¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½

Table of Contents

Thomas Jefferson Center Announces 2014 ā€˜Muzzleā€™ Awards

Thomas Jeffersonā€™s birthday is on Sunday, and that means itā€™s time for the ā€œā€ awards, granted by the . The TJ Center is a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization in Charlottesville, Virginia, dedicated to protecting free speech, and every year it highlights especially egregious examples of government censorship. Full disclosure: I had the pleasure of working for the TJ Center before I came to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, and reviewing nominees for the Muzzle awards ranks up at the topā€”with reading ā€”of experiences that most reaffirmed my career choice.

Torch readers wonā€™t be surprised to see a few FIREcases on  The TJ Center recognized the Kansas Board of Regents for its new policy on the ā€œimproper use of social mediaā€ by faculty members, which FIRE and other free speech advocates have criticized as putting academic freedom and free speech at risk. As the TJ Center notes, the Board has created a workgroup to review the policy (and FIREgave the workgroupā€™s draft a positive review on The Torch). But the Board refused to suspend its current, overbroad and vague policy during review, leaving faculty at Kansasā€™ public colleges and universities with insufficient guidance as to what they may or may not be able to say on social media.

The TJ Center also awarded a Muzzle to Modesto Junior College (MJC) for stopping student Robert Van Tuinen from handing out copies of the Constitution last Constitution Day. As shown on a recorded by Van Tuinen, a security officer and an administrative specialist told Van Tuinen that he could hand out literature only in the collegeā€™s tiny ā€œfree speech areaā€ and only after scheduling his activities through the Student Development office. Thankfully, Van Tuinen came to FIREfor help and, represented by the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine, filed a federal lawsuit against MJC. In March, the parties settled the case, and MJC agreed to pay $50,000 and to allow free expression in all ā€œareas generally available to students and the community.ā€

Of course, lots of state actors outside the realm of higher education commit serious First Amendment violations as well. The seven other honorees include crowd favorites like the , which tried to censor T-shirts that read, ā€œThe NSA: The only part of the government that .ā€

Read the full list of winners on the TJ Centerā€™s !

Recent Articles

FIREā€™s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share