Somali Sheriff Says Now That We've Been Hired, It Means We're Working for...
Our Gift to You This Holiday Season
As Operations Move to Columbus, Officials Vow Not to Work With ICE
Scott Adams Thanks Perma-TDS Dems for Helping Perpetuate Trump's 'Unmatched Political Skil...
Minnesota AG Keith Ellison Posts Cringe-Inducing 'Scam Stopper Showdown' Video
Photographer Critiques Vanity Fair's Photos of Trump Administration Officials
City of St. Paul Tells ICE to Cease and Desist Using City Parking...
Outrageous Stalking of ICE Ends with Epic Warning: Follow Us Again and You're...
JFK's Unknown Niece Vows to Remove Trump's Name From Building With a Pickaxe
Tara Palmeri Asks If It’s a Coincidence Trump’s DOJ Released the Epstein Photos...
Outgoing DC Police Chief Has Meltdown and a Biblical Message for the Haters
Heartbreaking Cat Theft: Amazon Delivery Man Snatches Piper by the Scruff, Leaves Family...
Sen. Van Hollen Vows to End Trump's Desecration (Then Maybe Rename It the...
When Men Run for Seats Instead of Wars: A Lament for Lost Chivalry
Bernie Sanders: The Grinch Who Blocked a Pediatric Cancer Bill for Political Leverage

Writer who says protesters embrace free speech must have missed 'No Media Safe Space' signs

The fact that this morning’s edition of The Washington Post even exists is a tribute to the nation’s commitment to protecting freedom of the press, and yet University of Pennsylvania professor Shaun R. Harper has published an op-ed claiming that campus protests against racism “aren’t silencing anyone.”

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/eva_frangou/status/707964557881425920

Harper, who is executive director of the Center for the Study of Race and Equity in Education, asks, “Where were the critics who now see free speech under siege at universities when people of color were being silenced?”

“Student activists are not attempting to shut down conversations at their universities,” he writes. “In fact, it is the exact opposite — they aim to raise the consciousness of white professors, administrators, campus police officers and peers. They want more dialogue, not less.”

Really? Was it so long ago that this happened among the precious flowers at the University of Missouri?

That student protest was about race, but black “allies” like Melissa Click were so insistent that the sanctity of the protest not be tainted by media coverage that she yelled at a student reporter that he couldn’t be there, and then went in search of “muscle” to have him physically removed when he insisted on exercising his right to cover the event. Turns out those hand-drawn “No Media Safe Space” signs weren’t legally binding.

Advertisement

No, protesters who point out campus racism aren’t silencing anyone — but they’re trying their best and would if they could.

Another fine example of black protesters wanting “more dialogue, not less” is the recent demand by students at Oberlin that the school establish racially segregated, black-only “safe spaces” across the campus. Students of color at Brown also recently posted their own list of demands online, to which a white “ally” amended, “Please, white people, do not comment or edit this document, or make your own demands of students of color. This is not our space and we are not entitled to inclusion or explanations.”

https://twitter.com/Dont_be_a_dweeb/status/707965966446108672

Might this tweeter be referring to Christina Sommers being introduced by students announcing the establishment of a “safe space” where an alternative speaker would be available? Or Ben Shapiro’s recent speech at California State University which was canceled but which he delivered anyway, despite protesters blocking the doors to the auditorium and setting off the fire alarm during his presentation? The hunger for dialogue is clear.

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/slingwingpilot/status/707967638492876800

* * *

Related:

‘Unexpected’! University of Missouri discovers that being Social Justice Central can be bad for biz

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement