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Kirkwood Community College parts ways with āantifaā professor, raising First Amendment concerns

Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
On Friday afternoon, Iowaās Kirkwood Community College issued an internally-inconsistent announcing āour decision to removeā Jeff Klinzman, an adjunct faculty member, from the classroom in order to avoid the āpotential impact on our learning environment.ā Yesterday, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS wrote to Kirkwoodās leadership to explain why its constructive termination of Klinzman ā which Kirkwood characterized as a āresignationā ā is contrary to its obligations under the First Amendment.
The āimpactā on Kirkwoodās educational environment and concerns for the safety of students apparently spring not from Klinzmanās views, but from the reactions of others to them. The college has been on the receiving end of substantial criticism from members of the public, some of it undoubtedly raising credible safety concerns: One encouraged the college to tell Klinzman āto get life insurance this week,ā and another posted a photo of his house in response to a user who said he ālook[s] forward to meetingā Klinzman. The furor stems from several Facebook comments made by Klinzman ā including one from seven years ago ā and his affirmation to a local television station that he is antifascist (āantifaā).
Earlier this summer, President Trump tweeted:
Consideration is being given to declaring ANTIFA, the gutless Radical Left Wack Jobs who go around hitting (only non-fighters) people over the heads with baseball bats, a major Organization of Terror (along with MS-13 & others). Would make it easier for police to do their job!
ā Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump)
On Facebook, Professor Jeff Klinzman commented on a screenshot of that tweet, which had been shared in an āIowa Antifaā group:

That response of Josh Scheinblum, chief investigative reporter for Cedar Rapidsā ABC-affiliate KCRG, who also found a 2012 Facebook post in which Klinzman shared a Rolling Stone story about LGBT issues in then-Rep. Michele Bachmannās district, adding:

When Scheinblum reached out to Klinzman for comment, Klinzman responded: āI affirm that I am āantifaā.ā The response is ambiguous, as āantifaā does not necessarily refer to an identifiable, discrete organization, but may instead refer to the individuals and autonomous groups that make up the constellation of groups that call themselves āantifa.ā
In either event, affiliation with people or groups calling themselves āantifaā is protected by the First Amendmentās guarantee of freedom of expressive association. As our letter to Kirkwood explains:
In any case, even if āantifaā referenced a discrete and identifiable organization, the First Amendment bars the denial of ārights and privileges solely because of a citizenās association with an unpopular organization.ā Healy v. James, 408 U.S. at 185ā86. If government actors could designate particular groups āhaving both legal and illegal aimsā as unlawful, there would be a āreal danger that legitimate political expression or association would be impaired.ā Scales v. United States, 367 U.S. 203, 229 (1961).
In order to penalize association with an organization with both lawful and unlawful aims, the government must show both that āthe group itself possessed unlawful goals and that the individual had a specific intent to further those illegal aims.ā NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware, 458 U.S. at 920.
Groups identifying themselves as āantifaā may have both lawful and unlawful motives: A U.S. Attorneyās Office that āantifaā is a āmovementā that furthers its goals āsometimes by protesting events or engaging in property damage or violence.ā As a result, āantifaā members cannot be penalized simply for being members, and there must be evidence that Klinzman had a specific intent to advance a particular groupās unlawful acts. Hyperbolic rhetoric doesnāt satisfy that stringent test.
Some will balk at the notion that āantifaā adherents are or should be entitled to freedom of expression. But the principles of free speech are not granted only to those who support them, nor is there any exception for advocacy of illiberal ideas. Freedom of expression includes the right to oppose freedom of expression.
As for the Facebook posts, those too are protected by the First Amendment. Klinzmanās response to President Trumpās tweet (āYeah, I know who Iād clock with a batā¦ā) is remarkably similar to a drafteeās statement during the Vietnam War: āIf they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J.ā That statement, the Supreme Court held in Watts v. United States (1969), was protected speech. Political rhetoric is often tinged with violent invective. Thomas Jefferson, responsible for much of the First Amendment itself, once declared that āThe tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.ā Unless the statement is a āserious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual,ā itās not a true threat. Hyperbolic political rhetoric like Klinzmanās post doesnāt qualify.
Nor is Klinzmanās 2012 remark a true threat or incitement. Even if it could be understood as advocating violence (and not, as is more likely, as advocating steadfast resistance to particular political or religious views), itās not a serious expression of an intent to undertake violence, nor is advocacy directed to and likely to result in imminent unlawful action. One way we know that is that it incited no apparent violence in the seven years since it was posted.
While many may find his speech deeply offensive, a likelihood that views may make colleagues or students deeply uncomfortable is not a sufficient justification to erode First Amendment rights. Of course, if a faculty memberās offensive expression were accompanied by evidence that he or she unlawfully discriminated against particular students, an institution would be justified in taking action. However, offensive expression alone is not a substitute for evidence of discrimination.
Our letter, below, explains these concepts in greater depth, including how the First Amendment limits the ability of public colleges and universities to penalize faculty membersā extramural expression, as well as why the collegeās assertion that public safety commands its censorship is not credible:
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