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Lecturer鈥檚 anti-police tweet leads to legislative pressure on Auburn University, which says it is exploring 'options'
At Auburn University, an incoming lecturer鈥檚 tweets criticizing police officers has sparked calls for his termination, including from a state legislator. Today, in light of the university鈥檚 statements that its 鈥渙fficials鈥 were reviewing 鈥渙ptions鈥 for responding to the lecturer鈥檚 鈥淸h]ate speech,鈥 FIREwrote to Auburn University explaining that the First Amendment, Alabama state law, and Auburn鈥檚 own policies protect the lecturer鈥檚 speech.
In July, Jesse Goldberg 鈥 a lecturer hired last spring to teach four courses at Auburn this coming fall 鈥 responded to a that condemned the detention of a protester by plainclothes NYPD officers:
A conservative news outlet covering the state of Alabama wrote about Goldberg鈥檚 tweet, as well as a in which Goldberg elaborated on his view, and about Goldberg鈥檚 views on police abolition. That quickly caught the eye of Donald Trump, Jr., who criticized Goldberg:
This is what鈥檚 happening on college campuses around our country. The liberal, anti-American-values egg heads already took over the Ivy League. Now they鈥檙e gunning for middle America.
Auburn professor: 'F*** every single cop' - Yellowhammer News
鈥 Donald Trump Jr. (@DonaldJTrumpJr)
Rep. Brett Easterbook, a state legislator who sits on the state house鈥檚 education committee, went beyond Trump鈥檚 criticism, calling for Auburn to terminate Goldberg immediately. In the comments to his Facebook post, Easterbrook pledged that Goldberg would be 鈥渄ealt with at the next ALGOP meeting,鈥 referring to the Alabama Republican Party, if he did not resign, and that the 鈥渟tage is already set.鈥
In response to media inquiries, Auburn Goldberg鈥檚 comments as 鈥淸h]ate speech鈥 that was 鈥渋nexcusable and completely counter to Auburn values鈥 and shared that its 鈥渙fficials鈥 were 鈥渃onsidering options available to the university.鈥
In , Auburn repeated that 鈥渙fficials鈥 were continuing to 鈥渁ssess the situation.鈥 Auburn opined that higher education 鈥渋s built upon the premise of the free expression of ideas and academic dialogue, but Auburn has not and will never support views that exclude or disrespect others, including hateful speech that degrades law enforcement professionals.鈥 This new statement pointedly noted that 鈥淢r. Goldberg鈥濃攚ho holds a 鈥攚as 鈥渉ired on a temporary, non-tenure-track assignment.鈥
That鈥檚 an ominous statement that strongly implies that Auburn will terminate, discipline, or decline to renew the contracts of faculty members whose speech catches the attention of off-campus critics or state legislators.
As our letter to Auburn today explains, it also sets Auburn on a collision course with the law.
At public universities anywhere in the country, faculty members have a First Amendment right to speak on matters of public concern, even if others find that expression deeply offensive. At Alabama institutions, they also enjoy a right under to 鈥渢ake positions on public controversies,鈥 and it is not the 鈥渞ole鈥 of the institution to suppress 鈥渦nwelcome, disagreeable, or offensive鈥 ideas and opinions. And at Auburn in particular (which has earned a 鈥済reen light鈥 rating from 果冻传媒app官方), university grants faculty the right to 鈥渟peak or write on matters of public interest鈥 without 鈥渋nstitutional censorship or discipline.鈥
Advocating for the abolition of police and criticizing police offices are protected by the First Amendment. Indeed, one of the principal Supreme Court cases applying the First Amendment in the university context held that a student newspaper鈥檚 cartoon depicting a police officer sexually assaulting the Statue of Liberty was, however contrary to campus 鈥渃onventions of decency,鈥 protected speech.
As the Supreme Court explained in ruling that the First Amendment protected the right to wear a jacket emblazoned with the words 鈥Fuck the Draft鈥 in the hallway of a courthouse (a place not exactly known for its tolerance of colorful expression), government officials can鈥檛 be trusted to discern between what words are or are not too offensive to allow. The choice to use the most abrasive language may convey the speaker鈥檚 鈥渆motive鈥 purpose 鈥 a value that government officials simply cannot regulate.
Auburn鈥檚 initial statement that Goldberg鈥檚 tweet amounted to 鈥淸h]ate speech鈥 is also a reminder that if 鈥渉ate speech鈥 were a category of unprotected speech (it is not), it would almost certainly be repurposed to suppress criticism of the authorities. That, for example, is what happened when police in Connecticut discovered a century-old law prohibiting discriminatory advertisements and repurposed it to arrest people who criticized white police officers.
Auburn 鈥 which has earned a green light rating in 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Spotlight Database by working to ensure that its policies are consistent with the First Amendment 鈥 should take a cue from former Auburn Police Chief Paul Register, now serving as the city鈥檚 Public Safety Director, who to Goldberg鈥檚 comments:
This person is certainly entitled to his opinion; his comments don鈥檛 represent the 鈥淎uburn Community鈥 that I know or hear from daily. It will not phase [sic] the professional staff we have here; they will protect him just as they do everyone else.
If former Auburn police can recognize the importance of protecting the First Amendment rights of their critics, we hope the administration of Auburn University can do the same.
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