dckingsfan wrote:Zonkerbl wrote:dckingsfan wrote:First, it isn't just nut jobs. They are chasing off folks like the attorney general of Illinois and the like. But you are right, Kaepernick has no more right to use the NFL as a stage than the attorney general of Illinois. But that says something.
Second, the point that he made (and rightly) was that the player was chased out of the NFL as are conservatives in higher ed. So, respectfully, I see them as more similar than not.
The problem with Kaepernick is Trump needs to shut his goddamn racist mouth. Trump is working for the government now and when he advocates for Kaepernick to be fired he is violating the Constitution.
Disinviting speakers you're not interested in has nothing to do with Kaepernick. At all.
Well, that is a very salient point - using the bully pulpit to attack individuals is way over the like.
Disinviting speakers vs. shutting down their ability to speak though... not sure I am with you on that one. And prejudicial hiring practices - that is most definitely a problem.
So consider this hypothetical. The local conservative troll group at your school invites a hate speaker to spread hate at your school. Your school has a policy against hate speech and a number of targets of that hate speech protest against giving the speaker of hate an official platform at your school to spread that hate. It is entirely legitimate for the school to consider whether allowing the speaker would be an egregious violation of their policy against broadcasting hate speech. In some cases they may conclude in favor of the speaker, in other cases they will choose to disinvite the speaker. If you never disinvite any speakers what is the point of having the policy in the first place? Similarly I imagine if a liberal student group at University of Dayton, my Jesuit alma mater, invited a speaker to advocate for Planned Parenthood, there would be an outcry from the student population and the University would have to think seriously about whether to allow this person to speak. To disallow Universities from enforcing their mission, pro-Christianity or pro-tolerance, whatever it is, would be a violation of the University's "first amendment rights," so to speak.
No, I don't think a school that advertises itself as a safe space for students who belong to a persecuted minority should be forced to allow Milo Imadouchepolous to spread his message of self-hatred there. That's a violation of the student's trust and the university's right to choose its curriculum consistently with its founder's wishes.














