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Student at IU Attempts to Censor Fellow FIREby Vandalizing Pro-Life Display

FIRE often exposes how colleges censor students鈥攂ut last week, it was a student at Indiana University who decided to engage in some vigilante censorship by .

According to , new student organization FIREfor Life at IU intended to have a peaceful demonstration on campus as part of an organized protest dubbed the 鈥淧lanned Parenthood Project.鈥 The trouble reportedly began when a student approached the demonstration, removed wooden crosses meant to represent the number of abortions performed daily by Planned Parenthood from the ground, and threw them into a trash can. (The student report includes a photo of this.)

Unfortunately, FIREsees incidents like this far too often. A pro-life display at at DePaul University was vandalized in January; one at Western Kentucky University was vandalized in 2012; another one was destroyed at Clarion University in 2011. Even one of 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 2013 interns experienced this form of censorship at Dartmouth College when his pro-life display was run over by a car ironically sporting a 鈥渢olerance鈥 bumper sticker.

And it鈥檚 not just pro-life students that are victimized by vandalism. In 2011, a professor at Sam Houston State University took a box cutter to a 鈥渇ree speech wall鈥 meant to teach students about their First Amendment Rights, and physically removed an anti-Obama comment.

FIRE Senior Vice President Robert Shibley shares some advice for students considering such vandalism in a 2012  piece:

Here鈥檚 a First Amendment pro tip: vandalism is illegal no matter what reason you think you have. Some people think you have the right to vandalize offensive speech or 鈥渉ate speech.鈥 You don鈥檛.

In talking about his book , FIREPresident Greg Lukianoff often expresses dismay that students are learning from colleges that censorship is not only acceptable but that it鈥檚 what right-thinking people should do. Unfortunately, this story provides evidence of that as well. In a  taken by the student group, another student鈥攁lthough not seen engaging in vandalism鈥攔eveals his desire for censorship, stating, 鈥淚鈥檓 saying that I鈥檓 acknowledging that I鈥檓 in conflict with you and that a lot of people are in conflict with you, and that if we can, if we are ever strong enough, we are going to stop you from doing this shit,鈥 meaning the pro-life protest. The First Amendment protects this student鈥檚 right to express the desire to censor others. But the fact that a student on an American college campus would be so hostile to the mere expression of different opinions is a sign that the message of how a free society works is not getting through to everyone.

Universities are meant to be a marketplace of ideas. Everyone loses when ideas are censored. While speaking out against a message you do not agree with is protected speech, vandalism is not. So, when faced with a message you don鈥檛 agree with, instead of vandalizing or demanding censorship, fight back by using your free speech to convince others that your opinion is right.

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