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Spokane Newspaper Denounces WSU Censorship
Mere hours after FIREwent public in defense of Washington State University student Chris Lee鈥檚 free speech rights, the newspaper most devoted to covering Washington State University wholeheartedly endorsed 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 position in a powerful editorial.
The editorial is even sweeter given that the paper in question, the Spokane Spokesman-Review, was responsible for running a written last week without even consulting 果冻传媒app官方. But in 鈥淩awlins wrong on free speech,鈥 the Spokesman-Review editorial board correctly writes:
In a college setting, students should be encouraged to explore and to push boundaries, to test ideas and to challenge norms. By caving in to the protesters, Rawlins followed the footsteps of Stephen Jordan, who as Eastern Washington University president this spring tried, on thin pretext, to block controversial Colorado professor Ward Churchill from speaking on campus before relenting. EWU survived Churchill. WSU will outlast playwright Lee. Rather than encourage what FIREcalls 鈥渢he heckler鈥檚 veto,鈥 Rawlins should promote a variety of ideas鈥攁nd order security guards to evict misbehaving playgoers at all times.
Unfortunately, there are some details wrong in the Spokesman-Review editorial鈥攆or instance, it misleadingly calls FIRE鈥渁 watchdog organization involved in conservative campus issues.鈥 I鈥檒l admit I鈥檓 not sure what defending a play making fun of The Passion of the Christ has to do with conservatism鈥攎uch less our cases at Seminole Community College, the University of New Mexico, or the University of New Hampshire, just to name a few. While we certainly defend conservatives, many of our cases also involve liberal students鈥攐r, like the one at UNH and, I would argue, this one, defy political categories altogether.
Even so, the is definitely worth reading.
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