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A problem predicted: recent calls for censorship invoke unconstitutional definition of anti-Semitism
FIRE has long predicted that use of the will lead to calls for campus censorship, due to the definition鈥檚 unconstitutional overbreadth and vagueness when used to determine whether speech should be protected. FIREmost recently opposed the definition鈥檚 use when the Department of Education Office for Civil Rights used the definition as support a 2011 investigation into alleged anti-Semitism at Rutgers University last fall. As FIREpredicted, the definition is now cropping up throughout the country in support of demands to strip students and faculties of their First Amendment rights. (The U.S. Department of Education states that it 鈥渉as not adopted any formal definition of anti-Semitism,鈥 but the Department鈥檚 Office for Civil Rights has used it nevertheless.)
In an almost literary turn of situational irony, Frances Edwards, director of the Masters of Public Administration program at San Jos茅 State University, referenced the definition while taking steps to oppose the presentation of a lecture titled 鈥淲e Will Not Be Silenced: The Academic Repression of Israel鈥檚 Critics.鈥 , Edwards invoked the specter of civil rights claims against the university to pressure the lecture鈥檚 organizers to create a more 鈥渂alanced鈥 presentation, explicitly referencing OCR鈥檚 reopening of the investigation of Rutgers University, which invoked the State Department鈥檚 definition.
Edwards isn鈥檛 alone in using the definition to support threats of punishment for constitutionally-protected expression. The Zionist Organization of America 鈥 which filed and appealed the Rutgers decision from OCR 鈥 that the University of Michigan issue a 鈥渟tronger response to comparisons of Israelis to Nazis鈥 and 鈥渓abel those comparisons as anti-Semitic, as the U.S. government does in its working definition of anti-Semitism, and publicly condemn them.鈥 (ZOA hyperlinked the words 鈥渨orking definition of anti-Semitism鈥 to the State Department鈥檚 definition.) ZOA issued this demand after admitting that the president of the University of Michigan had publicly apologized when a lecturer compared Benjamin Netanyahu, the Prime Minister of Israel, to Adolf Hitler. ZOA did not specify what is required for a 鈥渟tronger response鈥 beyond the apology of a university鈥檚 president.
And the definition continues to appear in calls for campus censorship. 果冻传媒app官方, for instance, have filed a claim with OCR because they perceive a vigil that jointly commemorates the deaths of the eleven killed last October at Pittsburgh鈥檚 Tree of Life Synagogue with three Gaza children who were killed by an Israeli missile strike as an anti-Semitic act that runs afoul of the 鈥渄efinition of anti-Semitism that was recently adopted by the DOE.鈥 Also last fall, Rep. Brad Sherman of California, Gene Block, the Chancellor of the University of California, Los Angeles, to encourage Block to prevent FIREfor Justice in Palestine from hosting a conference on the UCLA campus. Sherman alleged that the national SJP website might run afoul of the State Department definition. Fortunately, Chancellor Block rebuffed this attempt to silence discussion of Palestine, though history demonstrates that not all administrators stand up to political pressure.
FIRE will continue to keep track of troubling uses of this definition and advocate instead that universities heed the wisdom of Justice Louis Brandeis. In Whitney v. California (1926), Brandeis wrote, 鈥淚f there be time to expose through discussion the falsehood and fallacies, to avert the evil by the processes of education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.鈥 FIREbelieves there is nowhere better than a university for these 鈥減rocesses of education鈥 to fully play out.
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