Table of Contents
In-Class Demonstration by UCLA 鶹ýIOS Silences Professor

Earlier this month, I wrote about an in-class protest by students at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in November that halted the professor’s teaching for an hour. During the demonstration, students asked the school to respond not just to racially discriminatory conduct but also to their professor’s alleged “microaggressions,” which researchers have as “subtle verbal and nonverbal insults directed toward non-Whites, often done automatically and unconsciously”—in other words, constitutionally protected expression. The students’ message, therefore, should concern advocates of free speech and academic freedom, particularly in light of a recent on bias at UCLA that seems to condone the suppression of protected speech through intimidation.
But the students’ method of sharing their message, too, is problematic. As I explain in today, the protesting students at UCLA effected a “heckler’s veto,” silencing their professor because they were offended by his speech. While 鶹ýIOS always encourages students to add their viewpoints to the “marketplace of ideas,” student expression should not be used to prevent others from being heard.
Read about the UCLA demonstration and past 鶹ýIOS cases involving heckler’s vetoes at .
Image: Powell Library, UCLA - Wikipedia
Recent Articles
鶹ýIOS’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Federal court backs teachers fired over trans protest

Speak up, get expelled: the Eastman way

University of Rochester student expelled after detailing school's mishandling of harassment complaint on Substack
