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果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Robert Shibley: UNC Doesn鈥檛 Need Another Restriction on Speech
FIRE Executive Director Robert Shibley took to (Raleigh, North Carolina) yesterday to protest the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill鈥檚 consideration of a , which allows users to share anonymous comments with those geographically close to them. As we鈥檝e argued on The Torch before, counter-speech鈥攏ot censorship鈥攊s the best answer to messages that students and faculty may consider wrong or offensive. In yesterday鈥檚 article, Robert reminds UNC-Chapel Hill that it should know better, particularly in light of its history.
He writes:
In the summer of 1963, the North Carolina legislature passed a law banning 鈥渒nown members鈥 of the Communist Party from speaking on UNC campuses. The organized opposition to this 鈥渟peaker ban鈥 to keep politically unpopular and purportedly harmful speech off campus is a celebrated time in the history of the UNC system. It cemented the legacy of longtime system President Bill Friday and even rates a campus monument today.
Now, though, the university has found another target: users of the ever-controversial app Yik Yak. Apparently forgetting that the state鈥檚 1963 ban was struck down by a federal court just five years later, administrators are contemplating blocking network access to the app because, in UNC Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Winston Crisp鈥檚 opinion, 鈥渋t adds little to no value to [the] community and creates more problems for [UNC] students than it will ever be worth.鈥
Luckily for students at UNC-Chapel Hill and public universities everywhere, Crisp cannot simply eliminate speech he personally thinks isn鈥檛 valuable.
for a defense of anonymous speech as a tool for social change and more on why UNC-Chapel Hill should reject censorship.
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