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FIREand Regents Demand University of California Adopt Unconstitutional Policy

Yesterday, the University of California Board of Regents held an open meeting allowing students, faculty, members of the UC community, and other interested parties to share their thoughts on UC鈥檚 proposed .

The statement came about after the UC Regents the . Free speech advocates pointed out that a public university鈥檚 adoption of this definition as policy would raise serious First Amendment concerns and chill protected speech, including criticism of Israel鈥檚 government.

Earlier this week, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 Will Creeley explained that while the Statement of Principles Against Intolerance doesn鈥檛 include the State Department鈥檚 definition of anti-Semitism, it still impermissibly chills speech by telling students that certain viewpoints don鈥檛 belong at their university, encouraging them to report such views, and promising a 鈥減rompt鈥 and 鈥渆ffective鈥 institutional response. Will yesterday that the policy, if implemented, would create 鈥渁 kind of race to the bottom, sooner or later, by public universities punishing students or faculty for a particular viewpoint."

Given the First Amendment concerns over both proposed policies, that this open meeting was held on Constitution Day was fitting. Many speakers at yesterday鈥檚 meeting agreed that the new proposed policy was a bad idea鈥攂ut, unfortunately, for a different reason: they want UC to draft a policy that is even more hostile to speech.

The suggestions put forth and the demands made during the meeting were alarming. Despite having only one minute to share their thoughts, plenty of speakers managed to find time to demand that UC violate its students鈥 speech rights and ignore its obligations under the First Amendment. (Note: The following may include minor transcription errors.)

Comments from the UC Campus Community

Gary Fouse, an adjunct at UC Irvine, claimed that UC鈥檚 current proposed statement against intolerance is 鈥渦seless鈥 without the incorporation of the State Department鈥檚 definition of anti-Semitism:

The Israeli-Palestinian debate has led to an atmosphere where many Jewish students who support Israel are often spending their college years in a climate of intimidation, not just from Pro-Palestinian students but in many cases from professors in the classroom. The problem is not neo-Nazis or skinheads. Rather, it is the pro-Palestinian lobby such as the FIREfor Justice in Palestine, BDS promoters and other faculty allies. Each year these groups invite speakers to campus, some of whom cross the line from legitimate criticism of Israel to attacking Jews as people.

But it鈥檚 not up to public university officials to decide what criticism of a foreign government is legitimate or forbidden, and, in turn, to demand everyone at the university abide by their perceptions of 鈥渓egitimate criticism.鈥 The idea of a public institution doing so should trouble anyone who believes in the fundamental importance of the right to dissent. In fact, President Obama made similar arguments this week at a town hall meeting when he said 鈥淚 don鈥檛 agree that you, when you become students at colleges, have to be coddled and protected from different points of view,鈥 and that silencing arguments we oppose is 鈥渘ot the way we learn.鈥

Another commenter, a UC Berkeley alum, pointed out the absurdity of Fouse鈥檚 argument:

When I was a student at Berkeley, it was criticizing the US government that wasn鈥檛 permitted. In fact, we had to have a free speech movement in 1964 in order to have any political speech on campus. So now apparently criticizing the Israeli government is going to be banned.

As this commenter suggested, it鈥檚 noteworthy that students in the UC system have historically fought especially hard for their First Amendment rights鈥攔ights that should not be so easily set aside.

A group of UC students made a joint statement together saying that the State Department definition of anti-Semitism is 鈥渢he only existing definition that is capable of addressing the nuanced hatred that we experienced on our campuses today.鈥 If UC follows the advice of these speakers and a majority of those present at this meeting, it will be adopting a deeply troubling policy.

Another worrisome trend in this meeting was the use of criminal or violent acts as examples of why this policy is needed. Several commenters brought up examples of vandalism, including swastikas drawn on fraternity houses and violence against Jewish students, to justify the adoption of the State Department鈥檚 definition. But these actions are criminal鈥攖hey鈥檙e already illegal. Trying to target such acts through this new policy is not only superfluous, but would implicate constitutionally protected political speech in the process.

The Regents Respond

Comments from the Regents themselves were hardly any better.

While Regent John Perez鈥檚 acknowledged that the State Department鈥檚 definition could potentially limit academic freedom, that was one of the few displays of sound judgment.

The most worrying statements came from Regent Richard C. Blum, whose wife is United States Senator Dianne Feinstein. Blum said earlier in the meeting that 鈥渨e鈥檝e been too tolerant, too patient about all this for too long,鈥 and continued:

I should add that over the weekend my wife, your senior Senator, and I talked about this issue at length. She wants to stay out of the conversation publicly but if we do not do the right thing she will engage publicly and is prepared to be critical of this university if we don鈥檛 have the kind of not only statement but penalties for those who commit what you can call them crimes, call them whatever you want. FIREthat do the things that have been cited here today probably ought to have a dismissal or a suspension from school. I don鈥檛 know how many of you feel strongly that way but my wife does and so do I.

Yes, a UC Regent flatly threatened the university with political consequences if it failed to craft a 鈥渢olerance鈥 policy that would punish鈥攁nd even expel鈥攊ts violators.

The consequences of this suggestion are grave: If UC adopts the State Department definition of anti-Semitism (or any policy banning criticism or intolerance), and accedes to Blum鈥檚 demands, students could potentially face expulsion for any language a person subjectively believes is 鈥渋ntolerant.鈥

Regent Hadi Makarechian later echoed Blum鈥檚 demands, stating:

I just wanted to say that I agree with Regent Blum, that principles are great, rejection of actions are great, but we need to address the punishment. If we don鈥檛 have punishment we鈥檙e just putting a lot of paper together. We鈥檙e just stating a lot of stuff on pieces of paper.

The board concluded the meeting by saying there was more work to be done, and announcing the formation of a working group, led by Regent Eddie Island. Island said he would compose a group of university stakeholders who would work together to craft a policy that addressed concerns about both intolerance and freedom of speech.

We at FIREbelieve robust protections for freedom of speech accomplish both goals by providing a platform to debate the merits (or lack thereof) of intolerance in the marketplace of ideas.

Hopefully this working group recognizes that more speech and the hard work of convincing someone they鈥檙e wrong are the only real, effective remedies against intolerance. UC students and faculty who value free speech and academic freedom should watch these developments very closely.

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