果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Upon reading 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 press release on Johns Hopkins University鈥檚 shameful viewpoint discrimination against The Carrollton Record (TCR), a conservative student newspaper, Annie Turner of Maryland e-mailed JHU President William Brody asking him to reverse the college鈥檚 decision. She received the following response from JHU spokesman Dennis O鈥橲hea, here analyzed for your reading pleasure.

Dear Ms. Turner,
 
Thanks for your message below to President Brody. We appreciate your thoughts and I am pleased to respond on his behalf.
 
Please be assured that Johns Hopkins University fully supports free speech on campus, including the expression of viewpoints, popular or otherwise, contained in student publications.

This has the merit of being very polite, a skill that apparently escapes some college presidents. I鈥檓 talking here about President Timothy Sullivan of the College of William and Mary, who famously told one e-mailer: 鈥淪ome fool has sent me an e-mail and signed your name to it.鈥 That said, these are the usual empty platitudes administrators use right before they try to explain away why their illiberal behavior was okay in this case.

There never was any order barring the Carrollton Record from campus. The editors have been and remain free to distribute the newspaper (including the May issue) at a number of regular distribution sites on campus. Among these are student gathering areas such as the library, the athletic center and Levering Hall.

Turner didn鈥檛 claim in her e-mail that there was an order barring the Carrollton Record from campus, which indicates that this has to be a form letter. That isn鈥檛 unusual, but it does raise questions later, as you鈥檒l see. Regarding the distribution issue, neither FIREnor the paper ever said that TCR couldn鈥檛 distribute the paper anywhere on campus. What we said is that TCR was and apparently still is forbidden to distribute in the dormitories, unlike other newspapers and advertising handbills. JHU doesn鈥檛 deny this; in fact, it admits it in the next paragraph.

Copies of the May issue were removed from student residence halls and returned to the editors. This was done pursuant to a long-standing policy requiring that the Office of Residential Life must approve materials before they are distributed in residence halls. The intent of the policy is to maintain a reasonably clutter-free environment in the common areas of the residence halls.

This is wrong in so many ways. First of all, the university is admitting that it had people go around confiscating copies of the paper out of multiple dorms, which seems odd even from a 鈥渃lutter鈥 based principle鈥攚ouldn鈥檛 it be more logical just to tell them not to put the papers in the dorms next time?
 
Second, this statement would appear to make the Office of Residential Life the equivalent to the Ministry of Information in Orwell鈥檚 1984. We know that other newspapers are distributed in the dorms鈥take a look at this picture鈥攁nd JHU is presumably telling us in the above paragraph that the Hopkins Donkey is read by administrators before they allow it to be placed in the dorms. This is called prior review, and is hideously unconstitutional if the government does it. And for good reason鈥攑rior review is invariably a feature of the most brutal and repressive regimes in the world. But here JHU cheerfully assures us that The Hopkins Donkey and anything else placed in the dorms has been as thoroughly vetted as Pravda. This is not good news.
 
But wait鈥攖ake another look at this picture. What are the newspapers sitting on? Are they strewn about willy-nilly? Do they cover the floor and walls? Nope, they鈥檙e on a newspaper rack. That鈥檚 right, an object designed to distribute newspapers, and it鈥檚 located right in a dorm. So much for that 鈥渃lutter鈥 argument.

I hope this explanation has been helpful. Thank you again for writing.
 
Best regards,
 
Dennis O'Shea

As 鈥渉elpfulness鈥 goes, this explanation is lacking. What about the newspaper theft? No mention. Turner did not specifically ask about it, but you鈥檇 think this form letter would have some explanation in it of the university鈥檚 reaction (or lack thereof). Further, there鈥檚 no explanation of why it is apparently fine to have The Hopkins Donkey and The JHU Gazette in the dorms, along with numerous ads for a pizza joint, but not TCR. So this response, while calculated to assuage angry correspondents, really does nothing to address Turner鈥檚 concerns or those of 果冻传媒app官方. Finally, O鈥橲hea conveniently forgot to mention one of the most outrageous facts of the case, which is that TCR members are still facing charges of harassment simply for publishing an article. Maybe this sort of campus spin is no surprise any more, but every time it happens it鈥檚 still disappointing.

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share