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Trinity College professorās ālet them fucking dieā posts are protected speech; continued investigation unwarranted
On June 16, Trinity College professor , via his personal Facebook page, an anonymous writerās urging oppressed minorities to ādo nothingā to help if they encountered people āwho practice bigotryā in danger. The piece cited the actions of Crystal Griner, a āqueer black womanā and member of the U.S. Capitol Police, in saving the life of Rep. Steve Scalise, āone of the most anti-LGBTQ politicians in Washington,ā after Scalise was shot and severely wounded by a gunman at a congressional baseball practice on June 14. The Medium essay concluded that the proper response to ābigotsā in danger was to ālet them fucking dieā instead of coming to their aid. Williamsā Facebook post added no commentary ā supportive or critical ā to the Medium post.
Two days later, news unfolded that police in Seattle had shot and killed a black mother armed with a knife. Williams posted on Facebook again, borrowing the ālet them fucking dieā refrain from the Medium essay to call on readers to āconfrontā white people who direct violence at āoppressed people,ā and āput an end to ā¦ their white supremacy system.ā
This time, Williamsā posts were consolidated and shared by media outlets them as endorsing āthe idea that first responders to last weekās congressional shooting should have let the victims āfucking dieā because they are whiteā and that Rep. Scalise ā.ā
The ensuing controversy led Trinity College to temporarily close its campus, citing threats sparked by the controversy. FIREcondemned this development, the latest in a reprehensible string of incidents in which professors have been the target of violent threats. As my colleague Will Creeley wrote on June 23, ā[t]hreatening violence against those who hold opinions different from oneās own is a particularly evil form of censorship.ā
First Amendment protects provocative, offensive, even violent speech
Professor Williams has argued ā credibly, given that they reference violence against oppressed groups ā that his posts were in response to a police shooting in Seattle, not the attack on Rep. Scalise. But even assuming Williamsā posts were, as critics have characterized them, endorsements of violence against white people, they do not fall outside the universe of speech protected by the First Amendment. Our courts have recognized that protecting political speech means protecting speech which can be provocative, offensive, and even imbued with the rhetoric of violence. Such speech can only be limited where it is likely to incite imminent violence or expresses a sincere intent to act violently.
Trinity College is, of course, not a public institution. The collegeās , however, recognizes that ā[f]ree inquiry and free expression are essentialā to its goals. Additionally, Connecticut law prohibits private employers from terminating employees in response to speech protected by the First Amendment ā a law that to restrain private employers in Connecticut.
Trinity College could have quickly concluded that Williamsā posts were protected speech and issued a full-throated defense of its studentsā and faculty membersā rights to engage in provocative, even offensive, speech, while simultaneously condemning and disagreeing with Williamsā views. Instead, the college announced it would undertake a āā of Williamsā expressed views to determine whether they conflict with college policy, and ordered him to take a in the meantime.
Punishment-by-process
Administrators at institutions facing a tidal wave of sudden criticism are often tempted to announce an āinvestigationā into whatever caused the flood of emails, phone calls, and media inquiries. Itās a solution they believe to be within their control (even if it isnāt, when you consider the public reaction or judicial review). If administrators are either unfamiliar with how to cobble together and verbalize a defense of free speech or academic freedom, or are unsure of the full spectrum of facts, a knee-jerk investigation feels like a solution.
But this solution is temporary at best, and investigations can have chilling effects: Publicly-announced investigations are intended to signal that something punishable has likely occurred and that it merits close scrutiny by authorities. Investigations that proceed beyond a cursory review may mean interviews, lawyers, interrogations, and other coercive elements that amount to punishment-by-process. In other words, a penalty is borne even if the target is ultimately exonerated.
We explained as much in our July 3 letter to Trinity Collegeās president, and called upon Trinity to abandon its āreviewā into clearly protected speech. Unfortunately, Trinityās response was underwhelming. While Trinity president Joanne Berger-Sweeney said she shares an āappreciationā for ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ās concerns, she pushed back, responding that the review she commissioned will move forward and āinclude thoughtful consideration of issues pertaining to academic freedom (with the input of Trinityās faculty committee on academic freedom), as well as other college policies pertaining to the conduct of employees.ā
Thatās a nice sentiment, but maintenance of an investigation when the speech is clearly protected by both law and policy undermines Trinityās institutional credibility. An investigation where the only lawful outcome is to take no action can serve no purpose but to attempt to silence inconvenient voices. That is not in keeping with Trinityās mission and it is not an outcome FIREwill ignore.
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