot of them are a bunch of whiners who want to blame everyone *else* for their problems. I've had people show up at my door at the end of term with a 49% saying "Oh, gee, Dr. X, can you please (arbitrarily) increase my mark by 1% so I can pass?" [Checks records. Student didn't do easy bonus point assignment X, Y, or Z, and lost 10% right there]. "Uh, no" == "Professor X is an unfair hardass" on Rate My Professor. Naturally, the the prof figures prominently when people get an F, not them, even if 90% of the class passed just fine. Go figure.

      For the other tenth, the legitimate complaints, students need to look out for themselves and realize that the other profs will support them if the evidence is clear enough. For graduate work, one of the reasons there's a committee rather than a single supervisor is to ensure that a student has someone knowledgeable to turn to if someone is being unreasonable. It can still go horribly wrong, and profs do have a lot of power, but there are checks-and-balances for a reason, and students need to avail themselves of those if they discover that their supervisor is an ass. It is going to be messy and it doesn't always turn out well, but I've seen enough examples to know that it often does turn out ok.

    51. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2

      If you think some sort of speech should be censored, you definitely don't understand the purpose or the philosophy behind the 1st amendment and why it was ratified in the first place. Suggesting that university websites, dorm doors, or even bulletin boards should be off limits to religious expression completely misses the mark

      There is no censorship here. The NSU policy, a publicly funded university, prohibits "university internet technology resources to further personal views or religious or political causes." That is, it prohibits the use of public funds and the name of a governmental institution to promote religious or political agendas.

      There is no censorship because anybody is free to say whatever they want to, provided they pay for it themselves. Given that the cost of setting up a web site outside the university is zero, it is also clear that people who want to set up a private site on religion or politics at the university want to do so because they want it to appear to be associated with the university. Given that NSU is a public institution, that is exactly what the non-establishment clause is intended to prohibit.

      If NSU were a private university, it would have a choice. But in that case, the networks would be privately owned by the university, and it could choose to impose arbitrary restrictions on what you can and cannot post on its websites.

    52. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Everything I said is quite serious. Comp sci is laughably easy compared to physics, in part because physics is necessarily inclusive of everything up to second year comp sci because if you can't do basic electronics and programming you can't do any sort of science. That's why I switched. If you can do first year calculus without having a heart attack you're doing better than 50% of the comp sci grads.

      Background: undergrad theoretical physics, currently finishing a PhD in comp sci. MSc in Half comp sci half physics.

    53. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      absolutely, I have benefited enormously, as someone who bombed out of grad school in one field, to be able to get into and succeed in grad school elsewhere because tenured profs had the independent authority to make their own choices.

      I was more conveying some of the things that go with it.

      Besides, even private companies have crazy people. They exist, you get used to it. Where I am (ontario, canada) we no longer have mandatory retirement, which has brought a lot of these issues to the fore, with mandatory retirement you had a time horizon for how long this person would stick around for, and you could decline to rehire them as a consultant at 65 if you wanted rid of them. Now though, someone who becomes a problem at 62 could try and stick around until they die in their office.

    54. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2

      When you are speaking on a sidewalk, it is obvious to everybody that you are speaking as an individual who happens to be in a public place. Furthermore, that sidewalk is there for any taxpayer to walk on; that's what makes it a public sidewalk.

      The same does not apply to university computer resources. University computer networks are not "public", they are highly restricted in terms of who can get onto them. And when someone posts a page under a university domain name, the university's name and authority is associated with that page.

      If you want to use a physical analogy, if the university campus is open to the public, you and anybody else probably have the right to get up on a soapbox and speak. But you don't have the right to climb up on the university president's balcony and address a crowd.

    55. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Irrelevant. As a nexus of pure, unbiased, liberal, intellectualism universities clearly do not fall under the jurisdiction of your mundane laws.

    56. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Everywhere I have been considers research quality to drop off significantly by 50 and they expect, on average, that older professors will need to be transitioned into more teaching, or administrative work.

      When you hire you hire young because pay is based on years since PhD, and most fresh PhD's are young. You don't usually have the opportunity or desire to hire an older person because they cost more, a lot more, they're harder to get rid of if they're bad, and if they have tenure somewhere else they usually aren't about to leave.

      As you become older 'research' really means supervising and managing people who do research, making the transition from manager to supervisor isn't everyones forte though.

    57. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sumdumass · · Score: 2

      Actually, it's not in violation of the establishment clause. A violation would be it being required for some degree or attendance not relating to the rest of the courses. Religious schools can and do take public funding every day.

      As for the personal views, some people are somewhat locked into university resources when they pay to stay in the dorms or a frat house. Those people do not lose any rights when they do that.

    58. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      You need to sit down with your constitutional law professor and ask him why he's stealing money from you. No, I'm being serious, because you certainly aren't learning anything from it.

    59. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by superwiz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ANY law is only as potent as the enforcement mechanism. How many students can afford to sue to enforce contract laws and start their careers with a law suit demanding the right to slur casually?

      --
      Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
    60. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

      That is SO cool. Send an email from your student account that says:
      "We're having a bring-a-friend event at my church. Want to come?" VIOLATION
      "We're organizing a voter-registration drive." VIOLATION
      "Justin Beeber is so last week." VIOLATION

    61. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you use taxpayer funded university resources to promote religious causes, that arguably violates the establishment clause.

      also btw you are using the normal WRONG reading of the first amendment.

      Citation needed.

    62. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Depends on the comp sci program.

      Comp sci lives in many place in different universities: Engineering, Math or Business are the three most common.

      I think you can spot the school that produces the most pointy haired programmers. Some of them only take Calculus for business majors. [Judge Smails] Well, the world needs coders to maintain the AR systems, too [/Judge Smails]

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    63. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sit_Sri says

      "Getting rid of a tenured professor is really really hard, it's expensive, and usually they don't go completely crazy until they're towards the end of their careers, so you don't want to fire someone with health problems etc. There's a huge legal expense, and bad press."

      Nonsense just rad the Chronicle of Higher Education to see how tenured professor loose their jobs.I have served on the tenure review boards at my institution. Not one of the appeals succeeded and every single one was fired. Granted none of them were like Wade Churchill.

    64. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 0

      Every computer science program has some minimal introduction to digital logic and programming, both of those skills, at a basic level are requisites for science. You may not never need (or want) java in physics, but you need to know how to write basic code in matlab and write basic scripts for data manipulation.

      I agree that computer science varies wildly from place to place, Waterloo guys a couple hours from here are much more theoretical than the wildfred laurier types who are much more hardware, where I and UofT are both more balanced.

    65. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      That's crazy for the sake of being crazy. Nothing entirely wrong with it, but you need to start with actually knowing the material before you get to go the crazy routes.

    66. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Nobody is forcing you to attend public university. If you don't like the rules and restrictions, you are perfectly free to leave. And, yes, using public funding to promote a religious cause is in violation of the establishment clause. When "religious schools" take public funding, it is generally for other purpose.

      Of course, we haven't enforced the non-establishment clause consistently in the past, but restrictions like those we are talking about here show that that is changing. You're welcome to try and sue your local public university to force them to let you put up a religious web site under their name. I predict you'll be laughed out of court.

    67. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2

      So you don't want professors to make these decisions and you don't want administrators and bureaucrats to make them. I suppose you want tax payers to fund universities that are then run by students as they see fit?

    68. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny story.. My undergrad was at a public UC campus, speech was highly regulated and any opinion left of socialist was utterly unacceptable/racist outside the science/engineering departments. Now I go to a private religious school for my grad studies, here every opinion shy of blatant racism is tolerated & encouraged. How did this ever come to pass?
      You would logically expect the opposite.

    69. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by chihowa · · Score: 1

      You are not describing the typical graduate degree. The typical graduate degree does not include serious research, is 30-40 credit hours, and costs about 50% more per hour than an undergrad. They are handed out like hotcakes nowadays.

      Fine, the typical NON-USA (or Indian) graduate degree. Other parts of the world still make us work hard for them.

      It's not even that. He just redefined "graduate degree" to mean only "Masters degree" and then continued his post as if a doctoral degree isn't a graduate degree. Just arbitrary semantics; no real point. You still have to work for a US doctoral degree. I'm not familiar with masters degrees, though.

      --
      If you want a vision of the future, imagine a youtube comments section scrolling - forever.
    70. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by pete6677 · · Score: 1

      It also falls under the Big Lie theory - tell it often enough and people start to believe it.

    71. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow. If your argument is that it's "taxpayer funded", then that's all the more reason why it shouldn't restrict free speech. Because if it's "taxpayer-funded" then the university can be seen as an extended part of the government, and therefore subject to an *inability* to restrict free speech via First Amendment.

      Privately-funded organizations can restrict free speech, parts of the government shouldn't.

    72. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Bengie · · Score: 1

      At my state uni, complaints about a teacher could land them teaching remedial classes. At the final session of class, the students got to rank the teacher. If the teacher scored too low too many semesters in a row, they could land in some very hot water and I have seen some "high ranking" long term teachers get in big trouble from bad student reviews.

      As for students getting kicked out of the uni, only really two real ways to get kicked out of my state uni without being able to ask for a student body jury. As long as you paid your tuition and didn't do anything considered illegal in the normal sense, all students were given the right to ask to present their case to the student government and have jury of students decide their fate.

      Liberal universities for the win!

    73. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      StFX AC here. That's exactly what happened. Used and abused for political crap with the student union, and as petty retaliation by residence assistants. They're Judge, Jury, and Executor(?).

      No course of appeal, except for the "Appeal committee" which is the RA, their boss, and the dean. Guess how far that gets you?

    74. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by epyT-R · · Score: 2

      so that means one can only use the resource in accordance with the additive restrictions of 1/n tax payers.. basically any resources funded by the public are useless under this assumption because everyone is gonna have different and conflicting expectations of use.

    75. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      That sounds like an undergrad situation. We're talking about graduate studies.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    76. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The personal views part is absolute garbage. If one advocates that Jesus Christ is the answer it is far from a personal view but a view of most of the western world. The same is true for the sicker beliefs such as all Jews must die. Sadly there are quite a few people that believe in such sick doctrines so just how could we call that a personal view?
                                It would be nice if universities got some sort of clue about the use of English language, the nature of free speech and the Constitution of the United States. This school policy nonsense needs an attack by some very potent lawyers and people like the ACLU as well as students willing to tell the administration where and when to drop dead and rot in hell.

    77. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 1

      Comp sci is laughably easy compared to physics, in part because physics is necessarily inclusive of everything up to second year comp sci because if you can't do basic electronics and programming you can't do any sort of science. That's why I switched. If you can do first year calculus without having a heart attack you're doing better than 50% of the comp sci grads.

      Where on Earth is this place you went to school? At my University Comp Sci grads could dual major in math without much of a workload increase. Not because the math degree was easy, but it was so deeply built into the comp sci program.

      --
      Out of modpoints but really liked a post? 1BDkF6TtmmeZ3yqXbz9yhdYVqRYnwFoXDj
    78. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not much different than the united states justice system.

      Fun fact: Soviet system was pretty much the same.

    79. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not agree that a private school or place has any legal power to lessen the Constitution whether or not contracts or policies exist. Would it be fair to disallow republicans to shop at the supermarket? What if they happen to make political remarks as they stroll through the isles while putting supplies in their baskets?
                      Should Winston Churchill have been put out of office for stating that the red men of the Americs nor the black race had any reason for complaint?
                        The very idea of free speech involves the expectation that all of us would be severely offended rather frequently.

    80. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting anonymously since I moderated already:

      Universities don't tend to let you drill holes in the wall to run your own cable hookup so you can avoid using the university networks with their occasionally way-too-restrictive terms of service. At the one I attended, they didn't look upon using anybody else's wi-fi with sympathy, either. That left (expensive) cellular modems as the only good choice for an unmonitored connection.

      Other universities are known to force you to live in the dorms for your first two years, have "no cars for freshmen" or indulge in other similar hijinks.

      And sometimes a single given public university is the only viable choice. Of course, that's pretty much moot if you're born into a rich family, but a great many problems go away if you can simply throw money at them.

    81. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sumdumass · · Score: 2

      Nobody is forcing you to attend public university. If you don't like the rules and restrictions, you are perfectly free to leave. And, yes, using public funding to promote a religious cause is in violation of the establishment clause. When "religious schools" take public funding, it is generally for other purpose.

      Those rules and restrictions do not exist because of the US constitution or the establishment clause which is missing from the constitution. Those are claims you erroneously made. The US military has had a Chaplin in it and has offered/performed religious service since the inception. If what you say is true, the founders of the country as well as every entity that signed and ratified the US constitution must be willfully violating it. Or perhaps you are completely wrong.

      There is even an arguable point about the universities denying speech in the first place is a severe violation of the US constitution. The first amendment places restrictions on government entities denying speech too. It specifically spells out that it cannot deny religious freedom to anyone.

      Your argument simply does not hold water.

      Of course, we haven't enforced the non-establishment clause consistently in the past, but restrictions like those we are talking about here show that that is changing. You're welcome to try and sue your local public university to force them to let you put up a religious web site under their name. I predict you'll be laughed out of court.

      If the university allows students to put up websites under their name, then I could do that and win. However, I don't believe the rules outlined were about putting things up in the university's name. It was about using university internet resources which means campus wifi and internet delivered to the dorms. It is about using the campus computer lab and checking in on slashdot- which if you are commenting on this story because of it's political nature and personal views being expressed would put you in violation of it.

    82. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 1

      Only if the entire department is closed out. It is a tough ass job to rally to get a tenured professor fired.

    83. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'a private college, isn't it? Can't they do whatever they want? "Public" state colleges should need to follow the Constitution.

    84. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by nbauman · · Score: 1

      I had a prof who said 'I know what it takes to be a real physicist, and none of you have it' and failed the entire class.

      Same thing happened to Ted Rall, the cartoonist. He was an engineering student at Columbia, and a visiting professor from England pulled the same line. http://www.rall.com/uploaded_images/YOLD1-89-28-717289.JPG

      Professors like that are assholes. There was a series of articles in Science about the problems of science teaching in the US, and why good students don't go into a science career. That was one of the problems. A lot of physics profs take it upon themselves to "pull out the weeds." A scientist said, "They're not pulling out the weeds, they're tearing up the whole garden."

    85. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Ambassador+Kosh · · Score: 1

      This kind of thing is why I want to transition to a fully online learning system. I am not saying that online learning is some huge advancement just that the traditional methods are pretty lousy.

      Until we get strong AI you won't have any computers going on a personal vendetta against you. ;)

      Overall though this really is a problem. In fields like engineering you can't get a job as an engineer without that piece of paper and some of the professors are truly evil. However you have no choice, you have to play their game if you want to actually do anything. I am hopeful that we can get these nasty places shut down and replaced with online systems.

      What is sad is that professors can easily beat any online system I have seen. The problem is that not only do they choose not to they manage to be orders of magnitude worse. I am surprised at how much people actually manage to learn on leaving university. It is especially sad that so few engineers know how to use computers to solve problems. They have learned various methods that are used on tests to solve simplified problems but can't solve real problems in real situations.

      --
      Computer modeling for biotech drug manufacturing is HARD! :)
    86. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is obvious to everybody that you are speaking as an individual who happens to be in a public place.

      Oh, okay. But it's just assumed that if you happen to be connecting to a website using a university's network, you're there to speak for them? Absolute nonsense. There is simply no way to justify this PC bullshit.

    87. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      However, I don't believe the rules outlined were about putting things up in the university's name.

      I believe the NSU rules are actually about that. They just got mixed up in many people's minds with a lot of other, more complicated on-campus speech issues.

      It is about using the campus computer lab and checking in on slashdot- which if you are commenting on this story because of it's political nature and personal views being expressed would put you in violation of it.

      Indeed. And after graduating, you are also in violation of workplace policies if you use your employer's computers or networks for personal use.

      The US military has had a Chaplin in it and has offered/performed religious service since the inception

      And this issue has been an important one in the question of separation of church and state, and considerable progress has been made. Military chaplaincy can be made compatible with the non-establishment clause, it just requires some care.

      If what you say is true, the founders of the country as well as every entity that signed and ratified the US constitution must be willfully violating it.

      The founders and many states "willfully" violated people's civil rights in many ways, starting with slavery. You can't turn around a nation on a dime, so when they wrote the Constitution, they knew it would take a while to realize what it stood for. But like civil rights, separation of church and state and religious liberty has made steady progress over the past 200 years.

    88. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      No, it means that you can only use public resources in accordance with legal and constitutional restrictions. Those are indeed onerous restrictions and limit what public institutions can do.

      And we're not talking about 1/n tax payer here. I'd say about a third of the US population are socially conservative, a third in the middle, and a third liberal and/or progressive. On issues like evolution and religion, no matter what stance you take, you are going to be forcing a large part of the population to pay for education that they find morally offensive. For public education, it means that public schools and public universities tend to stick to bland, uncontroversial policies and issues, at least as far as their community is concerned.

    89. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You do realise that under the same interpretation you shouldn't be allowed to post your own post, since you are promoting a personal view.

      For that matter, you might as well say that military tombstones shouldn't have religious symbols on.

      The way my university deals with the balance between allowing individual expression and favouritism is to only allow amplified audio outside in a few areas, which are available on a first-come, first-served basis, and to allow affiliation (and hence grants and use of space) to any distinct club with 10 students and a written constitution and which isn't engaged in illegal activity: distinctness is determined by the existing clubs, and for the most part they they respect each other's existence. Thus, during orientation, we have Israeli and Palestinian banners flying next to each other, stalls from all over the political spectrum, gay marriage posters, anti-gay-marriage posters, christian clubs voting in favour of grants to the atheist club, and so on.

    90. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Tenure Must Die

    91. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

      I suspect that runs afoul of contract law.

      Probably not. As a guess you are required to agree to the code of conduct as condition of your admission.

      Think of it as the moral equivalent of shrink-wrap licensing where you have to open the package to read the license and by opening the package you agree to the license.

      Cheers,
      Dave

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
    92. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 2

      Nice thing about laws that make everyone guilty is that you get to selectively prosecute those you don't like.

      I think George Orwell came up with that a long time ago.

      Cheers,
      Dave

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
    93. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Don't contracts require that there's a meeting of the mind between both parties? If the contract terms are vague, then there is a significant lack of common understanding, I would think. I would think that calls into question the university's rights to impose inequitable penalties.

    94. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      If that was how that worked, maybe it would be a problem. But it's not - no one is saying you can't post things on external resources accessed through campus connections. They're just saying that your advocacy site can't have myschool.edu after it.

    95. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      THIS.

    96. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    97. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      I've been involved in comp sci at all of Guelph, Trent, University of Western Ontario, Laurier, Queens, and York. All in ontario. Though I have friends at waterloo (and I know they're more math heavy than the others) I've never helped make a course for them or taught there.

      And yes, my Physics degree (guelph) was a major in physics and a minor in maths and lots of comp sci people do a lot of maths, just not calculus and in many cases not stats, which you need some of for grad school. Set theory and linear algebra are bit more common for the comp sci people.

      Though I do agree, different schools are more or less maths heavy, lots of comp sci grads are not maths people at all, which is odd, but if you don't like calculus or linear algebra or stats you can still be a half decent software developer.

    98. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      Sometimes a bit of both. Depends on the reputation of where you are, and the reputation of the professor. In my case the guy had a number of years experience where I was, but I could certainly see someone going to the US from the UK and being appalled, we've had more than a few talks from physics profs in the US that were doing 'research' that wasn't even at a third year level. Though that was 10 years ago, so I don't know the situation today.

    99. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Which disclaimer was present why?

      I'll help - it's there because an email from a U of Humbug account DOES CARRY the implicit assumption that its author is speaking for the school in some capacity. If it didn't, there wouldn't be a disclaimer.

      Even if not every message on school letterhead IS attempting to speak in the school's person, that interpretation is still enabled by the presence of that letterhead.

    100. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Sir_Sri · · Score: 1

      And how much did it cost to send them through these reviews? How much of a fight with the union?

      As I said elsewhere, this is becoming a problem we're much more likely to fight now in canada with the elimination of mandatory retirement at 65. If this was behaviour from a 30 or 40 year old they'd be out the door no matter what, but someone in their late 50's or early 60's and you are starting to get into politics and press. If the person is going to go quietly on their own in 3 or 4 years it's not worth making a fuss and risking a lot of bad press. Just about everyone over 50 has had some sort of medical problem and you don't want to hear "Local university tries to fire professor after heart surgery/cancer/spouse with some problem/etc." It's not worth it. Worse still is if they're liked by students even though they don't do anything else in their job or make your staff situation a mess. Again, you're playing politics, but you don't want a bunch of students talking about how the university is trying to fire their favourite prof for saying controversial things (no, we're firing him for not doing his job doesn't usually go over well).

      Firing people is possible, is necessary, and we're going to see more of it. But it's still a pain to have to actually do.

    101. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by DaveAtFraud · · Score: 1

      My comparison to shrink wrap licenses is probably out of line. The code of conduct is probably available on-line and/or included in the admissions packet. But, just like so many commercial agreements, who really reads all of those pages of legalese? And, does it even matter if burried in all of that legal stuff is some sort of Orwellian, no matter what you do you're doing something illegal?

      Finally, remember that this is a sizeable institution vs. a lowly, poor student. Does the student have the time and finances to challenge the institution over some wording in the code of conduct that might be construed as being a commercial contract?

      Cheers,
      Dave

      --
      They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither safety nor liberty.
      Ben
    102. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given that basic education system of the US has decayed so dramatically in the past few decades, a note of caution is warranted relative to your good post:

      The founders of the United States believed that each individual was a unique individual, created by God... and this was of vital importance because it meant that each person had "God-given" rights. The presumption was that the individual naturally had ALL the rights that we today think of as "libertarian"; we each were free to do just about anything as long as we did not hurt others, and we would regulate ourselves because we would think of ourselves as accountable to God for even the things nobody saw us, or "caught" us, doing. This basic assumption is why the Constitution itself says nothing about our free speech rights (or just about any other rights)... most of our founders thought it was absolutely obvious that we had all these rights. It is only because some of the colonials were so extremely wary of government that they insisted on the 1st ten amendments (the "Bill of Rights") as a condition of ratification to explicitly list the minimum rights to make things absolutely clear. Unfortunately, the most-paranoid of our founders have been proven right... had the Bill of Rights not been there, many politicians of both parties would by now have removed all our rights in exchange for various promises of security or comfort (hearing something you don't like? Ban it! Seeing something you don't like? Ban it! etc.). We fall into a trap, however, if we slip into thinking that we get our rights from to Bill of Rights or from the Constitution... that's not what our founders intended and that's very vulnerable to the logical argument that the government can take back that which it has provided... as the descendents of our founders, we are supposed to remember that we each have MANY MANY MANY rights... nearly universal rights over our lives, and that the Bill of Rights is only an enumeration of the bare minimums the government is supposed to be forbidden to violate.

    103. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      When I was going through grad school at IU in the chemistry program, if we expressed opinions that were "problematic," we were in deep shit not because the views were "problematic," but because we clearly weren't working hard enough that we had time to "express."

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    104. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > I had a prof who said 'I know what it takes to be a real physicist, and none of you have it' and failed the entire class.

      sounds harsh, but what if it's true?

      You should see the class i was in first-year physics in Greece.

      Made GWB sound like Bertrand Russell.

    105. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      , that arguably violates the establishment clause.

      If you want to promote your personal views, pay for your own website or attend and pay for a private university, don't do it with tax dollars.

      What established clause? Are you saying the ONLY place you can offer your opinion is where you have paid for the entire infrastructure yourself? Seems a bit anti free speech to me.

    106. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Tax payers pay for a large part of these universities, that's what makes them public universities.

      The government cannot suppress free speech on public properties. And saying that people can't debate, or argue, or discuss at a university is the exact opposite of what a university stands for.

    107. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Entrope · · Score: 1

      Usually a meeting of the minds is indicated by explicit compromises -- or at least negotiation. Ambiguity in contracts of adherence (also called standard form contracts or boilerplate contracts), where one party has no realistic option to negotiate terms, is supposed to be construed against the interests of the party who offered the contract.

    108. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A SIGNATURE is the nexus of any agreement. Always remember to reserve rights by signing "WITHOUT PREJUDICE" near the signature. Always keep a copies of said documents on hand. Unless if you reside in Louisiana, because the Uniform Commercial Code has not been adopted there. Don't let anyone intimidate you be saying that such language voids a signature.

    109. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that the laws that apply to such institutions are those that were in existence when the charter for said university was issued? That is tantamount to a another state being formed from a state and that requires the consent of the US Congress via an act of US Congress.

    110. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by khr · · Score: 1

      for a music degree, a professor didn't like the student because he didn't take enough notes in his class

      Let me guess.... There's no arguing that the music includes the space the between the notes?

    111. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by musterion · · Score: 1

      The tenure system should be elimnated in its entirety. It does not protect profs with views out side the mainstream Left.

    112. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Tax payers pay for a large part of these universities, that's what makes them public universities. If you don't like the restrictions that come with that, attend a fully privately funded university; there are enough of them around, and they can adopt whatever policies they like.

      That's simply a better argument for allowing unfettered free speech. Since it's government funded, they are barred from restricting free speech of any kind.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    113. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

      this should not be used to force me to be atheist.

      This argument always confuses me. Explain how, exactly, preventing you from using my tax dollars to promote your religon (perhaps even to my kids), forces you to be an Atheist.

    114. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have to be an atheist. Just keep your God to yourself, the way I usually keep my godlessness to myself.

    115. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prt Sc

    116. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Professors are hired on their ability to do research

      Professors are hired on their ability to bring in grant money.
      FTFY

    117. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      let me walk you through this

      1 the Separation Of Chuch and State has been used as a hammer to prevent folks from having a nativity scene on their business property

      2 it has also been used to block folks from having a Witness Time after schools (using a school room that is otherwise for free use)

      3 the recent Chick-Fil-A thing is another example

      4 folks being blasted for actually saying Merry Christmas

      Oh btw don't forget ITS MY TAX MONEY ALSO

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    118. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by GregNorc · · Score: 1

      Graduate studies costs 4-5x more than undergrad studies, and carry a stigma of "Well, you couldn't cut it there, why would we accept you here?".

      If you don't receive full tuition reimbursement and a stipend (especially in a STEM field) you should not be pursuing a doctoral degree. Any halfway decent candidate can get a modest stipend and tuition reimbursement.

      I personally am by no means living high on the hog, but I pay my rent and have a little leftover for the occasional beer with friends. If I hadn't been offered this funding, I'd have gone and worked in industry, because this would not make economic sense.

    119. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Christian Bible colleges basically do that. If you're an atheist, a muslim, or maybe a wicca, Bob Jones University doesn't really want you studying on their campus.

      At least they're honest about it. Would be nice if every university just posted lists of what beliefs they actually accept on campus and what they don't.

    120. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "recent Chick-Fil-A thing"? Are you referring to the boycott by people who thought the company's actions toward gays were despicable? Or are you referring to the parade of homophobes who marched through the doors with pride to show that they *supported* those actions?

      Or was there some other part which actually involved tax money?

    121. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by PhxBlue · · Score: 1

      Whoosh!

      --
      !#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
    122. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Are you saying the ONLY place you can offer your opinion is where you have paid for the entire infrastructure yourself?

      You can offer your opinion in any place where you have a legal right to be present or on any medium that you have a legal right to use. In addition to places and media you own, that includes some forms of public property and some forms of private property you don't own.

    123. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      I believe the NSU rules are actually about that. They just got mixed up in many people's minds with a lot of other, more complicated on-campus speech issues.

      No, the NSU rules appear to apply to the campus network as well as the internet provided by them. Sitting in your dorm room arguing this on the internet can put you in violation of those rules.

      Indeed. And after graduating, you are also in violation of workplace policies if you use your employer's computers or networks for personal use.

      This is so not like a workplace environment that it isn't even funny that you equate the two. A work place does not require you to live on campus or provide housing then expect you to follow those policies in those areas.

      And this issue has been an important one in the question of separation of church and state, and considerable progress has been made. Military chaplaincy can be made compatible with the non-establishment clause, it just requires some care.

      First, there is no separation of church and state in the constitution. The establishment clause simply disallows the government from forcing a religion onto people and denies them the ability to restrict your choices in any religion. This is more important in k-12 education because students are compelled by law to attend. It does not matter as much in trade or college level schools as attendance is voluntary and courses are elective. A public funded school can and some do offer degrees in religion or religious studies and even denomination specific religions. Iowa and Michigan State universities come to mind but there are others. The military Chaplin is no different in this regard.

      The founders and many states "willfully" violated people's civil rights in many ways, starting with slavery. You can't turn around a nation on a dime, so when they wrote the Constitution, they knew it would take a while to realize what it stood for. But like civil rights, separation of church and state and religious liberty has made steady progress over the past 200 years.

      Are you seriously that daft? Slavery was not abolished in the constitutional until 80 years after the country was founded. It actually took an amendment, not a reworking of the understanding of some existing provision in order to suit your desires. If you want the level of separation you are suggesting, it will take an amendment to get it because it simply is not there as currently written. You are wrong and confused about what you are reading. The First Amendment does not say what you think it says.

    124. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by redlemming · · Score: 1

      I suspect that runs afoul of contract law.

      Probably not. As a guess you are required to agree to the code of conduct as condition of your admission.

      Think of it as the moral equivalent of shrink-wrap licensing where you have to open the package to read the license and by opening the package you agree to the license.

      Many legal professionals would certainly like to have people believe this. After all, contract-related work is the bread-and-butter of the legal profession. If they can convince the credulous and short-sighted that it makes sense to let contracts infringe fundamental rights, then that creates an artificial, long-term, and very potent demand for their services on the part of entities with large amounts of money to spend and interests that conflict with those same fundamental rights.

      In ethics terms, this is known as "conflict of interest", and it is the bane of freedom in many places in the modern world, not just in universities.

      Unfortunately, this kind of thing is quite common.

      For example, many legal matters are settled "out-of-court", which means that not only do we not get to find out whether a party (whether accusor or accused) actually engaged in wrong-doing (often, this infringes the long term right to public oversight over businesses and over the legal profession), but also the parties will sign a contract agreeing to never again talk about the matter or otherwise infringing fundamental rights in return for the settlement.

      If you don't want to sign, oh well, you'll get to go to court for many, many years, and even if you win, you'll end up paying the associated legal expenses for the rest of your life. To make matters worse, the average person in this situation will lose the court case because they don't have the money to pay for it.

      Judges being legal professionals themselves, there isn't really any incentive to fix the system.

      This is just one of a number of very serious ethics problems with how law is practiced in the USA. It is not an accident that we are known as the "land of the lawsuit".

    125. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      The government cannot suppress free speech on public properties.

      It can't suppress speech on public property (property dedicated to the use of the public) but it can suppress speech on state property (property that is merely owned by the state). Public universities are state property, not public property.

      And saying that people can't debate, or argue, or discuss at a university is the exact opposite of what a university stands for.

      Universities are many things to many people. Just because you want them to be an agent of social change and political discussion doesn't mean other people don't just want to learn how to build bridges, raise cows, or drill teeth. And I don't see what compelling interests taxpayers have to turn universities into political forums. If we want government-sponsored forums for political and social debate, let's create ones that are truly public, rather than tied to universities.

    126. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      That's simply a better argument for allowing unfettered free speech. Since it's government funded, they are barred from restricting free speech of any kind.

      The government can't restrict your free speech. But it can restrict how you use government facilities, like ordering you to leave campus if you violate university rules and stop using the university Internet. Any free speech you have is free speech you make outside those restrictions on the use of government facilities.

    127. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by redlemming · · Score: 2

      In one case I knew a physics student failed his oral exams because he was too confident. In another case, for a music degree, a professor didn't like the student because he didn't take enough notes in his class. The student complained to other professors, and the answer he got was, "Yeah, it's not fair, but we have to live and work with him, we don't have to deal with you, so we're not going to do anything about it."

      I had a prof who said 'I know what it takes to be a real physicist, and none of you have it' and failed the entire class.

      We were all asked to leave after appealing.

      The rewards system in academia is set up to reward people for being good at research. Things like tenure, raises, titles, access to funding, and so forth all flow from this. It's called "publish or perish".

      All this means that if you actually want to be successful, you need to be good at research. In many cases, this means that you need to be able to get grants, which means spending a lot of time selling your research.

      Things are complicated by the 30% or so "tax" that the typical university applies to research funding, ostensively to support overhead associated with your research (typically these taxpayer dollars are laundered into the university budget to make it impossible to trace the manner in which the funds are actually being used). Thus, considerably MORE money is actually needed than is required to do the job.

      In some specialties, things are even worse, such as certain areas of medical research. Here, almost nobody gets tenure and the average professor doesn't even get PAID unless they get research grants: these people have to use their grants to pay their OWN salaries. Of course, this only happens in unimportant areas of research, such as infectious diseases.

      In short, the University system -- typically -- is set up to create huge conflicts of interest on the part of professors. As a result of these conflicts of interest, the skills of University professors at teaching or at interacting with people are often disappointing. After all, why bother to invest huge amounts of time at mastering difficult skills when those skills aren't strongly relevant to one's long term success?

      This results in situations like the ones described above, where professors do unethical and / or incompetent things because being ethical and competent isn't really part of success for them. Being able to create the illusion that one is ethical or competent often matters, but the substance doesn't. It's a lot like how the legal profession works.

      Having said this, and in spite of the system, about 20% of professors end up being really good teachers, so a large part of being a successful student (assuming one is motivated and disciplined) is finding the right instructors ...

    128. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      No, the NSU rules appear to apply to the campus network as well as the internet provided by them. Sitting in your dorm room arguing this on the internet can put you in violation of those rules.

      Yes. Just like with any other Internet provider: they can cancel your access if they don't like what you say or do.

      First, there is no separation of church and state in the constitution. The establishment clause simply disallows the government from forcing a religion onto people and denies them the ability to restrict your choices in any religion.

      The "separation of church and state" is a shorthand for the non-establishment clause. The non-establishment clause doesn't say what you claim it says. The non-establishment clause says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      A public funded school can and some do offer degrees in religion or religious studies and even denomination specific religions

      Of course it can, provided those curricula don't actually "respect" that religion. How is this in any way relevant?

      Are you seriously that daft? Slavery was not abolished in the constitutional until 80 years after the country was founded.

      Slavery was clearly in violation of the intent and meaning of the US Constitution from the start; the 13th amendment merely clarified the issue. In any case, even after 1865, turning constitutional law into practice took more than a century. The point is that just because people get away with doing things one way for a long time doesn't mean that that way is constitutional.

      If you want the level of separation you are suggesting, it will take an amendment to get it because it simply is not there as currently written.

      I want the constitutional level of separation: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." We are still pretty far from realizing that, since there are many laws (including spending laws) that "respect" and favor Christianity.

    129. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If he didn't, then Ayn Rand definitely did.

    130. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In a conversation with my favorite physics professor of all time, he told me that if it was my intent to work in industry and not do academic research, I should aim for an engineering degree rather than a physics degree. His claim was that outside of academia, physicists usually end up doing an engineer's job for less pay.

    131. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm paying thousands of dollars to attend a university complete with various service fees. How can you claim that I am not paying to utilize university resources?

    132. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      We are still pretty far from realizing that, since there are many laws (including spending laws) that "respect" and favor Christianity.

      And before you jump on me by saying that Christianity is not an "establishment of religion", what I meant to say is that there are many laws (including spending laws) that respect Christian establishments.

    133. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Yes. Just like with any other Internet provider: they can cancel your access if they don't like what you say or do.

      Actually, no they cannot. Access to goods and services is highly regulated in this respect. You would have to show they didn't pay the bill or degraded the services offered in some way. Contrary to popular opinion, you cannot reserve the right to refuse service to anyone without legal consequences. Most states even have this embedded in law too. But there are even more restrictions here because as you pointed out, it's a government funded school and the government cannot refuse any service offered to anyone based on a protected speech right.

      The "separation of church and state" is a shorthand for the non-establishment clause. The non-establishment clause doesn't say what you claim it says. The non-establishment clause says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      I think you are confused. The establishment clause is about a letter written to a bishop by Thomas Jefferson explaining that the government cannot force a religion onto people and denies them the ability to restrict your choices in any religion due to the first amendment which not only restricts the government from respecting a religion but prohibiting the free exercise of it. Of course the first amendment says something different then what I said, but I wasn't quoting it, I was explaining its function.

      Slavery was clearly in violation of the intent and meaning of the US Constitution from the start; the 13th amendment merely clarified the issue. In any case, even after 1865, turning constitutional law into practice took more than a century. The point is that just because people get away with doing things one way for a long time doesn't mean that that way is constitutional.

      Wow.. Just wow. That is an outright factual lie. There is a completely documented history surrounding the issues of slavery and it is well known that many of the states never would have ratified the constitution if slavery was prohibited by it. Some people actually tried to abolish slavery in the constitution and it was intentionally removed in order to gain acceptance of all 13 original colonies.

      You cannot reinvent history and redefine what words mean just to make an argument. I'm not even sure how this claim you made could be considered a mistake. I'm having trouble seeing it as anything other then an intentional outright lie. Either someone lied to you, or you are fabricating shit intentionally.

      I want the constitutional level of separation: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." We are still pretty far from realizing that, since there are many laws (including spending laws) that "respect" and favor Christianity.

      I think you are delusional and just don't know what in the hell you are talking about. The US constitution does not prevent schools funded by government from offering anything religious nor does it restrict religious views being expressed on infrastructure possessed by them. You clearly do not understand the US constitution and I'm not sure your fallacy isn't a sign of problems you might have with reality.

    134. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First, there is no separation of church and state in the constitution. The establishment clause simply disallows the government from forcing a religion onto people and denies them the ability to restrict your choices in any religion.

      The "separation of church and state" is a shorthand for the non-establishment clause. The non-establishment clause doesn't say what you claim it says. The non-establishment clause says that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion or prohibiting the free exercise thereof."

      Well, it's important for people to understand that the First Amendment applies to government - after all, the Constitution is about defining the role and powers of government, not those of the people or the church. It enforces a separation of church and state on the part of government. It affords protection of rights including religious freedom. If it was meant to eliminate all mention of religion from government then I don't think it could even address the topic, even in the context of affording it protection.

      That said, I don't think there's any real problem with the government providing services to the people that they may choose to use for religious or nonreligious purposes, as long as it doesn't tell people how to use them.

    135. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Teancum · · Score: 1

      If you make some slanderous speech (aka accuse somebody falsely of some heinous crime or other bit of infamy) you are still subject to a lawsuit for making such a speech. Still, the bar should be set pretty high in terms of prosecution and should involve issues where professional careers or actual reputation damage can be documented and noted. That isn't something for university officials should enforce but rather allow venues for those who feel wronged to "have their day in court" if such a situation arises. Private arbitration done on campus, for example, could be imposed and quite a bit cheaper in terms of legal fees than going to a normal civil court and something which could be resolved between two particular students.

      I don't see how saying "I hate you filthy Jews" (or some other similar extremely racist statement) is something which should be feared on a college campus. Something like that may even be a true statement... but with some campus policies would censor such a student and withhold transcripts or expel a student saying something like that.

      Besides, I'm objecting here to specific denial of expression of religious speech. It has happened on campuses where things like showing a cross or reading the Bible on your own is considered "religious expression" and grounds to have a dorm contract terminated. There have been voluntary prayer groups which have been banned as an "establishment of religion" on campus. I'm calling such actions to be wrong.

    136. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Teancum · · Score: 1

      Assuming you are paying tuition including lab fees and internet usage fees, those students are paying for the university networks with the university as the ISP. They are paying for it themselves, not the other way around. There may be "subsidies" in terms of a state government underwriting some of the cost, but if a university allows students to create personal web pages on personally allocated storage, they are paying for that service.

      This isn't establishing a religion, and certainly the university isn't mandating that a student must post something positive in favor of a particular deity like requiring "Allah Akbar" somewhere on each page (something that is required in some countries... or something like that). That would be wrong. Misrepresenting yourself as having the university endorsing or supporting a particular political cause or promoting a particular religion would be bad... but that is not what a student generated web page usually does.

      I just don't understand where the "establishment clause" comes in here if some student makes a web page on their personal user account that says "I believe in Jesus Christ and he is my Savior!" That is not only being paranoid about the establishment clause, but arguably is in violation of the 1st amendment. I dare say it is a matter of time before universities will get slapped down for stopping that kind of activity.

      If NSU was a private university, they could have a contract when you become a student that you would agree not to express yourself religiously while on campus or on campus resources. But because it is a public institution I would dare say that unless the are simply denying any ability to create private personal communications using school computers, that they are constitutionally obligated to accept such expression of religious ideas.

    137. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 1

      You would have to show they didn't pay the bill or degraded the services offered in some way. Contrary to popular opinion, you cannot reserve the right to refuse service to anyone without legal consequences.

      They cannot discriminate, but they can impose consistent restrictions. For example, they can say "the network connection in your dorm may only be used for academic purposes" or "you may not post to discussion forums from your dorm room".

      The establishment clause is about a letter written to a bishop by Thomas Jefferson explaining that the government cannot force a religion onto people and denies them the ability to restrict your choices in any religion due to the first amendment

      That letter was merely Jefferson's attempt to explain the clause. The clause has older and broader origins and purposes. It is about preventing churches and denominations from gaining too much influence over the government. What it means in practice is defined by the Supreme Court (see below).

      There is a completely documented history surrounding the issues of slavery and it is well known that many of the states never would have ratified the constitution if slavery was prohibited by it. Some people actually tried to abolish slavery in the constitution and it was intentionally removed in order to gain acceptance of all 13 original colonies.

      Yes, as a compromise, the Constitution did not explicitly prohibit slavery (nor did it create a legal basis for slavery). What I said was that slavery was "in violation of the intent and meaning of the Constitution", a statement that I stand by.

      The US constitution does not prevent schools funded by government from offering anything religious nor does it restrict religious views being expressed on infrastructure possessed by them

      Since 1971, courts use the Lemon test under which many practices that used to be commonplace have been ruled unconstitutional (there were many prior court decisions leading up to this). The Lemon test originated in Lemon v. Kurtzman, which was about public funding for schools that also offered religious instruction (and basically ruled such funding unconstitutional).

      You cannot reinvent history and redefine what words mean just to make an argument.

      Neither can you, and you keep doing that. But instead of debating calmly and objectively, you engage in ad hominems.

    138. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2

      those students are paying for the university networks with the university as the ISP ... But because it is a public institution I would dare say that unless the are simply denying any ability to create private personal communications using school computers, that they are constitutionally obligated to accept such expression of religious ideas.

      I don't see why; where do you see such a constitutional obligation? As long as their restrictions don't discriminate against specific religions or ideologies, those restrictions seem to be constitutional. The NSU policy does not discriminate, so it seems constitutional to me (it may have to clarify "inappropriate", most likely as "pornographic").

      Misrepresenting yourself as having the university endorsing or supporting a particular political cause or promoting a particular religion would be bad... but that is not what a student generated web page usually does.

      There are really two questions here. First, does the university have a right to impose restrictions; on that, see above. The second is whether it has an interest or even an obligation to impose such restrictions. I think it does, although that's obviously a harder argument to make. Many public universities are selective and reputable, so posting a statement like "Allah is great" or "God does not exist" on a site like berkeley.edu has a different weight and impact than posting it on myspace.com. In addition, many students are also instructors, making such an action potentially analogous to posting of the Ten Commandments by a teacher.

      Apart from that, I don't see how letting students use the university name to promote their personal religious or political views contributes to their education, which to me is the relevant question to ask as a tax payer. I think it's good for students to engage in political and social debate, but they don't need to publish those debates to the rest of the world under the university banner.

    139. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by shentino · · Score: 1

      I'd bet that appealing will only cause them to retaliate for challenging them.

    140. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Teancum · · Score: 1

      The explicit clause in the 1st amendment is to "prohibit the free exercise thereof". That is where the university could be in trouble. It goes a little bit beyond simply providing a non discriminatory situation. More specifically, unless the university simply restricts all forms of communication on private pages by simply banning private pages altogether, they have created a forum that would by necessity be required to allow religious expression.

      I'm not saying that this is letting students "use the university name" to promote their views. Let's be serious about what people see when they look at a student web page.... anybody with half a brain would realize that they are speaking for themselves and not on behalf of the university or using the name of the university itself in any way. I could say ditto for the university e-mail system... which would be no different if the students were instead using the campus mail system for sending information about a prayer vigil or some other similar religious expression. If you use AT&T as your ISP, who in their right mind thinks that just because you have att.com at the end of your e-mail address that you actually represent the company?

      Restricting religious speech if any speech is allowed at all is a form of discrimination. That is where you are mistaken here.

    141. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by kenorland · · Score: 2

      Restricting religious speech if any speech is allowed at all is a form of discrimination. That is where you are mistaken here.

      That obviously fails as a legal principle. For example, professors can kick you out of class and give you a failing grade if you start proselytizing in math lecture when called to do an integral.

      If you use AT&T as your ISP, who in their right mind thinks that just because you have att.com at the end of your e-mail address that you actually represent the company?

      AT&T is just an ISP. A university, on the other hand, has highly selective admissions and its name usually enjoys special esteem, and merely being at the university constitutes an endorsement. Posting on myspace.com and on berkeley.edu are intrinsically different. Using a domain name is analogous to using a letterhead, and it is reasonable for a university (and in some cases mandatory) to prohibit others from using its letterhead or logo for political or religious purposes.

      I'm for free speech on campus, but free speech on campus is largely a policy decision, not a constitutional right. People can't achieve more free speech if they start with the wrong arguments. And FIRE is wrong in claiming that there is an unprecedented level of authoritarianism.

    142. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not even that. He just redefined "graduate degree" to mean only "Masters degree" and then continued his post as if a doctoral degree isn't a graduate degree. Just arbitrary semantics; no real point. You still have to work for a US doctoral degree. I'm not familiar with masters degrees, though.

      Yes, and outside of the USA and India, a Masters degree (Anywhere in europe beyond bachelors before PhD) is still quite difficult to achieve. For some reason, both the USA and india have created this pseudo-masters degree, charge extra for it, and devalue the work that almost all qualified professionals in europe do.

    143. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      The government can't restrict your free speech. But it can restrict how you use government facilities

      Not in this context, it can't. It can only restrict your representation of a government entity, not relevant in this case. There is plenty of case law on this that you are apparently ignorant of. These are NOT government employees in any case, they are students, and these restrictions are a violation of speech, and there are many examples of courts throwing out these kinds of content-based speech restrictions.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    144. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online.. by Teancum · · Score: 2

      Restricting religious speech if any speech is allowed at all is a form of discrimination. That is where you are mistaken here.

      That obviously fails as a legal principle. For example, professors can kick you out of class and give you a failing grade if you start proselytizing in math lecture when called to do an integral.

      Not quite, what you are citing here is "disturbing the peace", a completely separate set of laws that have little if anything to do with free speech. If you are getting into somebody's face and doing something which is disruptive and preventing another person from being able to perform their work and to do the things they need to do in order to earn money by being a jackass, that justifiably needs to be punished.

      You are not getting kicked out of the lecture hall because you are preaching a religious message, but because you are interfering with the normal and expected discourse of the day. If you brought up stupid and silly discussions, playing some music, or even reading aloud Shakespeare and disrupting the class, you would be similarly escorted out of the building and cited with the applicable crimes for doing such nonsense.

      On the other hand, if the campus has some forum or situation where people are able to express themselves freely (like a letter to the editor in the student newspaper... to give an example), that is a free speech venue where expressing religious and political ideas is not only useful but required. That gets back to my point that a college campus, especially a public university operating under the laws and constitution of the United States of America, not only can't restrict what is done in public forums but must explicitly by the terms of the U.S. Constitution permit any sort of religious expression including proselytizing. If they want to restrict such expression, they must necessarily shut down any sort of free expression.

      When you are in a classroom, you are certainly not free to express yourself in any random manner, which is why your analogy is simply flawed.

      It may be possible that a university could restrict student web pages explicitly to classroom assignments or purely information items about the student. Arguably a university doesn't even need to provide server space for students to have a web page at all. If a university wants to avoid "hate speech" and students advocating religious viewpoints, they certainly could simply shut down student accounts altogether. My point is that many public universities are offering what amounts to be an ISP for the duration of when they are on campus where through their student registration fees are paying for some server space on campus computers for personal use. When that happens, it is no different than a commercial entity providing such services to the general public.

  3. Universities are way too PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think I'll start a talk radio program and make it a point to be as un-PC as possible. I bet I can get millions of listeners! I'll be rich and famous!

    Oh wait...

    1. Re:Universities are way too PC by mabhatter654 · · Score: 2, Informative

      That worked for Springer, Stern, Coulter, Imas, and Limbaugh!

      Right up until FOX has to step in and get the Supreme Court to declare "lying" as protected free speech... To keep them on the air.

      The CONSERVATIVES RULE the airwaves for non-PC talk. Even Springer and Stern are "Right" shows because they treat their subjects as "freak of the week" while shouting "look how offensive I am!"

      It's sad when NPR is the last "liberal" holdout.. As they make an honest attempt to have discussion . Even the BBC gets labeled as liberal when they are the closest thing we have to 1960's style news people remember.

    2. Re:Universities are way too PC by Gregg+M · · Score: 0

      The CONSERVATIVES RULE the airwaves for non-PC talk. Even Springer and Stern are "Right" shows because they treat their subjects as "freak of the week" while shouting "look how offensive I am!"

      You clearly haven't been listening to Stern. Howard Stern is PRO abortion (not pro choice) and PRO gay. He treats his guests with respect even if he thinks they're bat shit crazy.

      --
      Linux is only free if your time has no value. Windows is only free if you threaten to use Linux.
    3. Re:Universities are way too PC by lilfields · · Score: 1

      I have no idea how you were modded up, because your "Right up until FOX has to step in and get the Supreme Court to declare "lying" as protected free speech... To keep them on the air," is blatantly false. Not only was it not Fox News (it was a Fox affiliate) but that's not even what happened. The Fox affiliate wouldn't run a piece about GMO without a response from Monsanto. It had absolute NOTHING to do with "lying." I'm a critic of Fox News (and MSNBC which has turned into a joke) but at least get your facts somewhat straight, instead of perpetuating this lie that the netroots throw around.

    4. Re:Universities are way too PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. The other guy drowns us out, therefore we have to silence him. That's a nice brown shirt you have there Mabhatter.

    5. Re:Universities are way too PC by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      But they are all Just Actors. They say on the air, is what gets ratings. Occasionally their real opinion spills out and they get treated for the tools they are.

      What people miss is that even the "liberal" personalities are selected because the "prove the Right, Right." Or money can be made from them! Really think about how contemptable they REALLY are.

    6. Re:Universities are way too PC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't know that 1960s style newspapers where lying just to keep the audience.

  4. I'm sure this is more of a fraud than reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I've seen a lot of bullies and hecklers upset that they don't get their way, whining that their free speech right to harass and intimidate folks is so very important that nothing else can be considered.

    This makes me think this is more of a fraud perpetuated by self-professed victims who are themselves the problem than a reality.

    1. Re:I'm sure this is more of a fraud than reality by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      ....because as we all know, it is not really free speech if there are no exceptions. After all, "shouting fire in a crowded theater" should be prohibited:

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schenck_v._United_States

      --
      Palm trees and 8
  5. Coporate Influence by qw(name) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's all because of greed. Universities have adopted corporate tactics to become and stay "more competitive in the marketplace" and that means shielding themselves from lawsuits and making themselves more appealing to donors.

    1. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn corporations! We need to ban them next!

    2. Re:Coporate Influence by brianerst · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Please. It's because universities are overwhelmingly run by a single ideology (in this case, leftism, but in another time or universe, rightism). Combine a monoculture of 'correct' thought, a hypersensitivity to hurting any favored/traditionally disenfranchised group's feelings and (as you said) fear of lawsuits and the professional outrage club and you get these codes. The fact that university faculty are usually the strongest supporters of and agitators for these codes should be shocking, but sadly it isn't.

      Corporations generally don't care at all about what you say - they just want your money. It's really only the content industry (MP/RIAA) that wants to throttle speech - ISPs and other non-content groups have been fighting a losing battle against them for years. The internet is brought to you by corporations and for the most part all they care about is charging you for the delivery of bits - the default attitude of nearly all of them when the MP/RIAA started its little crusade was to ignore them or fight back against them. They've added DRM and the like grudgingly at best - it's a cost and a headache to them and pisses off their customers.

    3. Re:Coporate Influence by westlake · · Score: 2

      Universities have adopted corporate tactics to become and stay "more competitive in the marketplace" and that means shielding themselves from lawsuits and making themselves more appealing to donors.

      So, nothing new under the sun.

    4. Re:Coporate Influence by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 1

      shielding themselves from lawsuits

      The limiting liability part is valid. No one is going to sue students. They have no money. The university has money, so any lawsuits will be directed at them, even if the university had nothing to do with inappropriate behavior by students.

      Yes, it's the same with sexual harassment. Nobody sues the offender, who has no money. The employer gets sued. For this reason, companies have explicit policies and education on sexual harassment.

      It's simply astute business practice to avoid getting held accountable for another single person's actions.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    5. Re:Coporate Influence by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Please. It's because universities are overwhelmingly run by a single ideology (in this case, leftism, but in another time or universe, rightism).

      If they're private universities, they can choose whatever ideology or speech codes they like, and students can choose whether to attend or not.

      If they're public universities, strong restrictions on free speech on campus are a consequence of restrictions on the use of public funds and resources to promote personal political and religious views.

    6. Re:Coporate Influence by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Speaking of corporations, what the heck is up with the summary: "how universities have become the most authoritarian institutions in America"??

      Hmm... the MOST authoritarian institutions in America. A little hyperbole? I suppose it depends on how you define "institution." If you mean "institution" as in "institute" which often implies a research organization, the claim is probably trivially true, since universities are probably the most common independent research organizations in America.

      But that's a dumb reading. So if we interpret "institution" in the broader sense of an organization created for a particular purpose, how about... I don't know... the TSA, the military? They aren't "authoritarian" at all... [\sarcasm]

      Or, for that matter, most corporations that have at-will employees. How many places could you keep your job if you acted in your workplace like many college students act on college campuses?

      The article identifies a real issue, but colleges are now the MOST authoritarian organizations in the U.S.? Hardly.

    7. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That, and infinite supply of students that are too desperate to get a degree to fight the system. But this also applies to staff - the long standing tradition of US colleges is "tenure" which is supposed to grant the teaching staff at least the freedom to express their opinions without the fear to be kicked out the door by the college administration (for the most part at least). Unfortunately, staff has been in many cases squandering this right for useless bickering on small politics, and colleges have found different ways to repress free speech. The atmosphere of openness that used to exist in colleges is pretty much gone starting from the top, and students follow the suit not knowing any better.

    8. Re:Coporate Influence by CodeBuster · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If they're public universities, strong restrictions on free speech on campus are a consequence of restrictions on the use of public funds and resources to promote personal political and religious views.

      Is muzzling free speech, simply because some find it offensive, not also promoting a personal political view? How can people speak of "tolerance" when they're unwilling to tolerate free speech on campus? Does it strike anyone else as ironic that those who hold "tolerance" in such high regard are amongst the most intolerant of speech that doesn't comport with their world view and ideological sensibilities?

    9. Re:Coporate Influence by sed+quid+in+infernos · · Score: 3, Informative

      Actually, public universities have very little power to restrict student speech on campus. See, for example, Rosenberger v. University of Virginia, where the Supreme Court required the University to fund a Christian magazine on the same basis it funded student-run secular magazines. Just a few years before that happened, the University tried to defund a conservative magazine. The argument was that commenting on the activities of NOW and other liberal organizations was an inappropriate "political" use of student activity funds; no one seemed take into account that the activities being commented on were funded by those same fees. That one didn't go to court, because of a media storm.

      The fact that the students are in some sense "using" state-funded resources doesn't really provide a constitutional basis to restrict their private speech. If resource are made available for private student speech, a public university has very little leeway to favor one viewpoint over another--and this includes attempts to exclude entire topics in a supposedly neutral manner. This error has been repeated quite often in this thread, and it's one reason organizations like FIRE are needed: the public is woefully uneducated on this issue. For example, if a public university allows students to hand out flyers on the quad as a general matter, they can't really control the content of those flyers. And if they restrict the flyers to "official" university functions, they have to ensure that the definition of official is precise and hat they don't allow exceptions.

    10. Re:Coporate Influence by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Lukianoff notes that baby-boom Americans who remember the student protests of the 1960s tend to assume that U.S. colleges are still some of the freest places on earth.

      Wasn't it always like that? In the 60s, the Universities just used tear gas and violent beat-downs by riot police.

      Obviously, this Ann Coultier isn't worth getting beaten up, getting a criminal record over, and expelled from school if her supporters are just going to fold at the first tiniest little sign of disapproval.

    11. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it really is just to maximize the possible applicant student body. The more people are comfortable on the campus, the more applicants they get. This lets them choose the best of those applicants, and their test scores, reputation, and income go up.

      The reason college campuses seem "lefty" to people on the right, is that by a noticeable percentage, most young people are on the left. People who come from conservative areas quite often forget that. Anyway, so a campus policy that keeps people on the left happy means more applicants. (It also means more money for football). Its all just dollars and cents.

    12. Re:Coporate Influence by kenorland · · Score: 1

      Where did I say anything about "personal views"? Public universities are subject to restrictions that we place on all public, tax-payer funded institutions and organizations. The IRS can't tell you to become a Christian or atheist. An IRS employee can't publish on irs.gov his opinions about Christianity or atheism. And it's the same with public universities. A public university, by necessity, is a rather politically, religiously, and culturally sterile place. At private universities, pretty much anything goes, from extreme conformity in some conservative Christian and progressivist places, to universities that try to avoid any kind of controversy, to many universities that encourage open debate and disagreement. It's a free country: you get to pick the university you like.

    13. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this whole article - from the WSJ no less, sounds like right wing crap - I work for a big corporation people get fired all the time for expressing even the most trivial opinion - researchers are fired and careers ruined for explaining why the project being proposed is _physically_ impossible - give me a break, colleges the most authoritarians institutions in america - what a sack of bullshit.

    14. Re:Coporate Influence by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 2

      It's because universities are overwhelmingly run by a single ideology (in this case, leftism, but in another time or universe, rightism).

      Universities are not hotbeds of leftism, and they never really were. A few universities are or were, but for the most part, here is what life at today's universities is like:

      1. Don't ask the wrong questions
      2. Climb the ladder: you are at school so you can get a good job afterward
      3. Know your place
      4. Pay!
      5. Don't complain about money!
      6. Never question how the system works, and make sure you call anyone who does question the system annoying.

      Corporations generally don't care at all about what you say - they just want your money

      Yes, they care about money. That's why they care about what you say:

      http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2000/nov/24/internetnews.internationalnews

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    15. Re:Coporate Influence by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      If they're public universities, strong restrictions on free speech on campus are a consequence of restrictions on the use of public funds and resources to promote personal political and religious views.

      I keep seeing this. The fact of the matter is that universities have consistently lost in court when these "strong restrictions on free speech on campus" have been challenged in court. The fact of the matter is that public universities have strong speech codes because those who run them don't want people saying things that they do not approve of. The courts have consistently ruled against these speech codes when FIRE has challenged them in court.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    16. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, 60's radicals were not about free speech, though some of their professors were. They were about having their viewpoint instituted without question to replace the older one they found morally bankrupt. They never, and to this day do not, respect other points of view and this whole speech code issue reflects that, though a lot of it is to avoid liability in case of a lawsuit by a student.

    17. Re:Coporate Influence by kenorland · · Score: 1

      All you're saying is that public universities must be ideologically neutral in whatever restrictions they place on free speech, a position a fully agree with.

      Lukianoff, however, is complaining that on-campus speech restrictions exist in the first place. But public universities can restrict on-campus speech and speech using university resources as long as they are consistent about it and as long as they don't veer into restricting private speech. You just affirmed that yourself.

      Lukianoff's premise is wrong: universities haven't become the "most authoritarian institution", many of them have always been somewhat restrictive and authoritarian. And I'm not sure why anybody believes that organizations that teaches students how to manipulate DNA or solve integrals automatically need to become political or religious forums.

      (Incidentally, the UofV case is about redistribution of student activity fees, not even tax dollars.)

    18. Re:Coporate Influence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please. It's because universities are overwhelmingly run by a single ideology (in this case, leftism, but in another time or universe, rightism).

      Please. Because there's a single ideology anyone can refer to as "leftism" or "rightism" and nobody will be the least bit confused about the specifics. Are Communism and Socialism the same? What about Capitalism and Mercantilism?

  6. It's only harassment... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    unless the school does it

    University of Delaware Requires Students to Undergo Ideological Reeducation
    http://thefire.org/article/8555.html

  7. I've seen it first hand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A friend of mine was arrested and trespassed for smoking up in the college library bathroom. He wasn't a student, just a former crackhead that believes in leaching off society (hi trane!). The point is, college libraries should let homeless people like him sleep there at night so they can learn stuff.

  8. Typical.. by drewsup · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So in order to not offend ANYONE, NO ONE is allowed to say ANYTHING.
    This goes right along with sports where there is no winner\ everyone gets a trophy to PC playgrounds with no jungle gyms.
    I weep at what has happened to my country in the past 30 years. I think it's time to start again from scratch.

    1. Re:Typical.. by reboot246 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It starts with assaults on free speech, but it ends with destroying the most basic of freedoms - the freedom to fail.

    2. Re:Typical.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is interesting to note, the author a self described democrat, correctly identifies what most would consider "conservative or libertarian" views being the ones most likely to be attacked. This was in full swing when I went to UCLA in the 1980s. The UC system instituted a number of speech policies that basically said that if you said anything that hurt someone's feelings you were guilty of insensitive/offensive speech. Invariably this meant anyone who said anything the (largely liberal) establishment didn't like.

      It was intolerance of any viewpoint but their own. Ironically, those accused were generally accused of intolerance.

      I'm actually a bit surprised by the slashdot response. I guess slashdotters swing a bit more libertarian than liberal, at least on this subject. Remember it's always easier when it's something you can identify with, like free speech. Just try to remind yourselves of that the next time someone is trying to ban something you don't like (smoking, trans-fats, sugary drinks, CO2) "for the good of society".

    3. Re:Typical.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The most dangerous words you can ever hear (from a "societal good" point of view) are "there ought to be a law..."

    4. Re:Typical.. by captainpanic · · Score: 1

      So in order to not offend ANYONE, NO ONE is allowed to say ANYTHING.

      You will be surprised to find people in favor of this model of "freedom". Unfortunately, they really exist.

      And there is no politician or CEO who will risk his career to reduce the amount of rules. It's safety first. Modern leadership is all about avoiding responsibility. Leadership is a skill where you hide behind a set of rules which seem to create the greatest security for the general population. The rules may obstruct progress, they may reduce freedom. But progress and freedom are abstract things, while one dead child or a lost job is a very concrete thing.

      You're not a baby-killer, are you? Imagine it was your child...

    5. Re:Typical.. by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      The most dangerous words you can ever hear (from a "societal good" point of view) are "there ought to be a law..."

      Really? How about "There ought to be a law prohibiting murder." or "There ought to be a law ensuring my right to vote."?

    6. Re:Typical.. by uhwuggawuh · · Score: 1

      What makes the freedom to fail "the most basic of freedoms"?

  9. Free Speech Zone on campus by spire3661 · · Score: 1

    At the community college im attending to bone up on some tech skills they have a 'free speech zone' in the main quad. It is hideous that the college has institutionalized where and when free speech can occur. I understand the practicality of such a solution, but i cannot ignore its chilling effect.

    --
    Good-bye
    1. Re:Free Speech Zone on campus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If ten groups establish 3 foot tables in a 30 foot walkway you will have to tell one to move. It's better to tell them to not establsh more than one, which is all that a "free speech zone" is in this case, space rationing.

    2. Re:Free Speech Zone on campus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the FIRE website, such exclusive zones for "free speech" have been found to be unconstitional...

    3. Re:Free Speech Zone on campus by spire3661 · · Score: 1

      As i said, i understand the practical nature of it, but it is outweighed by the chlling effect it causes.

      --
      Good-bye
  10. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by MyLongNickName · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nice ad hominem. Instead of reading the source and arguing with the points made, you drool on yourself and blabber on about Murdoch.

    The fact is that free speech in America has been getting more and more curtailed. Some in a very overt manner (free speech zones). Some in a softer manner (How DARE you suggest that affirmative action is racist, you racist). But the US is not as free as it used to be. No, we are nowhere near a totalitarian state. But freedoms do not go away overnight. If we continue to let the slide continue, we'll be closer to the totalitarian state. Freedoms are hard to get back once they've been ceded.

    But thanks for your idiotic response. If anything, it was a nice foil.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  11. One problem with 'Freedom of speech' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some have more freedom (i.e. dollars) than others.

  12. Emanating as this does from the WSJ by akeeneye · · Score: 0, Troll

    ... I'm not surprised to see the carping about how the right-wing is allegedly being oppressed on college campuses. But it also makes me wonder to what extent Christian schools tolerate free speech. The Wikipedia page for Liberty U describes how the school "un-recognized" the Democratic student group for being ideologically unfit.

    --
    The man who dies rich dies disgraced. -- Andrew Carnegie
  13. High conservative bent by Beetle+B. · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Most of the examples in the article have a pro-conservative leaning. So I went to their FIRE database and tried to find some cases where I knew universities tried blocking left-wing people from speaking. Not surprisingly, I didn't find at least the ones I was aware of.

    I think it's good someone is defending conservatives' right to speech. I simply feel they should be open about their partisanship.

    --
    Beetle B.
    1. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yes...FIRE is good as far as it goes, but it is odd they have an entry for Yale but not for Liberty University.

    2. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't Free Speech a left-"leaning" topic itself regardless of the topic? Therefore all the examples, at their root, are left-leaning.

      Just another example of how stupid the left-right paradigm is to begin with.

    3. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      No...the issue is that FIRE says it is concerned about freedom at campuses in general, but is largely silent whenever, for example, private religious institutions like Liberty University trounce all over their student's freedom of speech.

    4. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neither far-right nor far-left nations have ever had much free speech. Liberal can be left or right. Conservative can be left or right. For instance, Soviet Russia was far left and very conservative.

    5. Re:High conservative bent by DirePickle · · Score: 3, Informative

      Your first clue should have been that this was an article from the WSJ.

    6. Re:High conservative bent by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      Somewhere like Liberty has goals, and a legal status, very different than those of a state university. The free-speech-related issues at somewhere like Liberty are pretty different than those at a state university.

    7. Re:High conservative bent by Beetle+B. · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Somewhere like Liberty has goals, and a legal status, very different than those of a state university.

      The database contains both public and private universities.

      --
      Beetle B.
    8. Re:High conservative bent by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      I was just trying to say that if one objects to universities' restrictions on free speech, they'll find that the legal and ethical issues differ when considering public vs. private secular vs. religiously affiliated universities.

    9. Re:High conservative bent by Carewolf · · Score: 1

      Neither far-right nor far-left nations have ever had much free speech. Liberal can be left or right. Conservative can be left or right. For instance, Soviet Russia was far left and very conservative.

      I think you have your left/right axis poorly defined. You are probably right in whatever definition of left/right you use, but here is the cue-card we normally use:

      Pre-socialism: Left -> right == liberal -> conservative
      Post-socialism US: Left -> right == socialist/liberal -> conservative. (with both extreme socialism and extreme liberalism considered far left)
      Post-socialism Europe: Left -> right == socialist -> conservative/liberal (with both extreme conservatism and extreme liberalism considered far right)

    10. Re:High conservative bent by Beetle+B. · · Score: 1

      I was just trying to say that if one objects to universities' restrictions on free speech, they'll find that the legal and ethical issues differ when considering public vs. private secular vs. religiously affiliated universities.

      For some, yes, they'd make a distinction. The WSJ article didn't, and nor does FIRE.

      --
      Beetle B.
    11. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Just as right-wingers tend to see any moderate view that's not extreme right as "liberal", they also tend to see anything restricting their asshole behavior as "anti-conservative" backlash or oppression, as if it's because of their political view. No, morons, it's because you're acting like assholes. The restrictions are on acting like an asshole in an environment that demands cooperation and consideration.

      Conservatives say they value "strength" and "independence" and "bravery." They interpret this to mean being bull-headed, closed-minded, and argumentative. You want to stop being "oppressed," stop acting like assholes (or just admiring those who do).

    12. Re:High conservative bent by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      While I'm also suspicious of their ulterior motives, on that particular point, Lukianoff has said they don't include universities that explicitly claim to be partisan or sectarian. So universities that explicitly say, "this is a [right|left|Christian|Islamic|socialist] university, other views not welcome here" aren't considered within FIRE's purview, since in their opinion at least those universities are openly warning students about what to expect if they attend, so nobody is being misled.

      Of course in practice that basically means religious universities, because I'm not aware of a Socialist University of America or similarly openly-sectarian university on the left.

    13. Re:High conservative bent by timeOday · · Score: 1
      Two points:

      First, the libertarian / conservative approach would be to de-fund public education. In this case, all schools would be private and could therefore censor to their owners' content.

      Second, here's an example of right-leaning censorship at a state school.

      That said, it is just one example and doesn't prove a trend. Proving a trend such as this is hard. In the 1960's the US government was foisting conscription for an unpopular war onto college-age students. Extreme racism was also still pretty pervasive, including government-supported, in certain parts of the US. Since these things are not happening now, the level of protest should be different. If the level of discontent stays the same regardless of the actual seriousness of the causes, something else is going on.

    14. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is there a case of a University stopping left-wing speech? When I was there it was really anything goes for any left-wing groups, including making a huge mess they didn't clean up with a "homeless simulation" which was abandoned because it was too cold/rainy.

    15. Re:High conservative bent by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      You're mixing up two different definition of liberalism. In Europe, unqualified liberal usually implies economic liberal. In US, unqualified liberal usually implies social liberal. In both places, however, social liberals are generally considered to be on the left, and economic liberals are generally considered to be on the right.

      Libertarians are a corner case, and where they end up depends on how much they talk about economy. For example, In European countries, they usually talk mostly about economics since it's the major thing that's not working the way they'd like it to, and so they end up also being classified on the right.

    16. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think this is true. See this: http://thefire.org/article/7975.html (a bunch of cases mentioned here)

      And this: http://thefire.org/case/751.html (environmentalist)

      And this: http://thefire.org/case/849 (drug legalization)

      And this: http://thefire.org/case/772.html (about kicking people out of public housing)

      And this: http://thefire.org/case/656.html (NAACP not allowed to have campus group)

      Since it's a WSJ article, they probably emphasized conservative cases, but there are plenty of liberal ones on their site too.

    17. Re:High conservative bent by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      First point, I am pretty sure that the FIRE database is going to be composed of the cases they have been contacted about and saw as being in need of intervention.
      Second point, please give a little information about the left-leaning cases that you are aware of, do they involve public universities, or schools which do not explicitly claim to be partisan or sectarian?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    18. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmm....so this artwork was installed on campus and if I figure late 2011 to when the students went home in May 2012, it was there for at least 6 months. The artist was not censured for being insensitive. The "art" such as it was, was removed.

      Now, how is this the same again? Surely you could have come up with a better example.

    19. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's pretty fair don't you think? If you go to Seminary to study to be a Catholic priest, I would assume that they are probably not really keen on speech critical of JC. Less so at a Catholic university that is not a Seminary, but I really don't see any inconsistency.

      because I'm not aware of a Socialist University of America or similarly openly-sectarian university on the left.

      I guess they are less comfortable/honest with their position?

    20. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly do you as an open minded liberal define "asshole behavior" and "closed-minded and argumentative"?

      Anyone who disagrees with you I suppose.

      If you want to restrict people screaming at people in the library, fine, I agree that is "asshole behavior". If you want to ban Ann Coulter (or David Horowitz or whoever) because you think they are assholes and asking them to speak is therefore by definition "asshole behavior" then you are exactly the problem here.

    21. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly do you as an open minded liberal define "asshole behavior" and "closed-minded and argumentative"?

      Anyone who disagrees with you I suppose.

      Uh, no, you can disagree with me politely in a civil, dignified manner that encourages productive dialogue.

      If you instead choose to call me names, insult me, use hyperbole to falsely accuse me of trying to infringe your rights, or suggest that I deserve pain, physical injury, or to be tortured, assaulted, or killed - well, you're just being an asshole no matter what your political beliefs.

      And yes, I have had right-wingers and fundamentalist extremists do all these things to me, in full view of others on campus, while I was trying to have a civil debate with them.

    22. Re:High conservative bent by Solandri · · Score: 1

      Just curious if you also think it's an "issue" that the ACLU purports to protect the Bill of Rights in general, yet is conspicuously silent about the Second Amendment.

      I've long since decided that there is no perfect organization. Every one is always looking out to defend only the things they're interested in defending, which is their freedom to do. As long as on the whole it ends up defending liberties like freedom of speech from the egregious violations, it's all good. Don't use faults in the messenger as an excuse to ignore what may be a perfectly valid message.

    23. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Name some left-wingers who've been banned from appearances at public universities in the U.S.

      There are major U.S. universities that not only invite left-wing speakers, but often even employ them... people who are marxists, or anti-U.S. Military, or high-profile atheists, or with ties to 60's radical bombers, or ties to terrorists like Hamas, Hezbollah, or the PLO, etc; Yet these same schools have banned best-selling right-wing authors like Michele Malkin, Ann Coulter, or famous former-60's-radical-lefty-turned conservative David Horowitz from even making appearances on their grounds. On some of these campuses, the lefty professors have allowed conservatives to appear, but have encouraged their moronic lemming-like students to shout them down or physically assault them with fruit, or pies, or glitter etc. So much for "free speech"...

      The reason you rarely see liberal speakers listed as having been banned from speaking at a public university is that it almost never happens... and please don't hold up Ward Churchill as an example... that dirtbag (and fake indian) was a paid professor for many years before the public became aware of the crap he was shoveling into his students' ears... which lead to questions the university could not answer (like "what in the hell are this guy's credentials?" and "why in the hell did you guys make this flake a PROFESSOR?") which lead to all the fraud and misconduct which lead to his firing. I highly doubt that the jerk is having any trouble getting speaking engagements on university campuses even now (and that's fine... guest speakers of all stripes should be allowed; they need not become paid professors in subjects where they lack proper credentials however)

    24. Re:High conservative bent by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      The guy interviewed is himself a liberal.

      He's gone into this numerous times. FIRE's stated rules are that they consider:

      1) State institutions who are legally required to allow free speech.

      2) Private institutions that promise free speech.

      They take the position that any private university which states up front that it enforces a code of conduct that takes precedence over free speech (such as religious rules), is not violating the law, and is lying to students about what they should expect. They don't support the limitations these schools place on free speech, but as private institutions they feel it is their right to hold them.

      You may disagree with that philosophy, but there is nothing inherently liberal or conservative about it. It's a defensible response to living in a pluralistic society.

      Now, it so happens that the majority of speech restrictions from public schools at this time in history are based on liberal concepts. Conservatives tend to retreat to private religious institutions for their discrimination. But FIRE *has* gone after traditionally conservative/catholic institutions who promise free speech and then renege on it.

    25. Re:High conservative bent by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      You would assume wrong. The seminary students I know are some of the most open-to-religious-debate people around. If you want to have a factual discussion about the historical accuracy of biblical texts, or the hypocritical nature of Paul, there's nobody better to chat with than a seminary student. I'm sure not all seminaries are created equal, so YMMV. Now, if you want to go on an atheist rant about how stupid Bible-thumpers are, then this is not the crowd for you.

    26. Re:High conservative bent by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Let's look at one of the universities in the article. Fordham University is a Jesuit institution. Their president (the person being criticized and lied about in the article) is a priest. Jesuits are members of the Society of Jesus, which is "a Christian male religious order of the Roman Catholic Church... also known colloquially as 'God's Marines.'" If that's not a sect, I don't know what is. Therefore, Lukianoff and FIRE do include sectarian universities. Now the question is, why do they only include certain sectarian universities? I think we all know the answer to that.

    27. Re:High conservative bent by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

      Somewhere like Liberty has goals, and a legal status, very different than those of a state university.

      And a Jesuit institution like Fordham University doesn't?

      The free-speech-related issues at somewhere like Liberty are pretty different than those at a state university.

      Fordham is not a state university.

    28. Re:High conservative bent by alan_dershowitz · · Score: 1

      According to FIRE's president, they go after public universities that are obligated to guarantee first amendment protections to students. But they have different criteria for private universities, for instance that publicly say they support free speech but then have restrictive speech codes or selectively squelch some speech. Their position is, if it's public the school must give you freedom of speech; and if it's private, the school must clearly and consistently indicate what speech is allowed so that you can make an informed choice to pick universities.

      Here is an explanation from FIRE's president

    29. Re:High conservative bent by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      Funny that a social "liberal" often defends forcing people to cooperate with things they don't want to.
      See FOCA, see authoritarian "anti-discrimination" laws that force people to cooperate with same-sex weddings.

    30. Re:High conservative bent by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Can you give an example of a law that forces anyone to "cooperate" with same-sex weddings (whatever that means)?

    31. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same way the law forces you to "cooperate" with opposite-sex weddings! :)

    32. Re:High conservative bent by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      Forcing phtographers to take pictures of same-sex weddings.
      Forcing elderly berad&breakfest owners to allow two men have buggery on their own house (making them wash sheets with blood and feces).
      Making churches that rent their property for weddings accept same-sex weddings.
      Making traditional marriage supporters lose their jobs (see for example the infamous persecution in California).

      http://wdtprs.com/blog/2012/06/photographer-refuses-to-shoot-same-sex-thingy-bullying-ligation-ensues/
      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/religion/8283651/Second-BandB-owner-sued-for-turning-gay-couple-away.htmld
      http://www.lifesitenews.com/news/judge-rules-christian-facility-cannot-ban-same-sex-civil-union-ceremony-on

    33. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This might come as a shock to you, but straight couples have anal sex too. Some married couples, even.

      So unless you want to put out a big sign in front of your B&B saying "NO BUGGERY," I don't see any reason to discriminate against 2-male couples in this regard.

      Why don't you actually "defend" marriage against its real threat: divorce? Jesus had a lot more to say against divorce than he did against homosexuality, so given that you're not out there screaming about how divorce needs to be outlawed, I can only conclude there's something else at work here other than wanting to preserve "traditional marriage." That something is homophobia.

    34. Re:High conservative bent by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      > "This might come as a shock to you, but straight couples have anal sex too"

      Because SOME straight couples do this thing, we should equante straight couples with same-sex pairs? By that logic, we should equate cow meat with poison, because SOME meat may be poisonous (if it is rotten, for example).

      > "Why don't you actually "defend" marriage against its real threat: divorce? Jesus had a lot more to say against divorce than he did against homosexuality,"

      Because divorce was imensely more common among Jews than homosexualism. By your logic, nuclear bombings are perfectly Christian, because Jesus said nothing about nuclear weapons.

    35. Re:High conservative bent by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Double standards - they're not just for breakfast anymore...

    36. Re:High conservative bent by INowRegretThesePosts · · Score: 1

      Will you please stop ad hominem attacks and actually respect logic?

      I repeat: equating normal couples with same-sex pairs because the normal couple MAY practice buggery is like equating cow meat with poison because the meat MAY be poisonous.

      Another example: by your logic, we should allow children to have driver licenses, because some adults MAY behave like children.

      Etc, etc.

  14. Mod Parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Add to the list: administrators will do anything to justify the existence of their job title and keep themselves from being pushed out, even if it means eliminating those who do the real work. Also like corporate America.

  15. nothing new... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I graduated in 2001 from the FH Druck und Medien, now School of Media in Germany, and I remember the presentation of a student production being suppressed, by the powers to be, as it was comparing Rumsfeld with Hitler. Keep in mind that was the time of the Gulf War. I admit that particular student work was bad, but that wasn't the reason for it's suppression.
    Apparently some of the University's funding came from US sponsors :)

  16. Hey Bubba! It's me... by rmdingler · · Score: 1

    I notice you stopped accepting those collect calls....can i bum a square?

    --
    Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.

    Ernest Hemingway

  17. George Carlin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Carlin used to tour college campuses in the 70s and 80s because they loved freedom of expression and comedy. He even recorded a special, Carlin on Campus, in 1984. In his later years he avoided colleges like the plague because they became centers of cultural intolerance. Extreme bastions for censorship and political correctness. Most of his act was off limits for performance. Campuses were trying to avoid anything that might be the slightest bit offensive or controversial.

    Carlin on O&A talking a bit about free speech:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hX5mz27PTv0

  18. Freedom of Speech is Freedom to be an Asshat too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't agree with a lot of viewpoints people have, but Freedom of Speech is where you are free to be a racist, discriminatory sonnofabitch too.

  19. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Posting anonymous so I don't lose my mod points.

    > Instead of reading the source and arguing with the points made ...

    Everyone here, please read this. This is part of the problem. "If my guy does it, you're just overreacting if you disagree," and "if their guy does it, it's automatically suspect, move along, nothing to see."

    Forget political parties. Forget Democrat or Republican, or WSJ vs. NYT. If speech is being curtailed, that should concern you.

    Example: friend of mine works with my wife at the Social Security Administration, where the rules are so byzantine, they can mean anything you want them to this week. This friend jokes that says things like, "my, you're looking remarkably neutral and androgynous today." It's fun to watch their puzzled expressions as they try to decide whether it's a compliment, an insult, or something that merits a formal EEOC complaint.

    Freedom of speech means FREEDOM OF SPEECH. As the Supreme Court of the US has ruled many times, even OFFENSIVE speech must be protected. Even speech with which you might personally disagree.

    This should concern every one of you, regardless of your ideological bent.

  20. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    I think too, that as speech becomes based on private technology, there is a movement that "free speech" has to be "earned" on each said platform. If ever there was a time "he who pays the bills" has become the mantra.

    The Free Speech and debating hall in the student union has now been rented to Starbucks. After all, it's not the University's job to provide places for students to discuss stuff not related to the coursework they pay for.

  21. wrong premise by kenorland · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The premise that anybody should be able to say anything on any campus is wrong, legally, philosophically, and historically. Universities are (for the most part) private institutions, and they can decide what speech is permissible on campus and as part of the educational experience. Good universities will, of course, try to present a wide range of viewpoints, but what they present and how they present it is still up to them. Nor does it seem to me that this has changed a great deal over time. Even in the 1960's, people were protesting and getting arrested because their views differed from those of the institution; if they had agreed, there wouldn't have been any need for protest. Publicly financed universities face a special problem, in that tax dollars may not be used to promote religion and that there are a few other restrictions. That's OK: if you don't like those restrictions, don't attend a public university. That's also why public universities should probably also be only a small component of the overall mix of educational institutions.

    Rather than making all universities some kind of free speech compromise in which everybody can say anything except when it offends anybody, we should have a diversity of public and private institutions based on many different viewpoints and ideologies, and people pick and choose the institutions that they think meets their requirements.

    1. Re:wrong premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Kill yourself

    2. Re:wrong premise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I (another anon) think you've been drinking cool aid starting directly from your mother's tit. New generations, with very very few exception are really fucked up. Sad, I know.

    3. Re:wrong premise by JoshuaZ · · Score: 1

      No. If we have institutions where everyone picks and chooses the ones with ideas and beliefs they like the end result is that everyone just goes to their own echo chamber. Universities therefore need to foster free speech of all sorts. Similarly, the statement about public universities is confused: There's a clear difference between saying "university money can't go to religion" and censoring religious speech.

    4. Re:wrong premise by EllisDees · · Score: 1

      > Universities are (for the most part) private institutions,

      There are very few Universities in the US that do not accept some form of government funding. Because of that, they cannot legally restrict you from any of your constitutional rights.

      --
      -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
    5. Re:wrong premise by kenorland · · Score: 1

      You're saying that good universities should allow free and open discussion as part of their educational experience, and I agree. But that's a question of how the university chooses to structure its education. You don't have an automatic "free speech right" on campus. If you don't like the way a university restricts your speech, choose a different university.

    6. Re:wrong premise by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Publicly financed universities face a special problem, in that tax dollars may not be used to promote religion and that there are a few other restrictions.

      This has been stated by several people in this discussion and it is, for the most part, not true. Public universities have rather consistently lost when their speech codes (and other restrictions on speech) have been challenged in court.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  22. The full Fordham University statement by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm not surprised the Wall Street Journal allowed Mr. Lukianoff to mischaracterize the contents of Fordham's statement.
    Read it for yourself and see if it really matches the tone of WSJ's article : http://www.fordham.edu/Campus_Resources/eNewsroom/topstories_2601.asp

    November 9, 2012

    The College Republicans, a student club at Fordham University, has invited Ann Coulter to speak on campus on November 29. The event is funded through student activity fees and is not open to the public nor the media. Student groups are allowed, and encouraged, to invite speakers who represent diverse, and sometimes unpopular, points of view, in keeping with the canons of academic freedom. Accordingly, the University will not block the College Republicans from hosting their speaker of choice on campus.

    To say that I am disappointed with the judgment and maturity of the College Republicans, however, would be a tremendous understatement. There are many people who can speak to the conservative point of view with integrity and conviction, but Ms. Coulter is not among them. Her rhetoric is often hateful and needlessly provocative--more heat than light--and her message is aimed squarely at the darker side of our nature.

    As members of a Jesuit institution, we are called upon to deal with one another with civility and compassion, not to sling mud and impugn the motives of those with whom we disagree or to engage in racial or social stereotyping. In the wake of several bias incidents last spring, I told the University community that I hold out great contempt for anyone who would intentionally inflict pain on another human being because of their race, gender, sexual orientation, or creed.

    "Disgust" was the word I used to sum up my feelings about those incidents. Hate speech, name-calling, and incivility are completely at odds with the Jesuit ideals that have always guided and animated Fordham.

    Still, to prohibit Ms. Coulter from speaking at Fordham would be to do greater violence to the academy, and to the Jesuit tradition of fearless and robust engagement. Preventing Ms. Coulter from speaking would counter one wrong with another. The old saw goes that the answer to bad speech is more speech. This is especially true at a university, and I fully expect our students, faculty, alumni, parents, and staff to voice their opposition, civilly and respectfully, and forcefully.

    The College Republicans have unwittingly provided Fordham with a test of its character: do we abandon our ideals in the face of repugnant speech and seek to stifle Ms. Coulter's (and the student organizers') opinions, or do we use her appearance as an opportunity to prove that our ideas are better and our faith in the academy--and one another--stronger? We have chosen the latter course, confident in our community, and in the power of decency and reason to overcome hatred and prejudice.

    Joseph M. McShane, S.J., President

    Compare and contrast with

    Mr. Lukianoff says that the Fordham-Coulter affair took campus censorship to a new level:
    "This was the longest, strongest condemnation of a speaker that I've ever seen in which a university president also tried to claim that he was defending freedom of speech."

    I guess in the print edition, the WSJ and Lukianoff can assume most people won't actually read the statement being attacked.

    --
    [Fuck Beta]
    o0t!
    1. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're truly surprised, you must be unfamiliar with Murdoch (owner of the WSJ, Fox Propaganda, and others) and his editorial policies.

    2. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I guess in the print edition, the WSJ and Lukianoff can assume most people won't actually read the statement being attacked.

      The conservative media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news. Weren't you here during the last election season? ;-)

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    3. Re:The full Fordham University statement by briancox2 · · Score: 1

      I am a very conservative voter than nearly always votes Republican. I also agree that Ann Coulter is a polemic that speaks with intention of inciting outrage. She often does more harm for the conservative cause than good because she lacks grace and decency that honors the humanity in those she disagrees with. But that doesn't mean that it is appropriate for a President of a school to make a judgement that she should therefor not be allowed to communicate. That is not the country we live in and it does not represent our value of allowing speech we disagree with. The ACLU once fought for the right of Nazi's to protest in a Jewish neighborhood. And we survived it very well. Today the intolerance of strong language we have prevents us from even expressing things rudely. We have indeed fallen very far.

      --
      We should learn what we need to know about issues, before we decide what we need to feel about them.
    4. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news.

      FTFY

    5. Re:The full Fordham University statement by westlake · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The conservative media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news.

      Not so very different from Slashdot.

    6. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sounds like the guy was condemning the speaker while saying he can't officially prevent it. But it looks like he did prevent it.

      Chilling effects?

    7. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't mean that it is appropriate for a President of a school to make a judgement that she should therefor not be allowed to communicate. That is not the country we live in and it does not represent our value of allowing speech we disagree with.

      It sure doesn't, but that's not what he did.

    8. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Stiletto · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So, basically, it went like this:

      College Republicans: We're inviting Ann Coulter onto campus to do her hate-schtick show.
      University Officials: Go ahead, but you're making yourselves look like douchebags and this university look like a circus.
      College Republicans: Uhmm.. OK, she's dis-invited.
      College Republicans to the Wall Street Journal: WAAAAHHHHHHHHHHH! THE COMMUNIST LIBRUL UNIVERSITY IS CENSORING OUR FREE SPEECH!!!! WAAAAAAAHHHHHHH!

    9. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Gregg+M · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't mean that it is appropriate for a President of a school to make a judgement that she should therefor not be allowed to communicate

      Mr. McShane didn't block Ms. Coulter's speech,

      He didn't block her. He said you can do better. They evidently agreed with you and looked for another speaker.

      --
      Linux is only free if your time has no value. Windows is only free if you threaten to use Linux.
    10. Re:The full Fordham University statement by hey! · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't mean that it is appropriate for a President of a school to make a judgement that she should therefor not be allowed to communicate.

      It's very hard to budge our perception of an event once we've formed a strong opinion of it. If you read the statement posted above with detachment, you will see that Dr. McShane actually agrees with you and believes that Ms. Coulter *should* be allowed to speak, even though she does harm to her own cause.

      We have indeed fallen very far.

      We should carefully establish our bearings before making any such conclusion. If we inflate injustices or take fabricated ones at face value, things will naturally appear worse than they are.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    11. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess in the print edition, the WSJ and Lukianoff can assume most people won't actually read the statement being attacked.

      The conservative media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news. Weren't you here during the last election season? ;-)

      They still have ways to go to catch up to leftist "fake but accurate".

    12. Re:The full Fordham University statement by sgtrock · · Score: 2
      How did this get modded +5? Directly from the officers of the College Republicans:

      The College Republicans regret the controversy surrounding our planned lecture featuring Ann Coulter. The size and severity of opposition to this event have caught us by surprise and caused us to question our decision to welcome her to Rose Hill. Looking at the concerns raised about Ms. Coulter, many of them reasonable, we have determined that some of her comments do not represent the ideals of the College Republicans and are inconsistent with both our organizationâ(TM)s mission and the Universityâ(TM)s. We regret that we failed to thoroughly research her before announcing; that is our error and we do not excuse ourselves for it. Consistent with our strong disagreement with certain comments by Ms. Coulter, we have chosen to cancel the event and rescind Ms. Coulterâ(TM)s invitation to speak at Fordham. We made this choice freely before Father McShaneâ(TM)s email was sent out and we became aware of his feelings â" had the President simply reached out to us before releasing his statement, he would have learned that the event was being cancelled. We hope the University community will forgive the College Republicans for our error and continue to allow us to serve as its main voice of the sensible, compassionate, and conservative political movement that we strive to be. We fell short of that standard this time, and we offer our sincere apologies.

      Ted Conrad, President

      Emily Harman, Vice President

      Joe Campagna, Treasurer

      John Mantia, Secretary

      (emphasis added)

      IOW, some kids made a mistake, realized it, owned up to it, and dealt with it appropriately in a mature fashion. In the meantime, a spiteful, mean woman was told exactly what she was. THAT's the real story here.

    13. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You missed the point.

      The university has no business even expressing an opinion as to the fitness of the speaker.

      This is not an insightful post. This is why Slashdot is dying. It's groupthink like this that makes it nothing more than a collection of Internet memes.

    14. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to bold all the stuff that makes McShane look reasonable and not bold the stuff that makes him look like he's saying the sky is falling if she speaks on campus. Heck, they had Chris Matthews speak at graduation a few years ago and that guy is totally over the top. And they just had Peter Singer, the guy who thinks infanticide is just fine and dandy.

    15. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Uberbah · · Score: 2

      The university has no business even expressing an opinion as to the fitness of the speaker.

      Teabagger douchebag: Universities are engaging in censorship! Free speeech!
      Tubesteak: No, they're not. They let Coulter speak, just criticized the choice.
      Teabagger douchebag: Universities have no right to free speech!

      Do you guys have any sense of logical consistency purged in a special ceremony, or do you have to practice at it, or what?

    16. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Except of course that it was not a College Republican (or any other form of Republican) talking to the Wall Street Journal. It was Greg Lukianoff, Greg Lukianoff is an atheist, a Democrat, a supporter of same-sex marriage, and a supporter of abortion rights.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    17. Re:The full Fordham University statement by ChrisMaple · · Score: 0

      During the last 6 months I've heard numerous cases where mainstream broadcast media not only took statements out of context, but deliberately did tight editing to remove words and phrases that completely changed the meaning of sentences. Without exception, these edits were done to slander Republicans and conservatives.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    18. Re:The full Fordham University statement by argStyopa · · Score: 1

      Did you bother to actually read the note in full?

      It was a ringing condemnation of Ms Coulter personally, professionally, and politically.

      Now, you may disagree with Ann Coulter.
      You may disagree with her approach and her message.
      But for the University President to take such a personally condemnatory stance - I don't recall him writing such a screed against John Brennan, the 2012 commencement speaker who defended the USE OF TORTURE (afaik the Catholics haven't explicitly endorsed that since Torquemada) - is seemingly unprecedented.

      I believe your point is simple partisan bias.

      If the president had written similar personally-disparaging remarks about other controversial speakers, I'd stand corrected.

      Got any examples?

      --
      -Styopa
    19. Re:The full Fordham University statement by fnj · · Score: 2

      The conservative media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news. Weren't you here during the last election season? ;-)

      The liberal media doesn't report the news anymore. They take statements out of context and generate their own version of news. Weren't you here during the last election season? ;-)

      OK, now we've both got that out of our systems, how about we refuse to be gamed by the system with its false left-right divide which is only for show as they both grind away our rights and our wealth?

    20. Re:The full Fordham University statement by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Even if we grant you that there is a liberal media that does the same thing as the conservative media (and if we forget that 'But they do it too!' is a lousy argument), you forget one thing: the 'liberal' media in the US consists of multiple competing organisations, while the right has the single monolithic view of Murdoch.

      Hardly a fair comparison, now is it?

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    21. Re:The full Fordham University statement by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      Yeah, a lifelong Democrat even.

      You do know who were the bigots and racists in the US prior to 1964, right?

      And you are aware that every argument that starts with: 'I'm not $FOO, but' usually will actually promote $FOO?

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    22. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Are you actually arguing that the problem with free speech in this case is that someone dared to exercise it?

    23. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which just goes to show how ignorant the leadership of Fordham is...

      Ann Coulter has long used (and occasionally explained) her hyperbole and use of stereotypes... her general approach to criticism of the left is to take their arguments (which often are centered on stereotypes, race, ethnicity, gender, etc) and turn them about to expose their hypocracy. Her other "hateful" talent is to point out how the left behaves in two nearly identical situations, but when one narrow (or not-so-narrow) detail is flipped from left-to-right. It's one reason so many on the right love her so much... she takes a left-wing argument made by some left-wing nitwit like, Nancy Peolsi, and illustrates its absurdity, or perhaps some related hypocritical or stupid Pelosi action, and does so often using the very same blunt language and rhetoric the left routinely flings at the right... the comedic payoff being the over-the-top spewing of lefties screeching "Hate!" "sexist!" "racist!" or any other thing in a desperate effort to shut her up, get people to not listen to her, and generally avoid the substance of what she has said; it's some of the best entertainment money can buy. Yes, you can claim all day that she is "hateful" for pointing out left-wing chants of "sexism" when Republicans do not want to pay for abortions... and left-wing silence on the "sexism" of two decades of Bill Clinton's activites... but she's one of the few to stand up to the heat and say "Hey, wait a minute... I thought you said you were all for women's rights, and valuing women..." (not saying she attacked this particular item, in this way, it's just an example... she's a better writer and does better research and footnotes)

      Note the weasel-like nature of the Fordham statement:

      Student groups are allowed, and encouraged, to invite speakers who represent diverse, and sometimes unpopular, points of view ... To say that I am disappointed with the judgment and maturity of the College Republicans, however, would be a tremendous understatement

      Translation: Students may invite any speaker the faculty agrees with; the College Republicans had better back down on this one (and we lack the guts to identify specifically what she said that was wrong, so we'll just make general accusations we would never accept on an academic paper). Oh, and remember who gives out the grades and diplomas...

      In the wake of several bias incidents

      Translation: Avoid Ms Coulter's speech; it could lead to violence... (the provable truth is that the only violence Coulter has triggered has been in liberals who have assaulter her)

      The message got through... these young Republicans (sadly) backed-down and de-invited Ms Coulter. Unfortunately the pigs who have taken over that once-great school now wave the second half of the statement as proof of the academic open-mindedness of the institution. The sad thing is that the people running the place left it to the College kids to invite her in the first place... if Fordham had been run by adult academics, they would have invited her themselves... they'd routinely invite people like Coulter (from the right) and Bill Maher (from the left) to come and speak (sometimes alone at the podium, sometimes as two-person debates).

    24. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Society is chilling effects under the definition you used.

      The normal definition of chilling effects includes a threat of legal action, even unwarranted, to basically make your life hell.

      Not present here. He merely expressed a personal opinion of disapproval - so unless if you can prove this guy's got a history of being a dick in lawsuits if people don't respect his 'personal opinion', in which case you'd have a good argument for there being an implied threat of legal action - no, no chilling effects.

      Just some people being informed that they have invited a douche to speak for them, so if they follow through, they're going to be thought of as douches too.

    25. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      I'd like some references for this of specific examples. This has to be mainstream media too, no MSNBCs or Air America (does that thing even exist?) or Bill Mahar or Jon Stewart.

      The only incident I can think of off the top of my head is the George Zimmerman audio tape edit. I hope someone was fired for that.

    26. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      Even if we grant you that there is a liberal media that does the same thing as the conservative media (and if we forget that 'But they do it too!' is a lousy argument

      According to Ann Coulter, the subject of the story, Fox News is the only major news organization that tries to report fairly. Every other large media organization is liberal to the core and only reports with a very liberal slant. Every one.

      Ugh...

    27. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      But for the University President to take such a personally condemnatory stance - I don't recall him writing such a screed against John Brennan, the 2012 commencement speaker who defended the USE OF TORTURE (afaik the Catholics haven't explicitly endorsed that since Torquemada) - is seemingly unprecedented.

      Yes, I would take John Brennan over Ann Coulter. Not a fan of Brennan, but I can't think of a -worse- speaker than Coulter. At least Brennan could try to use facts and logic to try to defend the use of torture. Coulter is nothing, nothing more than a pure hate-monger. She has no positive qualities. She exists solely to widen the division in our country and increase the hatred and contempt the right has for the left. I consider it more damning than policy disagreements. A speaking engagement aids and abets that, in fact those are what she needs to survive. Brennan doesn't need that, she does.

    28. Re:The full Fordham University statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A little late but at least we are funny about it.

  23. Freedom is not granted by the administration by roc97007 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...it is exercised by the students. In the sixties, freedom of expression on campus sometimes had a high cost. University administrations may have bowed to expediency in the seventies and eighties, but it does appear that the old shackles are back in place, although some of them have different names.

    Today's students can take back their freedom of expression, but will they have the guts to do so? Or will they continue to lament that "the man" doesn't allow them to say unpopular things?

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    1. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by CodeBuster · · Score: 1

      Today's students can take back their freedom of expression, but will they have the guts to do so? Or will they continue to lament that "the man" doesn't allow them to say unpopular things?

      And how can they do that when their fellow students continue to play the role of Judas, siding with the administration and perpetuating the condescending liberal attitudes and beliefs which led to the present situation in the first place? The students who support limiting speech to avoid hurting feelings are fools, but unfortunately for the rest of us they aren't stupid and so remain the useful idiots of the administration and faculty who support these asinine policies out of intellectual laziness and lack of character.

    2. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      You do it, and then you stand by it, damn the consequences. That's how it was done in the sixties, and there was collateral damage at first.

      But you need the courage of your convictions, and I'm not sure the current crop of students can muster that.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    3. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      The administration owns the property, and can use the police to remove students they don't want there.

      The students have no such power, at least not on short notice. (They can perhaps get injunctions, but that takes time and money. Campus police can be less... deliberate.)

    4. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by roc97007 · · Score: 2

      That's all true. And how is that situation different from the campus protests in the sixties? Or, for that matter, Occupy Wall Street?

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    5. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe because we're more worried about the possibility of living on the fucking street because the cocksucker baby boomers leeched this fucking country dry. They had the chance to play hero freedom college protester. We get booted and eat at a fucking soup kitchen.

    6. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like a lack of guts to me.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    7. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's different, because then it was the views of the majority of students that were presented against the administration's wishes.
      I somehow think they will have far less problems silencing a minority.

    8. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      If you go back and look at the protests of the sixties, I think you will find that the entire campus didn't spontaneously revolt. It started small, and grew.

      But for that to happen, a few people have to have the guts to be first.

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
    9. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      You do it, and then you stand by it, damn the consequences. That's how it was done in the sixties, and there was collateral damage at first.

      But that would require them to leave their moms' basements or dorm rooms.

      Kids today seriously need to read some King or Thoreau. Civil disobedience sometimes means dealing with the consequences.

      Alone.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    10. Re:Freedom is not granted by the administration by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      The administration owns the property, and can use the police to remove students they don't want there.

      So we'll march day and night,
      By the big cooling tower,
      They have the plant,
      But we have the power.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  24. Re:Look up FIRE by MyLongNickName · · Score: 2

    Another idiot using an ad hominem attack.

    FIRE was founded about 15 years ago by a civil liberties professor. So your "Republican wing" comment is pretty stupid. It promotes free speech on campus, even those that might be the most upstanding or "socially polite". If anything, they are more like the ACLU than RNC.

    But yeah, dismiss things out of hand with no factual basis. Then immediately afterward, pat yourself on the back for being an intellectual.

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
  25. Ideology replaced culture by hessian · · Score: 1

    We have outsourced our own brains and the decisions normally made by cultural mores to ideology.

    Ideology is a type of political theory that we assume is true, so we crusade toward it in the name of Progress and Utopia.

    Naturally, because it is a theory, it's unstable. In fact, there is often proof against it. But its adherents cling to it even more, because it provides for them an identity separate from their real-world identity.

    However, this instability leads to it having a need: as a symbol, it must prevail over other symbols. Thus it is intolerant of them, but in the name of tolerance itself.

    1. Re:Ideology replaced culture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It goes a step further. Ideology clung to to an infinite degree becomes a de facto religion. This phenomenon can be seen when an essentially Marx-worshipping person campaigns against students voluntariiy meeting to practice their religion on public school grounds but finds no problem with "Das Kapital" in the school library.

    2. Re:Ideology replaced culture by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, get over yourself. I can guarantee that "an essentially Marx-worshipping [sic] person campaign[ing] against students voluntariiy [sic] meeting to practice their religion" is not A Thing That Actually Happened.

  26. Re:Hate speech by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 3

    Good riddance to bad rubbish.

    Exactly. Just look at how offensive she is! Anything that offends me must be destroyed.

    --
    Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  27. Meaning of education by gmuslera · · Score: 1

    Students should learn what they will face later in the real world. Knowing how things are going, i'd say that it complies with that mission.

  28. SEND MONEY TO FIRE. PUT YOUR MONEY WHERE YOUR M by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People, listen! In addition to blogging, you need to put your money where your mouths are. FIRE's litigation costs money. We need to fund organizations that actually try to DO something about the stuff that is killing liberty in this country.

  29. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The fact is that free speech in America has been getting more and more curtailed. Some in a very overt manner (free speech zones). Some in a softer manner (How DARE you suggest that affirmative action is racist, you racist).

    You seem to have a misconception about what free speech is. Your first example is about restricting people to particular locations in order to prevent their speech from being heard... all good so far. Your second example, however, is about someone exercising their free speech to criticize someone else's speech. It is an example of free speech, not an example of free speech being restricted.

    Nice ad hominem. Instead of reading the source and arguing with the points made, you drool on yourself and blabber on about Murdoch.

    You make a good point that we should be judging articles on their merit, however, technically it was not an ad hominem. An ad hominem is the informal fallacy of claiming some argument is wrong based upon some characteristic of the person making the argument. The previous poster made no claim that the argument was wrong, but merely pointed out the untrustworthy nature of the publication and exposited on what they thought the content was likely to be. I highly encourage you to read a book on informal logic as it is a very useful tool/method and will help you not only argue with more precision, but refine your understanding of logically determining truths.

  30. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Stiletto · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Turns out grandparent poster is right. From the article:

    The latest was last week at Fordham University, where President Joseph McShane scolded College Republicans for the sin of inviting Ann Coulter to speak.

    Conservatives and libertarians are especially vulnerable to such charges of harassment.

    It's basically a bunch of crybaby Republicans whining about how unwelcome on campus their harassment of women, minorities, gays, muslims, any anyone else not like them is.

  31. "news" for "nerds" ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Has slashdot really been reduced to quoting print newspapers days later?
    Used to try to be "news" for nerds.
    Now it's more like "yesterday's leftover articles" for nerds who don't read the press and seemingly are without enough nerdy topics to fill the space available.

  32. Some cheese with that Whine? by fermion · · Score: 1, Insightful
    Whine Whine. It is so much like the entitled to whine because they cannot have their people come in and tell the peasants how horrible we are. Nothing changes. The christian conservatives feel they have the responsibility to tell us we are all going to hell if we don't believe they way they do, to tell us that we can't have sex with whom we want when we want, to tell us that we can't buy drinks on Sundays, or that we have to sit and listen respectfully while they pray, but when we want one thing we are being 'emotional'.

    To make matters worse, if someone wanted to show that being gay was a normal productive life choice, they would say it violated their religious liberties. But if they want to bring in a women who condones murder,compares liberals with murders, and has called for the assassination of the president, they say we are being intolerant and politically correct.

    Really, when I was back is school it was the Christian conservatives, those fragile flowers that would faint if a poem had the word fuck in it, or if they saw a couple guys kissing, or had the leave the classroom when we discussed classic american literature because it was the devils work, these were the people who create censorship on americans campus. They would bring in the child molesting priests to cry foul. They would bring in the ministers to deny women proper care and choice because the only way they could hope to get a wife was to knock her up and make her dependent. It was sad.

    And I am sure the comments are going to prove my point, because I am not hating any one here. Everyone has a right to express their opinion and try to have a life that fits with their values. But it was never the liberal groups who were trying to cut funding for the legal conservative groups. And it was never the liberal groups trying to foce everyone to pray, or waste their time listening to others pray. We held our events and if you did not want to go, then don't.

    Here is how screwed up these people were. We were in a conservative state in a somewhat conservative city, but a city that was diverse so people pretty much let everyone do what they do. These wingnuts were so extreme that created their own campus newspaper because they couldn't stand to be in the same room with liberals. And I disagreed with most of the official newspaper, it was conservative. But if these people could not get thier way they did not know how to compromise, so they took their toys, found a sugar daddy, and built their own compound where they would not have to deal with anyone who was different. And evidently that is what they still do, crying when someone calls them on their hypocristy.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:Some cheese with that Whine? by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      We had westboro "baptist church" before they had enough gas money to inflict their crap on a wider net.

      The actual Fordham letter is a fantastic statement. A university should not promote hate, but the only real way to counter that message is to discuss both sides in the open so that the stupidity becomes evident to all but the most closed minded ideologues.

    2. Re:Some cheese with that Whine? by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      but the only real way to counter that message is to discuss both sides in the open so that the stupidity becomes evident to all but the most closed minded ideologues.

      Good luck with that. No really, good luck. Because some messages are more important than others, and in turn will get a very *special* place in those free speech zones by the politically correct crowd, pushing out other points of view. Happens all the time up here in Canada, York University(Toronto) is a great example.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    3. Re:Some cheese with that Whine? by kiwimate · · Score: 1

      I am probably someone you'd describe as a Christian conservative. I went to university in the late 80s (albeit in New Zealand) and participated in a Christian group.

      We didn't go to other groups and tell them they were bad. We didn't write scathing letters to the university newspaper. We had bible studies. Anyone was welcome, and, like every other group on campus, there was a pin board with notices which gave details of where and when we met. We'd have tables at orientation, as would all the other groups, and if people stopped by we'd talk to them.

      Our group was sometimes targeted by letters to the editor in the university newspaper. We had people from the on-campus atheist society come to our meetings and argue. We didn't invite them as guest speakers; they just showed up (which they were quite entitled to do). We didn't see any point in going to their meetings and creating a scene.

      My anecdote compared to your anecdote, I know. Sometimes the conservative Christians are the on-campus obnoxious blighters, and sometimes the liberal atheists are the on-campus obnoxious blighters. There are some very liberal Christians in the world; sometimes they can be the on-campus obnoxious blighters, and sometimes they're really, really cool.

      The most controversial episode that occurred while I was at my undergraduate school happened to be instigated by a lesbian, atheist, free-thinking student who wrote a letter that said she didn't want men to hold the door open for her and labelled it "a form of non-contact rape". Poor choice of words, obviously, and the paper got a lot of mileage publishing letters from people taking the mickey or from victims of rape angrily proclaiming that such a comparison was horrible.

    4. Re:Some cheese with that Whine? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. College is a place where we get to work out our ideas and be provocative. Leaders and administrators have to model proper behavior and redirect to proper behavior. I was in one metting where a pro-nuclear person tried to take over, but we listened, we disagreed, and it was over. I get into a discussion about religion and state that some people think about Jesus the same way that Christians think abou Mohammed and 9 times out of 10 the christian I am speaking with is going to become very angry. But that is the point. It is ok to attack the women who does not want a man to hold the door open for her. But it is not ok to come to a meeting and express a different point of view? This to me is the problem and the reason why colleges fail. It is somehow not encouraged for people who disagree to interact.

  33. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by kenorland · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The fact is that free speech in America has been getting more and more curtailed.

    "Free speech" means that the government doesn't punish you for what you say. Legally, free speech has been increasing steadily: you can say things now about sex, politics, and religion that would have landed you in legal trouble half a century ago.

    But "free speech" doesn't mean that you can say anything anywhere without consequences. Your fellow citizens can still punish you for what you say. Business can refuse to deal with you. Liberal universities can kick you out for spewing Christian fundamentalist nonsense, and Christian universities can kick you out for spewing progressive nonsense. That's what living in a free country means. And thanks to the Internet, we have more opportunity to engage in free speech than ever before.

    The sky isn't falling on free speech; quite the opposite, free speech is legally protected than ever before and there are more venues for it than ever before. The only thing anybody might reasonably complain about is that tax dollars are used so widely to support one or the other viewpoint indirectly. That's not new, but that kind of (unconstitutional) government support has shifted from conservative causes to liberal causes. The answer is not to shift it back, the answer is to eliminate such government involvement.

  34. Re:Hate speech by Smallpond · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This article appears to be bitching and moaning about the fact that hate speech has been universally recognized as out of the scope of free speech. Ann Coulter is generally regarded amongst the cognoscenti as a purveyor of hate speech, not free speech. I fail to see how denying her an audience of like-minded listeners could possibly be bad in any way.

    "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity. We weren't punctilious about locating and punishing only Hitler and his top officers. We carpet-bombed German cities; we killed civilians. That's war. And this is war."

    Anyone who supports this Islamophobic nutbag is a like-minded nutbag who is not welcome on any university campus. Her ideas practically beg to be suppressed, so why should she be surprised when it happens? Good riddance to bad rubbish.

    If she is wrong, let her speak and then rebut her remarks. Any suppression of free speech is a mistake. Her "like-minded listeners" will hear her anyway. I don't object to letting her speak. What I object to is "journalists" who report her garbage as though it is coming from a respectable source.

  35. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by SomeKDEUser · · Score: 2

    Look, America has an unhealthy obsession with "private-good; public-bad". And guess what, the private sector does not need -- nor desires -- to enforce free speech. You want universities to be havens of free speech? It's a 2-step process:
      - make them public / make the institutions which are necessary for the public good follow the same rules as public institutions.
      - demand of the public institutions to respect your rights. This is actually pretty easy.

    Also, the OP is right: it is a crybaby Murdoch piece about people unhappy that they can't hate in peace.

  36. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by kenorland · · Score: 1

    I think too, that as speech becomes based on private technology

    "Becomes?" Printing presses, newspapers, radio stations, and television have always been "private technology" and privately owned, and they have exercised strong control over speech. Lower prices have made free speech far more accessible to people.

    It would probably be a good idea to consider something similar to "common carrier status" for Internet providers, prohibiting them explicitly from exercising any control. But that would be an innovation in free speech and mass media.

  37. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 5, Informative

    "If my guy does it, you're just overreacting if you disagree," and "if their guy does it, it's automatically suspect, move along, nothing to see."

    Except, you and the guy you are supporting are completely wrong about what's going on here. This really is a Murdock propaganda piece. Look, sometimes a person is reliably and consistently stupid and evil. This means saying "oh, I'm sure Ghengis isn't riding towards those young girls to be nice to them" is not prejudice, just justifiable wisdom. Now your point would be really great if this was an exception. But let's see what I find if I look it up.

    WSJ:

    At Western Michigan University, it is considered harassment to hold a "condescending sex-based attitude."

    Actual policy (I'm not going to include the context here; please read yourself):

    Sexual harassment is defined as unwelcome sexual conduct which is related to any condition of employment or evaluation of student performance.

    and in a separate paragraph near to but not related to the definition of harassment, the only use of the word condescending:

    All persons should be sensitive to situations that may affect or cause the recipient discomfort or humiliation or may display a condescending sex-based attitude towards a person.

    If something is put in a media outlet which belongs to Murdock, assuming that the truth is the opposite will only make you wrong about 10% of the time. In this case, it's about Murdock trying to attack the freedom of speech of the people at universities.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  38. Rights apply everywhere by krisamico · · Score: 3

    for citizens in good standing. That is the definition of unalienable. Sometimes you have to fight for them though! Not to worry, you are witnessing Peak College. Bloated, wasteful, dysfunctional institutions will vaporize with the credit that pays their ridiculous prices. Goods and services purchased with credit are altered by the supply of said credit. When we stop rewarding failure with bailouts, that is. Affordable education that caters only to the needs of the student body will be a welcome change!

  39. It's not really a protest... by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    It's not really a protest if there isn't a rule being broken and an arrest being made!

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  40. Higher Education -- Not! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's no surprise. Students are no longer interested in higher education as a means of broadening their perceptions of life and deepening their understanding of the world. Most students today only want to acquire paper credentials for employment purposes. Universities have become largely job training institutes. In that kind of environment, freedom of expression becomes secondary if not totally irrelevant, and the disengaged student body will surely never protest over the loss of fundamental human rights.

  41. Nat Henton said exactly this 20 years ago by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In Free Speech For Me But Not For Thee. It's depressing that students haven't forced a change in all that time.

  42. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Runaway1956 · · Score: 1

    Affirmative action is indeed racism. Reverse-racism is no less racist than the original overt racism that triggered the reverse-racism.

    And, you might have pointed out for GP that Herr Bush instituted the so-called "free speech zones".

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
  43. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yeah, well, the site is retarded. They rated my University "red" because we have policies in place to prevent discrimination and hate speech. Heaven forbid the poor racist bastards would get punished if they make some other student who just wants their own educations life a living hell. Same with the sexual harassment codes. Nope, we have to get up in arms just cause you can't derogatorily call that black dude a nigger or the Chinese chick a chink, and damn it all who gives a shit what that chick thinks... we all know they just want the cock, am I right? Seriously, ro read what they have "issues" with the "openness" of the speech with the University of Wisconsin, it's a damn joke.

    As long as you are not intentionally being offensive you can chalk messages on the sidewalk... just provide the chalk, no need for permission - this includes political views, religious views, and pretty much anything else you want. Same with dorm rooms, you want to post intentionally offensive stuff on your dorm room? Post it on the inside of the door, the harassment codes specifically state that as a matter of fact.

    Shit, we just had an annual remembrance get-together remembering when a bunch of student had a huge protest in the 60's that had hundreds of arrests and over a hundred expulsions. The school provided funds to something that basically was just rubbing the schools face in the dog shit.

    TL;DR: site was shit, just a bunch of whiny idiots complaining because they can't be racist / sexist / harassing anyone anywhere.

    --
    To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
  44. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Nothing to do with free speech necessarily, but the comment about racist are the only ones who disagree with affirmative action comment. Because every time a comment is made that liberals disagree with and they can't debate facts their defacto response is to call the other person racist. It has become so bad over the last few years that when someone is called a racist I tend to read what they said and most of the time it is reasonable. The left has turned the term racist into meaning anti-socialism reasonable limitations on government power. It no longer has any relation to races of people.

    Now if there were actually a racist out there, I would no longer know it because they have "cried wolf" so frequently and so often that it is drowned out. Hell, just look at Allen West election in Florida. Al Sharpton thinks West doesn't deserve a recount with his election loss being so close to the automatic recount level. That may ACTUALLY be a racist comment by Sharpton, but he is a member of the left and immune to such calls, along with him also being black and a supposed fighter against racism. But what Sharpton pretends to be isn't what his actions lead you to believe. If West was a Democrat Sharpton would be all over the news complaining that West isn't getting a recount because he is black and people who think he shouldn't get a recount are racist. See, a perfect example of how calls of being racist has NOTHING to do with race, but more to do with political affiliation.

  45. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Forget political parties. Forget Democrat or Republican, or WSJ vs. NYT. If speech is being curtailed, that should concern you.

    You make a very good point. If free speech is being infringed by the government we should all be concerned, regardless of who brings that issue to our attention or if the act is being done by a specific political party. I think, however, you go a little too far in your equivocation. The trustworthiness of our sources of information are important and by excluding particular details or simply misrepresenting the facts an issue of speech not being subsidized by a specific organization can be misrepresented as that speech being censored, and make no mistake these are very different things.

    When you write, "WSJ vs. NYT" red flags go off in my mind. You're presenting not just publications favored by political parties, but one publication with a very solid history of integrity and factual presentation of information with a publication owned by a very deceptive corporation. The Newscorp organization is a big fan of free speech, insomuch as they went to court to defend their free speech rights to publish news stories they knew were untrue and to fire the reporters who refused to present them. And hey, they're correct. They do have the right to tell complete untruths to their viewers and readers. But at the same time their actions make it abhorrent to mention them in the same breath as the NYT and make me think anyone who believes anything they read in Newscorp publications is an uninformed idiot.

  46. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Dragon+Bait · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "If my guy does it, you're just overreacting if you disagree," and "if their guy does it, it's automatically suspect, move along, nothing to see."

    Except, you and the guy you are supporting are completely wrong about what's going on here. This really is a Murdock propaganda piece. Look, sometimes a person is reliably and consistently stupid and evil. This means saying "oh, I'm sure Ghengis isn't riding towards those young girls to be nice to them" is not prejudice, just justifiable wisdom. Now your point would be really great if this was an exception. But let's see what I find if I look it up.

    Even a blind pig occasionally finds acorns. My oldest made the comment that "children are nothing but a black hole of need." Some PC idiot said "you can't say that, that's racist." The teacher walked by and told her that she wasn't to make such racist comments in the future (and threatened her with explosion).

    Universities are no longer liberal institutions where ideas can be freely discussed. Idiocy and censorship do abound. But feel free to shoot the messenger and ignore the problem.

  47. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 0

    "All persons should be sensitive"

    Complete and utter hogwash.....blah blah....

    Are you saying that they should or shouldn't be allowed to say that?

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  48. My Parents went to Kent State by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you insensitive clod

  49. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by phantomfive · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's basically a bunch of crybaby Republicans whining about how unwelcome on campus their harassment of women, minorities, gays, muslims, any anyone else not like them is.

    Freedom of speech isn't free anymore when you stop crybaby Republicans from whining.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  50. Jews are behind all of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... just try talking about Jews in less than glowing terms on any university campus, you'll be sacked or thrown off your course immediately. And all the while the Jews are murdering Palestinian babies and children, because 'God gave us this land'.

    The eternal JEW is behind this.

    "The denial of free speech is the first act of tyranny."

    Nothing has changed:

    "The Jew
    by Joseph Goebbels
    Everything is discussed openly in Germany, and every German claims the right to have an opinion on any and all questions. One is Catholic, the other Protestant, one an employee, the other an employer, a capitalist, a socialist, a democrat, an aristocrat. There is nothing dishonorable about choosing one side or the other of a question. Discussions happen in public, and where matters are unclear or confused one settles it by argument and counter argument. But there is one problem that is not discussed publicly, one that it is delicate even to mention: the Jewish question. It is taboo in our republic.
    The Jew is immunized against all dangers: one may call him a scoundrel, parasite, swindler, profiteer, it all runs off him like water off a raincoat. But call him a Jew and you will be astonished at how he recoils, how injured he is, how he suddenly shrinks back: "I've been found out." "

    1. Re:Jews are behind all of this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gee I wonder why a Jewish person would be skiddish in 1930's-1940's Nazi Germany?

  51. "free speech zones" by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    TFA focuses mainly on content-based restrictions, such as prohibiting people from quoting certain passages from the Koran. But along with these restrictions, many schools now have extremely onerous "time, place, and manner" regulations. Although these are written so as to be blind to the content of the speech, they're often absurdly restrictive. I teach at a community college in Fullerton, California, where last year the police murdered a mentally ill homeless man. This resulted in murder charges being brought by the DA, and a city council recall. I wanted to set up a card table on my school's grassy quad to collect signatures for the recall petition. I went through the process of registering officially, and the restrictions were just nuts. They have two very small patches of grass, over at the corner of the quad, which are marked on the map. I was forbidden from approaching people as they walked by. A lot of colleges refer to these tiny patches, apparently without any consciousness of irony, as free speech zones.

    As far as I can tell, the intention is simply to create conditions that make it absolutely impossible for students to stage anything like an actual political rally or protest. You simply wouldn't be able to fit more than about 10 human bodies into one of these free speech zones.

  52. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by opus_magnum · · Score: 4, Funny

    (and threatened her with explosion).

    Shouldn't your daughter have reported her as terrorist?

  53. Colleges and Universities are dinosaurs by boddhisatva · · Score: 2

    A college education costs more and more and becomes worth less and less. As it is, in many professions, a company will hire someone with a bachelors degree and three years experience before someone with a bachelor's and a master's. This makes the ROI for a master's a negative number. As technology is advancing at an exponential rate, the value of degree decreases at a corresponding rate after it is acquired. The Stanford professor who taught an AI course online and had 100,000 students quit to pursue this methodology full time. MIT is putting all of it's courses online, free. Maybe colleges will become research institutions. But in that regard, when some grad students started working on fuzzy logic, their professors told them "Pursue this and your career is over" and peer-reviewed journals refused to publish their papers. Similar stories come out of every field. Nothing has changed since Galileo. I remember the scene in "Good Will Hunting" where Matt Damon tells a Harvard student that he could have gotten his $50,000 education (back then) for the price of library card. Now it's online. By the way, the text for the AI class was $100. That has to go. Doing a google search and finding that most of the papers on Hidden Markov Models cost $15-$35 is most disconcerting. That has to go. The only people left behind should be alchemists and assholes.

  54. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yawn. Conservatives have so overused their "you're playing the race card" meme that anytime I see that, I tend to realize that they're just posturing themselves as the victim in order to disguise and defend their own racism.

    See how you're trying to think if Al Sharpton as the racist here? Yeah, your judo sucks when people realize what you're trying to do.

    Personally I think America is better off with West out office. And it has nothing to do with his race, but with his paranoid delusions.

  55. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

    The writer is selecting the parts that support the thesis, but says nothing inaccurate. The policy does in fact threaten sanctions for a "condescending sex-based attitude".

  56. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by russotto · · Score: 2

    Freedom of speech isn't free anymore when you stop crybaby Republicans from whining.

    My kingdom for a mod point! Voltaire could not have put it better.

  57. So who actually has been stopped from speaking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Coulter got to speak. She got to spew her racist invective. You Right Wingers are completely nuts. Please list the case, the data, of all the incidents of restrictions.

  58. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 1

    Nothing to do with free speech necessarily, but the comment about racist are the only ones who disagree with affirmative action comment. Because every time a comment is made that liberals disagree with and they can't debate facts their defacto response is to call the other person racist.

    Can you provide some examples of this? I read a lot of news and while I've certainly heard comments taken out of context by politicians used to insinuate racism. I don't recall seeing the vast majority of political and social issues being framed in terms of one position being racist. This sounds a lot more like the kind of inflammatory talking point you hear on "news commentary" shows and never backed up with any sort of facts.

    Hell, just look at Allen West election in Florida. Al Sharpton thinks West doesn't deserve a recount with his election loss being so close to the automatic recount level. That may ACTUALLY be a racist comment by Sharpton...

    I don't understand your argument. How is saying someone doesn't deserve a recount a potentially racist comment? What quote from Sharpton do you think is racist?

    If West was a Democrat Sharpton would be all over the news complaining that West isn't getting a recount because he is black and people who think he shouldn't get a recount are racist. See, a perfect example of how calls of being racist has NOTHING to do with race, but more to do with political affiliation.

    Umm, your perfect example is a hypothetical what you think Al Sharpton would do if a candidate was a democrat? That's not an example its a supposition. Your argument seems to be about people not talking about race, as an example of people talking about racism inappropriately. I guess I'm just not buying your argument. If you want to convince me you need to support it much more strongly than that. Have you really considered this objectively and come to this conclusion and if so, what convinced you of your opinion?

  59. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    My kingdom for a mod point! Voltaire could not have put it better.

    Wow, thankyou sir. I'm certain I've never received a nicer compliment on slashdot, and surely it is undeserved.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  60. Mohammed Was A Schizophrenic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    - just sayin.

  61. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Seriously?

    Try this one, replace "republican" with "democrat" and replace "ann coulter" with your favorite liberal pundit. Once you've done that, see if you see the problem.

    I swear, here's some wisdom to take heed of. "Better to remain silent and thought a fool than to speak and remove any doubt". You guys spew a lot of garbage that if you took a step back and actually thought about what you were saying would surely think "wow, I'm a douche, and that is about the most intelligently barren statement quite possibly ever made"

  62. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Stiletto · · Score: 1

    They got their whining published in The Wall Street Journal. Clearly their free speech rights are being trampled.

  63. bollocks by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The Wall Street Journal has become about as responsible a news source as Glenn Beck's "the Blaze". It used to be that their hard news was spot-on but their editorial pages leaned Right. Now, their hard news leans way Right and their editorial pages are full-blown kookie wingnut.

    David Horowitz and his little pantload salon have a lot of influence over at the new, improved, Rupert Murdoch Wall Street Journal. He's a shitty academic who now has a permanent hard-on for all of higher education because he was basically laughed out of the business (his bleak student evaluations were purely coincidental, he claims).

    The WSJ is a big proponent of for-profit higher education. They're trying to get their Mitts on the for-profit colleges the way the Washington Post got into the higher ed biz via Kaplan. Beware of anything the Wall Street Journal has to say about education.

    There has never been so much diversity of political points of view on college campuses in the US. Unlike the 70's, all ends of the political spectrum are represented. You can find conservatism unlike ever before. Hell, you can't walk three steps without tripping over some Right Wing or libertarian prof with a handful of his students complaining loudly about how viewpoints like his cannot be found anywhere.

    In fact, it's surprising how much of an organized, concerted effort is being made not to increase the diversity of opinion, but to silence Left Wing points of view. There are a bunch of very well-funded groups (most of which involve David Horowitz at some level) who are targeting speech with which they disagree.

    With guys like the WSJ, there is one rule: It's ALWAYS projection.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up.

    2. Re:bollocks by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      Colleges are approaching 60-70% female enrollment. You're telling me the girls have dropped Women's Marxist Studies to become libertarians? I'll believe it when I see it.

    3. Re:bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you think gender has anything to do with hilariously non-introspective political ideologies I have a shrugging atlas for sale.

    4. Re:bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      David Horowitz and his little pantload salon has

      I stopped reading, right about there. Yes, I too observed a decline at the WSJ. The news seemed more hyperbolic and circus-like -- like Fox News or the BBC, at times.

      That said, your own crazed, emotional, metaphor filled rant rant makes YOU look like the crazy person, not them. Furthermore, your far left references and vicious attacks on a jewish person, kind of marks you as a member of the growing leftwing neonazi movement. (Which is increasingly delegitimizing itself, because, while left wing politics is tolerated, neonazism is widely recognized as very dangerous threat.)

      Frankly I think that with YOU, it's mostly about projection.

      If you don't like people criticizing you, move to Egypt. Here in the US, you fascists won't win a war with the military or the police. Most of us, in the real world, would be happy to see you and your kind incarcerated.

      Oh and by the way, I don't know if you read about the hunt for people like your ilk, but the FBI is closing in on Anonymous and has already made several arrests. So, yeah, keep fantasizing about a revolution. The rest of us will just snicker when you have your day in court.

  64. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The writer is selecting the parts that support the thesis, but says nothing inaccurate. The policy does in fact threaten sanctions for a "condescending sex-based attitude".

    a) the writer says it is considered harassment to hold a "condescending sex-based attitude." where actually harassment is defined as unwelcome sexual conduct which is related to any condition of employment or evaluation of student performance. So the writer is actually saying something "inaccurate"

    b) I can't see any sanctions clearly linked to not being "sensitive" which is the only context where this occurs. Now, I am not a lawyer, so I'm quite willing to bow to your 'expert' opinion, however please do explain how you parse the policy so that you see sanctions linked to a "condescending sex-based attitude". I have no doubt that my fascination will be fully aroused by your explanation.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  65. Re:Hate speech by Pseudonym+Authority · · Score: 1

    Careful. You may not always be the one who decides who gets to speak. The rulers will change and you are setting a dangerous precedent.

    Just remember: you cannot bitch about the other side doing the same thing later if you condone this now.

  66. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Carewolf · · Score: 1

    It is an example of free speech, not an example of free speech being restricted.

    Understand this: Free speech is not a just a law. It is an ideal. Because of the circular point you just made, we can not outlaw private restrictions to speech, but that does not mean they are morally right. Legal censorship (private) can be as bad as illegal censorship (public) depending on the size of the entity enforcing it, but regardless of their legality they are both something I am personally against.

  67. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by smpoole7 · · Score: 1

    > Liberal universities can kick you out for spewing Christian fundamentalist nonsense,

    But the liberal universities in question are usually state- or federally-funded. The Christian universities that you seem to have in mind are typically privately-owned and operated.

    Just pointing that out. Your idea of eliminating government involvement is a great one, but it'll never happen.

    --
    Cogito, igitur comedam pizza.
  68. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    I'm a Republican and I'm not whiny. Let's look at it from my perspective. The colleges are indoctrinating the youth with no opposition. Whenever you are on campus and you decent from the left wing ideology you get harassed. My free speech is being stifled. You call it hate speech but let's address each of your points.

    Harassment of women: This is strictly about abortion. For sake of argument pretend you believe life begins at conception. Would you be OK with a form of birth control that ended a human life each time it was used? You can argue that life doesn't begin at conception but that's not the point. The point is, if yo believe life DOES begin at conception then how could you act any different than the Republicans do? Other than that, there is no harassment of women from Republicans.

    Minorities: Affirmative action, you can't make up for past discrimination by enforcing racial discrimination upon everyone. I didn't discriminate but because I am white I don't have the same chances of success as a minority because we are putting people into positions, be it colleges or jobs, based on their skin color rather than their ability. Thinking this way makes me a racist. You had that situation in NY where no minority passed the advancement test so all the guys who did pass, all white, were not given a promotion and they rescheduled the tests to get more minorities to pass. Discrimination against whites in the name of fairness.

    Gays: All about marriage. I had a gay room mate. I have many friends who are gay, I live in California. I am against gay marriage. You don't change words to suit your ideology. Example, the term gay. There was a commercial by Wanda Sykes where a guy used the word gay to me stupid. Nothing to do with homosexuality. You know, they even spell it Ghey rather than gay. She chastises the guy and say "don't steal our word." Catch the irony in that, since the word was stolen by the homosexual community and totally changed the meaning. I don't care if you are gay. I understand how tough things are for gays. But times are changing and the "harassment" has to do with aggressive homosexuals forcing their lifestyle upon society rather than fitting in. You know, the same way you see religious people forcing their way into your life. Of course I see the gay community being far more aggressive about forcing their lifestyle into my life than religious people are. But that's OK with you because you can be a hypocrite because you care. Me, I'm a homophobe because I say "just be gay and get out of my face."

    Muslims: sorry, I can't give you a rational argument you will accept (not that I expect you to accept my point of view on any of these). Muslims are responsible for 99% of all terrorist attacks in the world. To not understand that is just more political correctness. You are willing to condemn Christians because some priest molest children (by the way these are GAY priests in most cases if not all). Or some nut job kill an abortion doctor but you won't say a thing about the Muslim religion which basically does nothing in the way of denouncing terrorist attacks based on the belief in Allah. Of course if they do their own brethren will silence them.

    as for "anyone else not like them" pure bullshit. You people on the left chastise and berate anyone who is a Republican. Women get told they are idiots for being Republican. Blacks get ostracized by their own for being Republican. Look at what happened to Stacey Dash after she said she was supporting Romney. You guys are very hateful towards others who don't share your opinion.

    I know this was long but you really should consider your skewed point of view towards Republicans and even if you don't agree with what I said, perhaps we are really hateful people, just not as enlightened as you. Maybe you should help rather than hate. How can youchange our point of view by insulting us and spewing hate?

  69. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by phantomfive · · Score: 2

    Clearly you don't get the point.

    --
    "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  70. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by oobayly · · Score: 1

    I'm confused, the teacher threatened your child or the PC idiot. One outcome is good, the other not.

  71. A great example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A great example from my state. I personally find it sickening the response the college had to this. When really all the students are doing is trying to effect positive change and honesty in how the college operates. Somehow I suspect the response wouldn't have been any different had it not been done in the form of a joke.

    http://www.7dvt.com/2012why-middlebury-college-put-five-students-trial-over-dalai-lama-prank

  72. Amazing, but not surprising by russotto · · Score: 1

    ...that so many people reject the claim just because Murdock or a supposed Republican organization is making it. Suppose for the sake of argument that Lukianoff really is just a Republican shill and ignores crimes against free speech committed by conservatives. Does that mean the crimes against free speech committed by liberals, that he highlights, are any less wrong?

    Take the Fordham University event. Those on the left are quick to point out that Fordham didn't actually ban Coulter. But were McShane's strong words against her and "disappointed with the judgment and maturity" of College Republicans just that, or were they a veiled threat of consequences should the event go on?

    Then theres the "condescending sex-based attitude" -- it turns out that yes, as the article says, displaying such is sexual harassment if said attitude is unwelcome.

    The prohibition on "annoying" speech from Northeastern's systems is also true. (It also applies to "offensive" speech, again in the sole judgement of the administratrs).

  73. 'Dont ask don't tell' by CdBee · · Score: 1

    I assume the debates that are discussed go deep into the modern conflict between rights of individuals and traditional expectations of society: It seems to me thta in one way it could be a real issue..... I assume everyone has views, and people value their views: They don't like to see them denigrated or to see aspersions cast upon them.

    I'm trying to see things from a Conservative viewpoint here (its not something that comes naturally to me) - if I had strong views about relationships, about the rights and duties of states and individuals, I'd probably want to talk about them. I'm pretty sure someone would find them offensive (normally it'd probably be me). BUT - if the people on one side are allowed to make a big thing of their views and values, why aren't those on the other side?

    what I'm saying is that in certain circumstances we need to either have an open debate, or silence all debate. I'm a liberal. I think conservatives are WRONG at a pretty fundamental level... but if I seek to silence them from talking about things that matter to them we arent having the debate, nobody wins, we just increase divides that already exist. That would make for a peaceful life: I wouldnt have to worry about people who already have a bad time (immigrants, gays) hearing stuff that will offend them .. but it can't.. really.. be good...

    --
    I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    1. Re:'Dont ask don't tell' by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      Excellent post. As a conservative, you and I will likely disagree on many issues, but I would never try to inhibit, and would in fact defend your right to speak your mind.

      To the article, it was disappointing to me that Ann Coulter (though I'm conservative, I'm not a fan of hers) was a lead subject in the article, because I know that alone probably turned off many people immediately. If we replaced her with someone like Michael Moore, Al Sharpton, or Rachal Maddow, and that person wasn't allowed to speak, maybe more of the left wing would see the same point.

      If you don't like the message someone is sending, you don't have to get "offended". You can leave, consider the source, change the channel, or simply listen (and maybe learn the other side's position).

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    2. Re:'Dont ask don't tell' by CdBee · · Score: 1

      I don't know how we fix this.

      In an economics class you'd probably find respectful, intelligent debate about the nature of capital markets and the best way to promote growth (you'll find few communists these days in any country who wish to overturn the basic system of capital being ventured to gain revenue and benefit the investor and the society -) that's accepted, the remaining debate is over whether its best to intervene to redistribute and regulate, or best to wait for the trickle-down effect to spread the benefit to all those who are willing to work for their keep.

      The offence that risks being taken, lies elsewhere. I spent 2 years sharing a house with 2 gay men. As a result of this (it was a comfy, cheap, welcoming place to live and I dont regret it at all), I never really understood the aversion to gay relationships, to me they were like two girls who I didn't fancy and who did things that didnt in any way appeal to me.... but I had insults shouted at me on the street by neighbours because they assumed because I shared a roof with a known and open gay couple I must share their interests.

      Some conservatives (a minority, I admit) say that a person's sexuality doesnt affect their ability to work or venture capital, and earn wages or accrue revenue, and the state shouldnt intervene because intervening is something a state shouldnt do. Other conservatives really do seem to want to make statements about the nature and desirability of gay relationships. Thats where it gets really difficult because you won't find many liberals (outside an extreme lunatic fringe) stating that long term heterosexual monogamous relationships, especially marriages, are a bad thing. A lot of us aspire to that for ourselves. At the same time, if we have friends who don't conform to the family values ideal, those who speak out for it (and they will..) often seem to pose a threat to the lifestyles of our friends, and of us by proxy.

      If only the core debate wasnt centred on such personal issues. So, yes, sometimes i hear the message someone is sending on conservative social issues, and i take offence, not because it impacts on me or the way i want to live my life, but out of a protective care for friends who would be affected. Apparently by my own standards I'm a hypocrite for doing so: I can live with that. I'd be as much a hypocrite, by those same standards, if i said nothing.

      Tricky. Very tricky. Don't know how we sort this one out...

      --
      I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    3. Re:'Dont ask don't tell' by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      I don't think we're in disagreement on this issue. I couldn't care less if someone is gay. What I don't need is people getting in my face about it. I'm also fine with a legally binding relationship (with all the same rights and responsibilities), though admit I'm conflicted about calling it "marriage" because you don't just get to redefine a term that has been used for a few thousand years. I'm not a religious person, but I can see how that would be offensive to those who are, and there's no logical reason that I can see to not just call it something else. And finally, and I'm not trying to insinuate that this is a gay thing, but as a teen, I was approached by a guy in his 40s...that dude needed help. As did a family friend a few years later...although I was about 21, he was 50 something, and it's a good thing he took NO as an answer. Homophobic?...no, antipedo?...yes.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
  74. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by verifine · · Score: 1

    I work at a private, non-profit college. We don't tell our students what they may say online; our efforts are directed toward known porn/malware sites (often the same thing) and keeping people from using P2P. Yes, of course there are legitimate uses of bittorrent et al, but our problem is one of bandwidth consumption. We can't afford a gigabit pipe from Google or anyone else and we can't have a few students sucking up all the bandwidth that must be shared with everyone.

    Saying what you wish to say is one thing, it's well and good and under the right circumstances is protected by the Constitution. What concerns me more personally, is that not one instructor on staff has Conservative leanings; every instructor that has expressed an opinion is very Liberal. Call it "progressive" if you like; it's the same thing.

    Maybe it's different at taxpayer-supported institutions; I'd like to hear from others.

  75. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 1

    Even a blind pig occasionally finds acorns.

    Yes, but the whole point of my comment is that, in this case, it has not found acorns but worthless stones. And now it's trying to get us to eat them.

    My oldest made the comment that "children are nothing but a black hole of need." Some PC idiot said "you can't say that, that's racist." The teacher walked by and told her that she wasn't to make such racist comments in the future (and threatened her with explosion).

    Universities are no longer liberal institutions where ideas can be freely discussed. Idiocy and censorship do abound. But feel free to shoot the messenger and ignore the problem.

    I like your story; it's almost as good as some of the ones around niggardly. How about you set her up with a decent portable video camera or two, and arrange a repeat situation. Let's see if we can get the idiot teacher exploded[sic] from her job instead.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  76. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by jazzdude00021 · · Score: 1

    It's this exact attitude that has caused the USoA to become the political cesspool we are right now. Political debates are nothing but ad hominem attacks disguised as political talking points.

    Take the Fordham case for example. If they host Ann Coulter it opens them up to ad hominem attacks from people who would rather dismiss them by saying "they're the same as that racist, sexist *-ist" than actually take the time to come up with a rational response to debate her points. The result: the institution capitulates to the threat and she is, in effect, censored from campus.

    Murdoch may be a shady character whose only ambition in life is to see how big of a bank account he can rack up, but that doesn't discount the issue his company (WSJ) is presenting. We need to learn to separate the person (Murdoch, Coulter, etc.) from the issue.

    No wonder we have bullying issues in school....

  77. tenure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my college most fear the at will employment situation we are in . The union feels powerless as they fight to keep our pay cuts labeled as pay freezes-- as if we were as stupid as the general public; realizing pay freezes are pay cuts.

    Tenured profs will do what they want; but there are so few of them - nobody gets that status anymore except a few near retirement. They've taken away job security so most of us are at just as much risk as you people are - except we work in a place of free exchange of ideas... it used to be. The protections are gone. We are job training corporations in the view of many people; out of date vs online training - that also undermines the whole thing; if not more so as we become a business instead of an intellectual institution for thinking people--- we are becoming a business; a walmart education for worker drones.

    I'm so upset I can't talk straight about this anymore.

  78. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Your name is appropriate. You really are a troll, and a pretty fucking ignorant one at that.

  79. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd argue it is the political climate that shifted to the right, not govermental/university policies. It's the perception that has changed, not what they do (or, more precisely, don't). The government used to be pretty much in a neutral middle, that middle is now on the left of the political discourse, not sure that we should shift that neutral where the winds blow.

    Good post otherwise.

  80. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you provide some examples of this?

    Pretty much anything critical of the tea party mentions racism. Thats one simple example.

    You shouldn't need to be pointed to examples unless you only read echo chamber news sources, which if true would make your claim that you 'read a lot of news' blatantly dishonest in its intent. You know if this is true or not, but you will never admit to it if it is, so dont bother claiming otherwise in a defensive valueless reply.

  81. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by xstonedogx · · Score: 1

    If the WSJ is excluding details to make a point, it is the epitome of triviality to argue against those points by showing what was excluded. If the WSJ is wrong about something, prove it. Otherwise, just stuff it, because your cheerleading for the NYT at the expense of the WSJ won't convince anyone. Those who are "uniformed idiots" because they read the WSJ certainly won't be convinced (the name calling is a nice touch - really brings people to your way of thinking). And those who already agree with you don't need convincing.

    Rational thinkers will not be convinced, and those are the only ones you can possibly hope to sway.

  82. ...well... by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    Doesn't matter what you see
    Or into it what you read
    You can do it your own way
    If it's done just how I say

    Independence limited
    Freedom of choice is made for you, my friend
    Freedom of speech is words that they will bend
    Freedom with their exception

  83. Re:Hate speech by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Journalism has been dead for awhile. Its all "He said, She said" now. This allows the media to support any view they wish at any time, by simply deciding which of the He's and She's to "report" about, rather than the harder job of finding evidence that supports things.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  84. In the Real World Jews are humans too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Humans suck; religious groups who exploit conflation race and religion create more problems. Combine that with religious beliefs of a god-chosen master race (jews) and you create a group that others will develop strong feelings about!

    The Jews were never completely innocent victims but they love to act like it. It is understandable why they are a target for hate, as they help provoke it. They don't deserve all they get but they are not innocent victims either. Obviously, I'm being broad but they are broad in their "why do people hate us" BS.

    Racism in the USA has become meaningless, the public doesn't know what it is. It has become a slogan, a brand, like everything else. You merely have to be branded and you are screwed - it doesn't take any rationality to label somebody with it either. It is not as severe but still similar to being labeled a pedophile. Jews exploit this to the extreme; one can't criticize their theocracy without being labeled racist-- even jews are labeled self-hating racists for not going with the theocracy!

  85. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article appears to be bitching and moaning about the fact that hate speech has been universally recognized as out of the scope of free speech. Ann Coulter is generally regarded amongst the cognoscenti as a purveyor of hate speech, not free speech. I fail to see how denying her an audience of like-minded listeners could possibly be bad in any way.

    "We should invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity. We weren't punctilious about locating and punishing only Hitler and his top officers. We carpet-bombed German cities; we killed civilians. That's war. And this is war."

    Anyone who supports this Islamophobic nutbag is a like-minded nutbag who is not welcome on any university campus. Her ideas practically beg to be suppressed, so why should she be surprised when it happens? Good riddance to bad rubbish.

    If she is wrong, let her speak and then rebut her remarks. Any suppression of free speech is a mistake. Her "like-minded listeners" will hear her anyway. I don't object to letting her speak. What I object to is "journalists" who report her garbage as though it is coming from a respectable source.

    Isn't that Bill Maher you are thinking of?

  86. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously?

    Try this one, replace "republican" with "democrat" and replace "ann coulter" with your favorite liberal pundit.

    None of my "favorite" pundits, liberal or otherwise, are anything like Ann Coulter. And FWIW, there have been liberal pundits whose uncouth language I've been told I'm a hypocrite for not criticizing.

    Except...I never heard this person speak, nor paid any attention to them. It's just taken as granted that somehow I support them just because they are liberal.

    But I offer no defense, nor support. The same cannot be said of the Conservative Right which leaps to the defense of Ann Coulter, Rush Limbaugh, Todd Akin, or Richard Mourdock.

  87. Baby Boomers Sold Out and became the problem. by couchslug · · Score: 2

    The students who hated all authority in the Sixties were RIGHT, but they sold out for the most part.

    Kids, the Man is fucking YOU even harder than he did your predecessors.

    Unless you get pissed off enough to act, "prepare your anus".

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  88. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anything? No, not anything.

    But don't deny the tea party has a strong racist component to it. I know they've insisted they're not racists quite a bit.

    Really, my experience with them tells me otherwise. I went to a few meetings. After hearing remarks disparaging niggers and bean-eaters, I quietly left.

    Oh sure, you might argue that was just an isolated group, not representative of the whole, but when I see a bunch of people oblivious to that happening at all, I discount that defense.

    Especially when those same people spew outrage over a single non-representative remark by liberals.

  89. Re:Wow, don't have opinions online. by JWW · · Score: 2

    Yeah, and if you want to say those things on the lawn of the university they need to be stopped too.

    This can't say x on public this or that is just bullshit. Limiting speech in public areas is limiting speech. We shouldn't be required to buy our own private areas to exercise free speech. Universities should understand and be ardent supporters of this.

  90. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The race card meme exists because liberals will reflexively knee-jerk "racism" whenever someone of color is criticized or otherwise doesn't get their way by a conservative. Calling someone a racist puts people on the defensive regardless of whether or not the claim is backed up with substance; it's one of the charges that is so damning against someone that the mere accusation of it is tarnishing.

    This isn't to say that racism doesn't exist or that a conservative can't possibly be racist but rather that it should not be taken at face value just because someone claims it.

    I would have personally thought that social liberals would prefer that 'racism' charges not be overused like this so as to not cheapen the accusation and turn it into what is starting to become a meaningless accusation at this point.

  91. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sure we can, because we're human beings who can recognize a foolish consistency as a problem as it tends to lead to absolutist ideas that just don't work.

    For example, I can support censorship sometimes, while opposing it other time. I can support abortion in some cases while opposing it in others.

    See there's this thing called nuance that matters.

    A lot.

    There are times where it is appropriate to exercise some discrimination.

     

  92. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by misexistentialist · · Score: 2

    I don't think it's clear at all there, mixing definitions of coercive or sustained harassment and simple "discomfort", though this page this page is more coherent, laying out the "hostile environment" terms. Whether harassment has occurred is "judged both objectively and subjectively", which is another way of saying "No Men Allowed."

  93. 1998 called... by mariox19 · · Score: 1

    Illiberal Education: The Politics of Race and Sex on Campus, by Dinesh D'Souza, discussed this issue almost 15 years ago. It's nothing new—it's perhaps just that others are beginning to catch on.

    --

    quiquid id est, timeo puellas et oscula dantes.

  94. Free Speech Zones by CODiNE · · Score: 1

    I recently visited a community college that actually had a free speech zone way out on the corner of the quad. There was also a policy of not allowing religious or political discussions.

    How do they expect the philosophy, theology and political science majors to do their assignments?

    --
    Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
  95. The Young Republicans of Fordham by westlake · · Score: 3, Informative

    The College Republicans regret the controversy surrounding our planned lecture featuring Ann Coulter. The size and severity of opposition to this event have caught us by surprise, and caused us to question our decision to welcome her to Rose Hill. Looking at the concerns raised about Ms. Coulter, many of them reasonable, we have determined that some of her comments do not represent the ideals of the College Republicans and are inconsistent with both our organization's mission, and the University's. We regret that we failed to thoroughly research her before announcing, that is our error and we do not excuse ourselves for it. Consistent with our strong disagreement with certain comments by Ms. Coulter we have chosen to cancel the event and rescind Ms. Coulterâ(TM)s invitation to speak at Fordham. We made this choice freely, before Father McShaneâ(TM)s email was sent out and we became aware of his feelings --- had the President simply reached out to us before releasing his statement he would have learned that the event was being cancelled. We hope the University community will forgive the College Republicans for our error, and continue to allow us to serve as its main voice of the sensible, compassionate, and conservative political movement that we strive to be. We fell short of that standard this time, and we offer our sincere apologies.

    Ted Conrad, President

    UPDATED: McShane Responds to College Republicans' Cancellation of Ann Coulter Event

    The Republican Club tried to get the Student Association to spring for George Will, but was capped at $10,000. Fordham College Republicans withdraw Coulter invite

    The Speaker's Bureau:

    Campus Speaker & Board of Advisors Member - Ann Coulter

    Click here to host an event with Ann on your campus!

    Fun times:

    The incident followed a Monday night lecture at the University of Western Ontario, where Coulter told a Muslim student to "take a camel" as an alternative to flying.

    Coulter made the comment as she responded to a question from student Fatima Al-Dhaher, who asked about previous comments in which Coulter said Muslims shouldn't be allowed on airplanes and should take "flying carpets" instead. Al-Dhaher noted she did not own a flying carpet and asked what she should take as an alternative transportation. Coulter did not deny making the flying carpet comment and replied to the university student, "What mode of transportation? Take a camel," to jeers and cheers. It was a decidedly pro-Coulter audience. One man, who identified himself as a U.S. citizen, described U.S. President Barack Obama as a "Marxist."

    She is well-known for her vehement views against Muslims. In a post-September 11 column, she wrote that the U.S. should invade Muslim countries, kill their leaders and convert them to Christianity.

    Coulter, who often comments on Fox News, once said Canada is "lucky we allow them to exist on the same continent" after the Canadian government did not join the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.

    Coulter speech cancelled over fears of violence

    1. Re:The Young Republicans of Fordham by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your post is idiotic on SO many levels...

      First, the College Republicans letter reads like so many other hostage/POW letters that it's really embarrassing... Gary Powers could have written that confession from his cell in Moscow. Sure... they then tried to invite the totally in-offensive and completely ineffective master of milk toast George Will... just as I am sure Gary Powers would have promised his captors he'd never use a camera again...

      Second, EVERY ONE of the Coulter quotes you used was (when and where stated) obviously and in-context over-the-top rhetoric to make a point. You guys on the left love to do this yourselves ALL the time... watch nearly ANY bit by Bill Maher, Steven Colbert, Jon Stewart, etc.

      Yeah, when all Americans are being groped, x-rayed, etc just to board a plane (something we all used to freely do, unmolested) because some Muslims did 9-11 (Muslim Student Union idiots are WRONG when they blame 9-11 on "the Jews"), and when anybody suggests that perhaps Islam should become adult and responsible and clean up it's own house before Muslims are allowed to fly (since after all, any non-Muslim calling for reform of Islam is called a "hater", "racist" etc) ... and then a Muslim apologist stands up and makes ludicrous statements and assertions (something that frequently happens anywhere a Muslim student organization is found... and yes, I once found myself having a SERIOUS argument with some Muslim students where they insisted flying carpets and Jins were REAL, doh! ) the absolutely appropriate response is to suggest alternate means of travel like camels and flying carpets. Jets are for people who live in the 20th or 21st century...

      Yes, she also made the funny quote about invading Muslim countries, killing their leaders and converting them to Christianity... in the larger post 9-11 context about the proper responses to Muslims going craze and slaughtering innocent civilians and the ineffectiveness of modern PC-style responses relative to the extreme response of the crusades (which anybody with a little education in a subject called "history" will tell you were a response to the initial crusade by Muslims, and centuries of history show led to a long period of violent Islam staying put in its own lands leaving the western world at peace). Just as Bill Maher uses his rhetoric to make points, and nobody need fear he will actually DO anything because he is not President, Ann uses rhetoric to make points, and given that she's not, and never will be, President there's no danger any real invasion will occur into all Muslim nations killing anybody who does not convert to Christianity... but of course those of us who know history will also know that she is also highlighting that invading nations and killing anybody who does not convert is exactly how Islam has always spread itself...

      The left either needs to grow up on the whole rhetoric thing, or prepare for bans on all left-wing speech... it's all so VERY hurtful, hate-filled, and offensive...

      Dawkins offends many Christians with his rhetoric... BAN HIM! He's HATEFUL!

      Most of Comedy Central offends conservatives... BAN THE WHOLE DAMN CHANNEL! it's HATE-SPEECH!

      NBC and MSNBC have said appalling things about Sarah Palin, Conservatives, Republicans, Christians, the TEA party, etc. BAN THEM! they are HATERS! pull their licenses!

      Hey lefties... is this really, truly, the world you want? A world where anybody who has the majority in politics or on the campus can ban the speech they do not like and lack the intellectual capacity to out-argue? Remember this: No majority is permanent. In the sixites liberals claimed they were for free speech and would defend that principle even for speech they opposed; conservatives mostly agreed with the principle and tolerated a great deal of speech (not the violence that OFTEN went with it, but the actual speech). When liberals took over the ivory towers, however, they went back on the deal and started pushing speech codes and politic

    2. Re:The Young Republicans of Fordham by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One man, who identified himself as a U.S. citizen, described U.S. President Barack Obama as a "Marxist."

      Uh, he has organised an effort to increase retirement savings by requiring all businesses to offer automatic IRA accounts rather than 401K plans?
      http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=alOV1EaIG3h4

      Which some fear is the first step towards nationalization of pension schemes as with other countries:
      http://thefederalist-gary.blogspot.co.uk/2012/01/pension-plans-nationalized-by.html

  96. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by misexistentialist · · Score: 2

    Free speech: you don't get it. You think "harassment" is something else than the legal definition. You think "hate speech" is something different from speech. You even think a ceremony funded by the school is the height of "free speech"! Though to be fair, those aren't really your thoughts.

  97. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by rtfa-troll · · Score: 3, Informative

    I don't think it's clear at all there,

    I'd agree there. It's an awful piece of writing which the university should be ashamed of. However it doesn't actually say anything threatening and if they did try it on they would lose of ever pushed to it.

    this page this page is more coherent, laying out the "hostile environment" terms. Whether harassment has occurred is "judged both objectively and subjectively", which is another way of saying "No Men Allowed."

    I definitely support the principle that "The issue is not whether you are paranoid, the issue is whether you are paranoid enough" but in this case you are being paranoid ;-) The fact is though, that this is basically just a direct cut'n paste from Davis, the related supreme court judgement. For the University it's saying we match exactly what the supreme court told us to do. For real life it's saying that you can't be done for harassment just because some delicate flower felt harassed; you have to actually objectively harass them. It's also saying that if they were (literally) asking for it and don't feel that they were harassed, it's still okay even if, according to the objective standards you could have been said to be harassing them.

    In other words, this particular statement is pretty much 100% on the side of sanity and definitely doesn't mean "man == harasser", however much Andrea Dworkin might wish it to mean that.

    --
    =~ s,(.*),<sarcasm>$1</sarcasm>,g if any_point_you_wish();
  98. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 1

    Some in a softer manner (How DARE you suggest that affirmative action is racist, you racist).

    Your second example, however, is about someone exercising their free speech to criticize someone else's speech. It is an example of free speech, not an example of free speech being restricted.

    It is an example of free speech, not an example of free speech being restricted.

    Understand this: Free speech is not a just a law. It is an ideal. Because of the circular point you just made, we can not outlaw private restrictions to speech, but that does not mean they are morally right.

    First, you don't seem to know what a "circular point" is. Second, we're not talking about a private organization "outlawing" free speech. Private organizations can't outlaw anything because only the government can create laws. We're not even talking about a private organization censoring speech in a location. We're talking about someone citing free speech criticizing them and their opinion on affirmative action, as though somehow they have a right to prevent people from talking about how they disagree with said person. That's not censorship it's the epitome of free speech.

  99. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Since it's proaganda, university officials should ban it.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  100. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (and threatened her with explosion).

    See. Fascists.

  101. True, but irrelevant to the discussion by cbhacking · · Score: 1

    While I have no objection to what you stated, I don't understand why you felt the need to state it. It implies that people are trying to prohibit this "whining". Generally, they aren't doing any such thing. They're just calling it out *as* whining. There's absolutely no conflict of free speech there. Individual sites and the WSJ are allowed to publish whatever whining they want, just as others are allowed to point it out as whining. In fact, people are even allowed to call something whining when it isn't! It's not terribly polite of them, but it's permitted.

    What is not permitted is actual hate speech, behavior intended to incite violence toward a group, or intentionally cause emotional harm (arguably another form of violence, simply a non-physical one). The "crybaby Republicans" that you and the GP mention are welcome to cry all they like about this policy, and that is their right.

    Why are you implying that people think otherwise?

    --
    There's no place I could be, since I've found Serenity...
    1. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by phantomfive · · Score: 2

      What is not permitted is actual hate speech, behavior intended to incite violence toward a group, or intentionally cause emotional harm (arguably another form of violence, simply a non-physical one).

      These are all protected under the US constitution, and for good reason.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    2. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Call out the thought police, you are intentionally causing me emotional harm by charging me with intending to cause emotional harm.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    3. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by supercrisp · · Score: 1

      Hate speech is protected, but exclusions are made for "fighting words" that intended to incite or inflict injury. So, yes, hate speech is protected but the speech intended to incite violence or cause emotional harm is not. And, yes, those are gray areas, which is what the judiciary is for.

    4. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      exclusions are made for "fighting words" that intended to incite or inflict injury.

      These exclusions are entirely based on the situation in which they are presented, not on the content itself. I could call you an idiot right now in an intent to hurt you emotionally, and it would be protected. However calling you an idiot to your face in public might very well be fighting words.

      Besides, I don't think you're an idiot, I think you're bad at research.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
    5. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by supercrisp · · Score: 1

      I'm grateful for the clarification about your opinion of me, but I'm confused by the first sentence. How exactly is the situational nature of what might be said relevant to my post, which didn't address situations but only the original blanket statement that hate speech is protected?

    6. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by dcw3 · · Score: 1

      What is not permitted is actual hate speech, behavior intended to incite violence toward a group, or intentionally cause emotional harm (arguably another form of violence, simply a non-physical one). The "crybaby Republicans" that you and the GP mention are welcome to cry all they like about this policy, and that is their right.

      Ah, and this is where you're wrong, and the Supreme Court has ruled on it. Go look up the Westboro Baptist Church case. For the record, I don't agree with the Church (would it be unchristian of me to say I hate them?), but I'm in favor of protecting everyone's rights to free speech. The right to not be offended isn't in the Constitution, and this PC attitude of trying to make it a right is morally wrong. If you can't handle being verbally offended, you should have never been let out of elementary school. It's really too bad that this had to be the WSJ and Coulter, instead of say MSN and Bill Maher. If it were, I'd be here defending the "crybaby" Dems right to free speech, and we wouldn't be having this disagreement.

      --
      Just another day in Paradise
    7. Re:True, but irrelevant to the discussion by phantomfive · · Score: 1

      Because even fighting words are protected speech in the US, and even hurtful, incendiary speech, unless the situation is such that it will produce an imminent lawless action.

      --
      "First they came for the slanderers and i said nothing."
  102. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 1

    Nothing to do with free speech necessarily, but the comment about racist are the only ones who disagree with affirmative action comment. Because every time a comment is made that liberals disagree with and they can't debate facts their defacto response is to call the other person racist.

    Can you provide some examples of this?I read a lot of news and while I've certainly heard comments taken out of context by politicians used to insinuate racism. I don't recall seeing the vast majority of political and social issues being framed in terms of one position being racist. This sounds a lot more like the kind of inflammatory talking point you hear on "news commentary" shows and never backed up with any sort of facts.

    Pretty much anything critical of the tea party mentions racism. Thats one simple example.

    I don't think "the tea party" qualifies as a comment nor as a topic of debate. You said whenever there was a comment liberals disagree with. What comments? So no, that's not even close to an example.

    Further, while the Tea Party has certainly been criticized for various racist remarks made by members I don't think that is a major criticism of the Tea Party. If you to a search for "tea party criticism" the first hits have to do with: their criticism of Mitt Romney, requiring land to vote, Islam not being protected by the first amendment, mischaracterization of Jared Lee Loughner as "a liberal extremist", lack of compassion when lauding the shooting of Congresswoman Giffords", blasphemy by members, and that they can't create a coherent platform for voters. Racism doesn't even make the first two pages in Google. Perhaps you have a skewed perception of reality?

    You shouldn't need to be pointed to examples...

    Yes, for heaven's sake. Let's just scream rhetoric and never try to address real facts or real world cases. Then we'd have to support our hyperbolic nonsense. If it is so easy, cite a few examples. Are you lazy or lying?

  103. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Neither of them are good. Teachers should never threaten kids for saying stuff other than maybe death threats.

    PC is bullshit and the solution isn't more PC, it's less.

  104. Re:Hate speech by superwiz · · Score: 1

    Or, to paraphrase a book which many on Slashdot claim has lost its relevance, and then came the Pharaoh who did not know Joseph.

    --
    Any guest worker system is indistinguishable from indentured servitude.
  105. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 2

    If the WSJ is excluding details to make a point, it is the epitome of triviality to argue against those points by showing what was excluded. If the WSJ is wrong about something, prove it.

    I think other posters have already covered that pretty well. The WSJ clearly was trying to misconstrue the facts and sensationalize.

    Otherwise, just stuff it, because your cheerleading for the NYT at the expense of the WSJ won't convince anyone.

    This isn't about "cheerleading". I'm not particularly a fan of the NYT, but I certainly recognize them as a a normal, reputable newspaper that does research, vets their sources, makes an attempt not to print outright falsehoods, and prints retractions. Newscorp owned properties are something else. To pretend they should be given equal weight on their face is just absurd at this point. It really isn't news, it's an attempt to persuade.

    Those who are "uniformed idiots" because they read the WSJ certainly won't be convinced (the name calling is a nice touch - really brings people to your way of thinking).

    If you get your news from a source that went to court to defend their constitutional right to lie to their readers/viewers, what else would such a person be called? You pretty much have to be uninformed and/or an idiot to trust such a "news" source.

    And those who already agree with you don't need convincing.

    Here's where you mistake. I'm not trying to convince people. That's rhetoric. I'm presenting a logical argument. Frankly, I don't expect people to change their minds as most people are just looking for anything to justify what they already believe. Instead I'm writing to respond to those that can still argue logically and really, fuck the rest of you. This is Slashdot, news for nerds. If you can't handle logic why would I care about your opinion?

    Rational thinkers will not be convinced, and those are the only ones you can possibly hope to sway.

    Rational thinkers ignore the rhetoric you endorse. Wasting time coddling people who insist on believing things written by a propaganda company proven to repeatedly lie are the ones beyond hope.

  106. What do you expect? by p51d007 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The "free thinking" radicals of the 60's counter culture movement, are today's 50 & 60 year old "professors" in most major institutions. Couple that with the ideology they have pushed in primary & secondary schools over the last 25 years, and they have melded the minds of today's 20-30 year old adults into believing that free speech is only free as long as you believe what they believe. If not, you are to be told you are a __________(insert favorite PC term), and need to be silenced. Until THAT ideology is removed, and the so called political correctness "movement" is contained, nothing will change it.

    1. Re:What do you expect? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agree 100%. PC is among the most destructive ideas in the country.

  107. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    The parent is the "informed idiot". The case he was talking about is well documented. The reported wanted to include statements detrimental to monsanto and GM feed going into milk being produced locally. The local station told them to cut that out and present the story without it. The reported didn't and were fired. The reporters attempted to file a claim under the whistle blower protection laws and lost.

    How not presenting details turns into lieing probably has more to do with his interpretation (lies) then anything.

  108. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Shit, we just had an annual remembrance get-together remembering when a bunch of student had a huge protest in the 60's that had hundreds of arrests and over a hundred expulsions. The school provided funds to something that basically was just rubbing the schools face in the dog shit.

    Erm, surely this means it was an effective protest, since the views of the protesters subsequently became the school's policy? Sure, at the time, the protest was not welcomed by the faculty and students were expelled for it - just as they would be today, if they were to offend against "speech codes". But the protesters graduated and joined the faculty, and now the things they wanted as student radicals are now official policy.

    The very concept of racism, which includes more than just racial discrimination, comes from the 60s and was created by the radical groups of that time as a way to push their "anti-fascist" agenda. The radicals regarded speech codes as preferable to freedom of speech because they thought it unlikely that such agenda-pushing weapons would ever be applied against them - ironically adopting fascist tactics in order to fight fascism. Maybe someday there will be a switcharound, and speech codes will make it illegal to spread hate against Jesus or advocate abortion. That will be fun to watch.... from a distance.

  109. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by LordLucless · · Score: 1

    (and threatened her with explosion)

    Damn, now that's a discipline policy!

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
  110. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The fact is that free speech in America has been getting more and more curtailed. Some in a very overt manner (free speech zones). Some in a softer manner (How DARE you suggest that affirmative action is racist, you racist). But the US is not as free as it used to be.

    Except the latter has nothing to do with freedom of speech.

    Last time I checked, I can denounce affirmative action all I want. I often do, given I believe we should have a society based purely on merit, not on skin color. Because of this, sure, I'm often near-crucified by "liberals", insisting I hate black people and minorities, when the subject of affirmative action comes up. (It's not a party thing, either; the seething rage I've had thrown at me from "conservatives" with regard to equality for all, regardless of sexual orientation, is just as bad.)

    In either case, never once has the Federal government stepped in and told me to shut up.

    The Bill of Rights includes no amendment guaranteeing the right to not be offended, nor the right to not hear opposition.

    I find the phrase 'Freedom of Speech' is often badly abused, where it has no place being invoked. Policies of universities directly funded by the tax payer? Sure, it's a stretch, but you can perhaps make a case that they're official government installations. Completely private universities? Random people on the street? Random forum moderators on the Internets? No - they cannot violate the First Amendment.

  111. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by __aaltlg1547 · · Score: 1

    It's basically a bunch of crybaby Republicans whining about how unwelcome on campus their harassment of women, minorities, gays, muslims, any anyone else not like them is.

    At the University of Colorado they now have a Visiting Scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy.

    I. Kid. You. Not.

    http://www.colorado.edu/news/releases/2012/07/03/cu-boulder-commences-search-visiting-scholar-conservative-thought-and

  112. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Saying that opposition to affirmative action is racist IS free speech. Free speech doesn't mean you are free from disagreement, criticism or character evaluation based on your speech. It doesn't even mean people can't retaliate against you for something you say. It just means that government won't arrest you or otherwise suppress your speech.

  113. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ninetyninebottles · · Score: 2

    I'm a Republican and I'm not whiny. Let's look at it from my perspective. The colleges are indoctrinating the youth with no opposition.

    Why does your perspective have to be so absolute? That seems to be the problem. Nothing prevents universities from bringing in any speakers they want so long as they do so within the bounds of the constitution and if they allow/pay one religion to speak they do the same for all. That seems to be the fundamental disconnect in my mind. When everyone is given equal opportunity, why do you whine about not being given more than equal opportunity?

    Harassment of women: This is strictly about abortion.

    Actually if you read the article and the actual policies at the university it claims to cite, this is about no employee making grades or employment based upon requirement that people have the same views. So no, it isn't about abortion... but lets continue.

    For sake of argument pretend you believe life begins at conception. Would you be OK with a form of birth control that ended a human life each time it was used? You can argue that life doesn't begin at conception but that's not the point. The point is, if yo believe life DOES begin at conception then how could you act any different than the Republicans do?

    You see I believe in freedom. For example, I believe 99% of people who shoot pigeons are jackasses. They're hunting for sport, wasting good meat, and they mostly are macho dickheads trying to compensate for their own inadequacy. I voted to give them the freedom to choose to continue this sport, even though I disapprove.

    Even if I believed life began at conception I can still rationally demonstrate that that is just an opinion and unprovable. Further I can logically demonstrate it is a faith based opinion not supported by science. So even if I believe it, I would still support the right of other individuals to make their own choices based on their own beliefs and if there is a god, let him judge them.

    It's called "freedom" and it's not just a bumper sticker or a campaign slogan. Maybe you should try believing in it instead of just saying it like a parrot.

    Other than that, there is no harassment of women from Republicans.

    Umm, yeah. Except all the other harassment about things like homosexuality, subservience to men, etc.

    Minorities: Affirmative action, you can't make up for past discrimination by enforcing racial discrimination upon everyone.

    Is that truly what you believe the purpose of affirmative action is, punitive? Maybe you should read something that isn't from the right wing. Try reading how affirmative action changed, for example, politics and business in northern Europe removing in a few generations the prejudice of centuries.

    Gays: All about marriage. I had a gay room mate. I have many friends who are gay, I live in California. I am against gay marriage.

    Please. Before gay marriage Republicans fought against homosexuality being legal at all and after they lose gay marriage they'll still be fighting against the rights of gays to adopt children. Why do you hate freedom? For a party who opposes "big government" you sure do believe in the government making choices for other people and getting in people's personal business. Here's an idea, don't like gay marriage? Don't marry any gay people and shut the hell up and mind your own business.

    Muslims: sorry, I can't give you a rational argument you will accept (not that I expect you to accept my point of view on any of these). Muslims are responsible for 99% of all terrorist attacks in the world.

    Have you considered learning facts? They make decision making much more accurate.

    ...as for "anyone else not like them" pure bullshit. You people on the left chastise and berate anyone who is a Republican.

  114. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No kidding: "A red light university has at least one policy that both clearly and substantially restricts freedom of speech."

    http://thefire.org/spotlight/codes/1270.html

    So for example, Ohio State has a sexual harassment policy, something to discipline unwanted sexual advances, and therefore they are added to the list and helped killed free speech on campuses... Ok...

  115. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, one doesn't have a right NOT to be offended.

  116. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Starting to become a meaningless accusation at this point.

    Are you posting from 1980?

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  117. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't dare. At some point, one of these "nutbags" might actually have a solid point, then where will their little progressive utopias be?

  118. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again:
    I may disagree with what you say sir, but I shall defend to the death your right to say it.
    Just because you find something offensive, doesn't mean that someone else does.
    Now please go bang your head against the wall 45 times.

  119. And thus we see how Higher Ed becomes a scam... by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    A hideout for the incompetent. A form of welfare for academics. What we need is a system of exams. Minimal human intervention. Build this circuit in X amount of time. Program this algorithm in x amount of time. Name this many muscles, bones and nerves. While we'll still need internships and hands on experience for some things, much of the old style brick and mortar and a professor nonsense can be replaced with books and on-line learning.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  120. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    But campuses have extended that idea to "student housing" ie the places students pay the school to live in... Which is kind if backwards both from a landlord-tenant view and the traditional academic view... THAT is what is unprecedented here.

  121. Guest series on Volokh Conspiracy by nastav · · Score: 1

    He recently guest-blogged on Volokh Conspiracy, which is popular blog by prestigious law professors. The series of articles posted by him is well worth a read. http://www.volokh.com/author/greglukianoff/

    --
    -- obligatory (but true) caveat: my comments my own, and don't reflect my employer or colleagues' positions.
  122. Next up : how universities became obsolete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Fuck these fascist scum.

    They once had a near monopoly on the dissemination of knowledge.

    Now they do not.

    So their actions are relevant only to idiots.

  123. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, it's comments like this that remind me why I stopped reading /. two years ago. Thanks for the reminder.

  124. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by AthanasiusKircher · · Score: 1

    The sky isn't falling on free speech; quite the opposite, free speech is legally protected than ever before and there are more venues for it than ever before.

    If you said this before 2001, I might have agreed with you. Since then, with the introduction of "free-speech zones," government detention of supposed "terrorists" indefinitely on trumped up causes (often some part of the supposed evidence involves some free expression), etc., I don't think your "than ever before" still holds.

    Although we have had strides in free political and corporate speech rights in the past couple years. But individual speech has come under greater restrictions and surveillance by the government in the past decade.

  125. Policy != enforcement by HalAlpha · · Score: 1

    I work for an IT shop in a university and am one of the people who respond to complaints about speech in any campus system. While our university has what some may see as a draconian policy, we have never actually enforced the policy since it was written in 1994.

    The reason many campuses have these kind of policies is not de-facto censorship, but instead de-facto legal ass-covering. We also have policies that you can't ride bikes on campus, even though we offer bike racks everywhere; or say you can't use campus computers for illegal file sharing even though unless you're sucking up a crazy amount of bandwidth, we won't really do anything about it. These policies are purely legal risk management and in most campuses solely exist so if a student says something bad, we can't be sued about it.

    --
    "If I can't dance, I don't want to be part of your revolution" - Emma Goldman
    1. Re:Policy != enforcement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Messiah College, eh?

  126. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This article appears to be bitching and moaning about the fact that hate speech has been universally recognized as out of the scope of free speech. Ann Coulter is generally regarded amongst the cognoscenti as a purveyor of hate speech, not free speech. I fail to see how denying her an audience of like-minded listeners could possibly be bad in any way.

    Did someone seriously just cite the opinion of "the cognoscenti" as a reason for censorship? Come on. You better hope the cognoscenti never take a dislike to any of your ideas, if this is the system you like. If Coulter's so obviously hateful, shouldn't that be apparent to college students? And if it's not, don't we have way bigger problems than Ann Coulter speaking?

  127. Prospective Graduate Students by ub3r+n3u7r4l1st · · Score: 1

    You many want to visit the following website and think X times about your decision to enroll:

    http://100rsns.blogspot.com/

  128. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are times where it is appropriate to exercise some discrimination.

    And playing around with freedom of speech isn't one of those times. When you create ambiguous rules, don't be surprised when those very same rules come back to bite you in the ass. Sure, you can complain about it, but you'd be an imbecile to do so; you did, after all, invite the abuse.

  129. However.... by pastafazou · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And, in fact, the greatest damage moderates and right-wing could do to the left wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of sexist, anti-Semitic, elitist, racist, and hate filled non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the right.

    1. Re:However.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the whole bit about "You didn't build that yourself" and "We all belong to the government" ...

    2. Re:However.... by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      Except that I've listened to a lot of right and left wing radio, and I've never heard a left winger use the term towel heads, etc.. I do hear it on the right.
      Also, on the right are all the bigoted views... I haven't heard the same kind of crap from the left that I hear from the right all the time... Homophobic. Anti women. Xenophobic. You name it.
      And I have many conservative views: particularly financial. I believe in small government, responsible fiscal policy, balancing the budget, free market. Todays GOP is lead by nutjobs. When they've had power they haven't shrunk government (the opposite) nor have they balanced the budget (the last surfeit was under Clinton). I don't know how a true conservative can vote GOP these days.

    3. Re:However.... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 0

      Read though this.. I bet I'll get you to laugh. Nothing like life.

      Let's take you back to grade school. Congress is the one that does the budget, not the President. He can either approve or veto it. The ONLY reason we nearly balanced the budget under Clinton was with the Republican controlled Congress. If you look at the debt clock site, adjusted for inflation, it's definitive. Clinton fought it kicking and screaming, shutting down the government for weeks until he capitulated. We had welfare reform, they shut down a bunch of useless agencies and so on. I worked in the agency that was attached to the Interstate Commerce Commision. Their last action at that point was TEN years before their demise. Literally did NOTHING for a decade. Republicans do work and work well. You're confused by the outright lies from the left. It's not surprising, it starts in the schools. Look here - http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/faq.html, scroll about half way down where it's adjusted. Still pitiful. If we only continued with a Republican congress into the 2000s.

      If you don't hear that stuff on the left, you're not listening. Just look at Obama's "the rights war on women.". What a load of crap. "Romney will take away your 'right' to an abortion." Really? The President can overturn a Supreme Court decision? Of course not. That's not even being considered. They said the same thing about Reagan, nothing happened. So now you, I, everyone has to pay for women to have free contraception. Does this mean Obama has a war on Men? Where's my contraception? How absurd, how absurd on the womans side. What a load of rottin goods and people bought it. Then "the rich" stuff. All kinds of race baiting. The left called Mr. Steele a Nigger. Called Herman Cane a Nigger too. Just google it. Joe Biden and his chains bit. It's all out there if you're listening.

      Conservatives are also not homophobic. Just because you don't want a very small minority to redefine marriage - something that is a religious entity for THOUSANDS of years the world over and was codified into law for separation purposes, that doesn't make you a homophobe. Conservative - yes because you are preserving what worked. How dare gay people try to shove that down the rest of the worlds throats. Call it something else, make it legally the same thing and have a nice day. If I were asked, I'd make it what it is - screwed. Then you can go to a screwing. They were screwed. A few years later they'll even agree they were screwed. Especially when they go to court to undo it. I'd extend it though. I'd make it such that a daugher and her mother or other relatives can get screwed too. That way they too can take advantage of the laws for being married. Happens more than I thought.

      We also have learned from history that any nation that doesn't secure its boarders will fall. We have laws on immigration. Why not enforce them? Why say this is somehow racist when hispanic isn't even a race. It's an ethnicity. They are white. People that I know that are naturalized are really upset about it. Much more than I am. One guy is from Bangladesh. I asked about their illegal alien policy. He said it was simple. If he went into India or they come into Bangladesh - you're shot. If you survive you're shot again. Only America bends over and says - let me look away. Here's some money too. Now let me help you some too. As some sothern states showed us, they could be gone by the end of December. Just pass laws like they did. They left in droves. Our job problem would likely get a big boost, hospitals will be a lot more solvent, things will improve dramatically.

      This is not to say that I'm happy with the GOP. Right now they're our best bet. That's sad. We need a big overhaul. Both parties are just bad. Right now we're screwed. It will take a lot to fix what's wrong, especially since Obama is running up the debt more and faster than anyone. Before the election he had already run it up more than all the previous presidents combined. Where's the benefit? We should be swimming in stuff. He squandered it. We will be Greece. It's just a matter of time.

    4. Re:However.... by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      I agree with most if that. Btw I didn't grow up in the US, so I wasnt indoctrinated like my kids are.
      I really haven't heard the racism from the left, but I concede that I may just not have heard it.
      I really don't know why it's political suicide to fix the budget. I also don't know why we can't cut defense. We could balance the budget easily if the politicians were willing.
      What will it take? A downgrade of our treasuries?

    5. Re:However.... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      To get our budget under control you're looking at what Greece is going through. That's riots, buildings on fire, etc as these entitled people are denied their entitlement and they discover their promises was a bunch of lies. I have a feeling all this will come out and when it does it won't be pretty. Just try to stay away from it and stay alive and out of jail. I have a feeling there will be a lot of opportunity to get screwed coming up.

      The green back may become worthless. No more gasoline for anyone because there is nothing to pay for it. No food. No electric, and no Internet! I'd be fine,however many people would be like zombies without the internet. Unfortunately as we go down we take other nations that depend on the dollar for reserve currency.

    6. Re:However.... by tolkienfan · · Score: 1

      Your last sentence is the most astute. It's the reason things haven't gone further already: so much is on the line. Other countries don't believe they can afford to allow the dollar to fail.
      What happens? I can't predict. But we CAN get the budget under control without riots.
      If only the politicians would have the courage to risk it.

    7. Re:However.... by ebvwfbw · · Score: 1

      But we CAN get the budget under control without riots.
      If only the politicians would have the courage to risk it.

      But they can't. The Dem's have sold Obama as Santa Claus. Free gasoline, free cell phones, free health care, free education. Just tax the rich they said. I've actually heard people say Obama will fill their gas tank. Quite a trick, eh?

      One thing is for sure, the health care as they have it in law right now isn't sustainable mathematically. Neither is Social Security. Neither is the deficit. You'd need a big economic engine to support that and we don't have it. Obama is tightening regulation - meaning more paperwork. It's as if he wants things to fail to be honest.

      Where's inflation? It's defying logic, for a long time. You can put it off but when it hits it will be worse the longer you wait. We've put it off for a long time. Keynesian economics - put it off for the next generation. THE most unethical economist that probably ever lived.

  130. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    You're presenting not just publications favored by political parties, but one publication with a very solid history of integrity and factual presentation of information with a publication owned by a very deceptive corporation.

    You say this and I think, "How can anybody say that about a paper owned by Newscorp." But then you go on and talk about how unreliable Newscorp is as a news source and I think, "This guy thinks that the NYT has a history of integrity and factual presentation of information. What a strange definition of integrity." The NYT is a newspaper that won several Pulitzer Prizes for printing articles by Walter Duranty saying that the Ukraine famines orchestrated by Stalin were not happening. The NYT is the newspaper that promoted Jayson Blair when his boss at the time wrote a memo saying, "We have to stop Jayson from writing for the Times. Right now." This was in response to articles containing fabrications that Jayson Blair had written. There are many other examples in between those two individuals that demonstrate that the NYT has never been a newspaper with integrity (although it managed to build a reputation for integrity, it never actually had any).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  131. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Toonol · · Score: 1

    But don't deny the tea party has a strong racist component to it. I know they've insisted they're not racists quite a bit.

    I deny that. Now offer proof.

  132. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    The bulk of the article is derived from information provided to the reporter by Greg Lukianoff, a Democrat.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  133. Liberlals have always a love affair with Gulags by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Of varying degrees. It's simply a matter of what you call them.

  134. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    I don't know about your university, but are you OK with a university punishing a student for racial harassment for reading a book about the KKK in front of someone who was black? How about when you discover that the book was "Notre Dame vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan"?

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  135. Nothing new here by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Just as for centuries it has been the policy of the Roman Catholic church to promote free speech when they are not in power and to oppose free speech when it rules, it was the policy of the left to promote free speech in the 1960s when they did not yet quite control most universities and to oppose free speech now that they have an iron grip on most schools.

    If the freedom to make non-intrusive political speech is not absolute, it does not exist.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    1. Re:Nothing new here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is the first matter that one learns in post-secondary education? Nothing except the authority of government is absolute.

  136. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by kenorland · · Score: 1

    Like so many legal questions, I think the answer depends on the details: what does the housing contract say, how is Internet service provided, what alternatives are there, etc. And a legal remedy might be to replace dorm Internet service with a private provider, making the issue go away.

    All I'm saying is that there is no general right to free speech at universities.

  137. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

    Except WE ALREADY HAD this debate... You know, back when the Anerican British Colonies were "corporate employees" of British companies.

    RIGHTS like Free Speech don't go away just because you "pay rent" to somebody else for housing or utilities... That's WHY they're called RIGHTS.

  138. Re:Hate speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At my university, the clubs I'm responsible for administrating (well, assisting the elected students who are responsible for overseeing the administration of the independent clubs, but in practice) voted without dissent to fund a "traditional marriage" event, despite the fact that the second-largest faction there were lefties including the gay club (and the largest were the politically-neutral group).

    Here, the clubs know that the best way to protect their independence is to be united: they all want independence from me and my directors, but they almost all know that we'll never ask them to give up their independence if they don't try to assert it, and in return we'll protect them from the university and the union. The strict neutrality rule is one of the most fundamental parts of the clubs system, since it is the inevitable corollary of the non-interference rule which allows the clubs to manage their internal affairs under whatever terms they want. At the same time, the university likes it because it alleviates their responsibility: the clubs self-regulate, so they just send complainers to me.

    Posted as AC to avoid being quoted by those who oppose my job (i.e. those who want to make clubs accountable to the student politicians or the staff who nominally work for them).

  139. Speech code confuse harassment with being offended by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    The origins of speech codes on campus made some amount of sense, in that they were based in restricting harassment. It is not acceptable to follow people around calling them racial slurs, just like it's not acceptable to follow people around doing the chicken dance.

    It is perfectly permissible for the government to restrict harassment even if said harassment is done via speech. In fact, it does restrict that. There are actual legal remedies to harassment in the real world, and it's entirely reasonable for a university to make rules duplicating those laws so they can punish students there or kick them out of the school, instead of requiring a restraining order and the legal system.

    Incidentally, if you ever seen anyone defending the speech codes on campus, they seem to be defending the original intent. They run around defending the idea it is not acceptable for students to go around harassing people.

    The problem with speech codes is that everyone seemed to have immediately forgotten the original premise, and decided that speech codes weren't to stop to the problem of people being harassed, it was to stop people being offended.

    AND THOSE TWO THINGS ARE NOT THE SAME.

    Harassment is when someone makes repeated legal-but-annoying actions directed non-consensually at a specific other person, with none of it individually doing any real harm, but cumulatively it causing enough that it rises to something we've decided to stop. And indeed, the government, and government institutions, can stop that.

    But the government has absolutely no ability to stop being from being offended, or the right to punish people who do offend other people. Offending people is a constitutional right.

    And while it might have possibly been understandable confusion between 'harassing someone' and 'deliberately offending someone' (Hint: Harassment has to happen more than once, at the very least.), at this point speech codes have clearly slipped off the deep end and are now attempting to ban stuff that is just sorta vaguely offensive to some random person, somewhere.

    It is not possible to accidentally harass someone. Nor is not possible to say something to someone and harass someone else. Nor is it possible to be giving a speech and have someone walk up and be harassed. Reading a book near someone else cannot be harassment.

    Nothing without a specific person that is not specifically impacted, on purpose, can be harassment.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  140. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by ganjadude · · Score: 1

    right.. the correct response to disagreeing with a mans point of view is to halt his speech and lock him up. Works great in china

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  141. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Hey, moron. Harassment is a specific legal thing.

    AND HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH OFFENDING PEOPLE.

    As long as you are not intentionally being offensive you can chalk messages on the sidewalk... just provide the chalk, no need for permission - this includes political views, religious views, and pretty much anything else you want.

    Except this isn't even slightly what the actual code forbids: It say you can't 'Demean the race, sex, religion, color, creed, disability, sexual orientation, national origin, ancestry or age of the individual or individuals; and Create an intimidating, hostile or demeaning environment for education, university-related work, or other university-authorized activity.'

    If you don't understand what that actually says, I suspect you don't know what 'demean' means. Demeans just means 'to lower'. It means to lower the value in any way, it doesn't even have to be offensive or untrue.

    And that's not lowering the value the individual, as a poor reading of that sentence would imply...it's barring people from lowering the value of the race, sex, etc.

    And I can only conclude by 'demeaning environment', they mean 'an environment where X is lowered in the eyes of people'.(1) Aka, that 'intent' thing just means you have to intend to change people's opinions. (Which does mean they can't get people for speaking facetiously, but that's about all the 'protection' that provides.)

    So, to recap: It is against the rules to, in any way, speak negatively about any attribute any student holds hold with an intent of convincing anyone else of that. Not to 'offend' them as you seem to think...they don't even have to be there, or aware it happened.

    That is the ACTUAL STATED POLICY OF THE SCHOOL.

    And to make this even stupider, these attributes include creed.You know, if I attended that school, I'd be tempted to have a stated creed that school administrators ate babies, and constantly repeat that near them, hoping some day that they would, some day, tell some random person that my idea was wrong, thus putting them in violation of their own speech code.

    1) A 'demeaning environment' really would be something like Saw, where you have to do horrible things to survive. However, a) that would be crazy for _speech_ to create, and b) is already covered by 'hostile' or 'intimidating' anyway. So I think my interpretation of 'a demeaning environment' meaning 'an environment where people think demeaning things' is correct.

    Alternately, 'demeaning environment' might mean one where people say demeaning things, but that's even stupider: You are barred from saying demeaning things, but only if you're intending to create an environment where people are saying demeaning things. OTOH, if no one is saying demeaning things, feel free to say demeaning things. Huh?

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  142. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by chmod+a+x+mojo · · Score: 1

    Hey fuckstick I go there, you obviously don't. And you are so god-awful stupid you can twist anything to say anything.

    Here is a nice splintery bat, go shove it up your fucking ass and enjoy it.

    TL;DR version, I go there, you don't - I see what really goes on there, you... don't. Get the picture yet? There is NO problem with freedom of speech unless you are repeatedly verbally assaulting someone.

    --
    To err is human; effective mayhem requires the root password!
  143. Idiocy from the left, as usual... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In fact, the greatest damage moderates and left-wing could do to the right wing extremists is to invite them to freely speak their minds. The resulting spew of homophobic, sexist, and racist non-sequiturs would likely shift most people just a bit to the left.

    1. There is no such thing as "homophobia". Most people who oppose homosexuality do so not because of some irrational fear, but rather from the moral conviction that it is wrong, and/or the rational view that it serves no legitimate biological purpose and is, in fact, a dysfunction. You may disagree and think it's ok... but the truly dishonest act is to label any position your political opponents have as a "phobia". I guess if the people who oppose homosexuality start calling you a "heterophobe" and then declare that you must be stupid and must be silenced because you are just a "heterophobe", demanded that you could not speak in public forums, etc. you'd be fine with that, right??? I guess in the 60's, all the protesters should have been labelled "vietnamophobics" and been banned from speaking on college campuses...

    2. The term "sexist" has lost it's meaning, thanks to the left; it used to mean people who made negative assumptions about others due simply to their gender... like all the Democrats who, for decades, fought to keep women from being able to vote. Now, however, if you are a liberal who hates Sarah Palin and calls her a "cunt", you are just fine, but if you do not want to pay for some lady's birth control or you think women should be free to do what they want with their own bodies (but think it's wrong for them to murder their own children) you are a "sexist" who is "waging a war on women"

    2. As for the non-sequitur... just paste-in pictures of Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden, etc. The left is brimming with over-the-top irrationality...

    Oh for a return of the young lefty hippies of the sixties... they at least pretended to support "free speech" and the "free exchange of ideas" in between the ROTC building occupations and the bombings etc ... after they grew-up however, they, and the generation of morons they taught, who now run our universities decided that any speech they disagreed with had to be stopped...

    My how the mighty have fallen... the energetic "open-minded" young people who used to claim they'd "fight to the death" to protect the free speech rights of their opponents... turned into the bitter old people who haunt the ivory towers and have given us "speech codes".

    1. Re:Idiocy from the left, as usual... by sjames · · Score: 1

      Wow, amazing, I make a comment about the whackos on the right (and you must admit, some of them should probably seek help) and you immediately proceed to erect a whole army of strawmen to knock down.

      The Democrats I object to have problems on the other axis. That is, they are too authoritarian. I am speaking against them in this very thread. You apparently didn't notice that I favor free speech for all (even you), perhaps you were distracted by your bile boiling over.

      You truly enjoy free speech and my plan is working perfectly :-)

      As a side note, I would object to being called a heterophobe since I am hetero and do not support any program to discriminate against heteros.

  144. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ah, but the NYT has no reputation for truth or honesty among non-liberals.

    They have slanted nearly every story to the left for my entire life. You lefties have a media world full of left-leaning outlets, so you are not often challenged to read/see things from either a neutral or right-leaning perspective (and, indeed, there has been a desperate "don't watch fox" theme on the left since before the network even got going... I've been paying attention, I have a neighbor who worked at a Fox affiliate and he was getting protested by libs before the network even went live) but right-leaning people live in a left-saturated media world... we have no choice but to see what your side is writing and saying. You guys often paint a caricature of the world-views of conservatives because you do not know any serious conservatives, have not been exposed to their media, and generally get your views of them from liberals in the liberal media who edit and mis-characterize them (hint: Comedy Central comics edit EVERYTHING and take EVERYTHING out of context because they are COMICS and not neutral JOURNALISTS), but we have a very clear view of your views because we cannot avoid them; we are force-fed your views by liberals who hold those views on nearly every media outlet. The NYT lost all the credibility it had decades ago when they proudly and boldly lied to the American people about Stalin's massacres (he was a communist and the folks at the Old Grey Wench were not going to expose one of their own). They spin any story about a flawed Republican as an overdue expose' of malicious evil and any story about a flawed Democrat as an unfortunate personal tragedy. When Republicans are in power, they leak unending streams of classified info; When Democrats are in power they actively refuse to even tell their readers about leaks that have occurred. There is a good reason why every Democrat in Washington DC leaks to the NYT... they are practically an arm of the Democrat National Committee.

    You must be a murdochaphobic... and your irrational fear means you must be silenced! Nobody should invite you to speak on a campus!

    It's pretty funny, really... young people used to say things like "don't trust anybody over 30" and "rage against the machine!"... now y'all been reduced to "Rage for the machine!" and "make all the non-conformists shut up!"... You have become useful idiots... tools ... meat puppets... you stupidly support making government huge, injecting it into all aspects of life, and you will ultimately be swamped by the tsunami of absolutely unprecedented public debt that will come due in the later half of your lives. You have become cogs in the machine and you have enthusiastically done it to yourselves. You are losing your true freedoms... and that is one of the very few things you truly deserve...

  145. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

    >Also, the OP is right: it is a crybaby Murdoch piece about people unhappy that they can't hate in peace.

    Just for the sake of argument, let us assume you are right, and it is a crybaby piece. Is this a case where they can't hate in peace? If they can't hate in peace, there is something wrong with the system.

  146. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So. P2P, understandable. Malware, too.

    But why're you singling out porn? If you're talking about 'also malware', I'd put pirate sites above that - more dangerous, and actually illegal instead of just 'immoral'.

  147. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by JackieBrown · · Score: 1

    I remember the Republicans telling Todd Akin to withdraw from the race after his comments.

    Here are a few..
    http://www.politico.com/blogs/on-congress/2012/08/list-of-senators-calling-on-akin-to-quit-keeps-growing-132703.html

  148. What's the point of free speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When the only speech you want to defend is one whose only point is to demean, bully, frighten and cow someone or some group?

  149. You already have the NRA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do you insist on two groups doing the same thing?

    You don't see the NRA talking about protecting the first amendment, do you?

    Why is it that gun nuts and libertards keep whining on about how the ACLU don't support the second ammentment as if that is leaving the second all alone and unloved?

  150. Compensatory damages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a common meme in redressing ills done to others.

    Pay back MORE THAN YOU OWE.

    But you don't like that because you want a reason for your failure other than your own incompetence.

    1. Re:Compensatory damages by Rakarra · · Score: 1

      It's a common meme in redressing ills done to others.

      Pay back MORE THAN YOU OWE.

      So the white kids were found guilty of racism and this was their punishment? Because the whole point of "redressing ills" and "paying back more than you owe" is that you have to be guilty of the crime in the first place.

    2. Re:Compensatory damages by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

      Affirmative Action was valid at one point to level the playing field. It's not longer required. It also has nothing to do with "Paying back more than you owe", and those calling for its removal have no reason other than to truly level the playing field. Those calling for it to stay have more reason to keep it for failure from their own incompetence.

      --
      Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
  151. Slashdot is a close 2nd by peter303 · · Score: 1

    If you post something that slashdotters disagree with, you get modded out of readability. I give this message about 15 minutes.

    1. Re:Slashdot is a close 2nd by roc97007 · · Score: 1

      Good points are not allowed here. Someone mod this guy down!

      --
      Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  152. No CENSORSHIP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do not tolerate censorship in any form.

  153. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by T.E.D. · · Score: 1

    Freedom of speech isn't free anymore when you stop crybaby Republicans from whining

    Well then, I guess its fortunate for Freedom that no force has yet been discovered by science that can stop that.

  154. How Free Speech Died by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Universities have moved from teaching students how to think to teaching them what to think. An no dissent is allowed. Politically Correct is a millstone around the necks of all of us.

  155. funny how CORPORATE censorship by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    never gets noted
    FIRE are totally biased right wing scum; let some single solitary person say something about a Christian,they are all over it
    Let a corporation pull funding cause of a gay person, hey, its freedom of property, right ??

  156. Re:Hate speech by orgelspieler · · Score: 1

    You can't rebut crazy. Have you ever tried talking to a truther, a Holocaust-denier or a moon-landing-hoaxer? The best thing for private citizens to do is to make it as hard as possible for these whackos to be heard. Some opinions really don't need airing, and if a private community like Fordham decides they don't want to hear her batshit insane blabber, more power to them. As other posters pointed out, the College Republicans rescinded their invite BEFORE their president issued his letter. And his letter specifically DEFENDED the College Republicans' right to have their speaker of choice on campus. In typical WSJ fashion, this got turned into "the evil communist liberal university president wouldn't let this nice lady talk to some heroic, freedom-loving Republicans who desperately wanted to hear what pearls of wisdom she had for them."

  157. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by kenorland · · Score: 1

    RIGHTS like Free Speech don't go away just because you "pay rent" to somebody else for housing or utilities... That's WHY they're called RIGHTS.

    I see you are confused by the term "free speech rights". The term refers to the First Amendment, which says "Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press". That does not give you a right to speak wherever you want, because there are other constitutionally guaranteed rights, like the right to property. Restrictions on speech are usually of the form "if you don't stop speaking (misusing the network, whatever), I order you off this property and if you don't comply I have you arrested for trespassing." Whenever you can legally order people to leave, you can effectively restrict their ability to speak.

  158. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by Dragon+Bait · · Score: 1

    I'm confused, the teacher threatened your child or the PC idiot. One outcome is good, the other not.

    The teacher threatened to expel my daughter for making "racist" comments. Who knew that astronomical terms are racist.

  159. Waiting for permission to be free by roc97007 · · Score: 1

    A good discussion, but my position continues to be that free speech is not something you are granted, it's something you take. By definition.

    Example: The students in this area staged a "hug out" a couple years ago to protest the banning of public displays of affection at school. Students would greet by hugging, hold hands going to class, and so forth. Three local high schools participated. The students were in danger of getting suspended or expelled, but continued anyway. And, eventually, got the rules changed.

    And that, Ladies and Gentlemen, is how freedom works. If you're waiting to get permission to be free, you've already lost. Yes, it's hazardous. Anything worthwhile usually is.

    --
    Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
  160. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

    So. P2P, understandable. Malware, too.

    But why're you singling out porn? If you're talking about 'also malware', I'd put pirate sites above that - more dangerous, and actually illegal instead of just 'immoral'.

    Probably a public relations issue.

    I went to a private college that had a similar policy, but only for the PR with alumni to keep the funding coming in. They had a policy of "Responsible Freedom", only instead of enforcing their network access agreement, they put a K12 filter (N2H2's Bess Filter) on all computers when there were only a handful of students that had a problem, and those students actually used lab computers at times when no one else was there. The network access in ones own dorm room had an ISP-like agreement in place; so they could easily disconnect you from the network if you violated it.

    The P2P traffic did eat their bandwidth enough to put a load balancer in to favor certain kinds of traffic - like outgoing video feeds during January for the presentations made during the month, again namely for alumni. But the network did have issues and their pipe was limited - they were in a ring network and eating more bandwidth than they were purchasing (a side-effect of the network design by the ISP allowed that - one reason I prefer Cable Internet instead of DSL).

    So yeah, it's probably a PR thing.

    --
    Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
  161. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by TemporalBeing · · Score: 1

    Christian universities can kick you out for spewing progressive nonsense.

    However, those Christian universities typically don't - they usually make it a point of discussion instead bringing people in from both sides of the issue.

    --
    Truth is like the sun. You can shut it out for a time, but it ain't goin' away. - Elvis Presley (source: imdb.com)
  162. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by kenorland · · Score: 1

    Good for them; they certainly need the contact with alternative viewpoints. A technical college, on the other hand, may simply want to keep religion and politics off campus since it has nothing to do with their mission. The point is that students don't have a "free speech right" on campus, it's up to each educational institution to decide for themselves.

  163. Re:Could the summary possibly be more slanted? by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    You idiot. FIRE doesn't rate your school's 'freedom'. They rate your school's speech code.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?