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UC Berkeley Rejects Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSā Demands to Disinvite Bill Maher

Torch readers know that Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS and other free speech advocates have had much to criticize the University of California, Berkeley about lately. Many have pointed out that UC Berkeleyās celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Free Speech Movement rings somewhat hollow in light of its numerous speech codes. And last month, Chancellor Nicholas Dirks caused alarm with an email in which he argued for civility as a necessary limit on free speech. Happily, following , Dirks soon that freedom of expression should not be hindered in this manner.
In a positive development, it looks like Dirks might have learned from this fallās criticism: He is now from students to disinvite Bill Maher as the universityās December commencement speaker.
For those of you unfamiliar with the controversy, a recent argues that the comedian and political commentator āis a blatant bigot and racist who has no respect for the values UC Berkeley students and administration stand forā and asks the university to rescind its invitation to Maher. The petition says that the university must āuphold a standard of civility,ā and that ā[t]oo many students are marginalizedā by Maherās āoffensiveā and ādangerousā statementsāparticularly about Islam. As of today, the petition has garnered over 4,300 signatures.
Like so many who call for censorship, the petitioners nevertheless claim to value free speech. The Los Angeles Timesās from UC System student regent Sadia Saifuddin, who said:
I canāt condone the university inviting a speaker that threatens the campus climate of our university. ⦠I believe there is a fundamental difference between free speech and hate speech as well as a difference between Maher being allowed to express his views, and being given the honor of giving the keynote address sponsored by the university ⦠I donāt stand for [any] university-sponsored action that makes students feel unsafe and unwelcome.
Legally, of course, āhate speech,ā which has no specific legal definition, is protected speech. (Elizabeth Nolan Brown recently with remarkable clarity for Reason, in the context of the controversy over University of Illinois Urbana-Champaignās decision not to hire Steven Salaita for his tweets, which many called āhate speech.ā) Robin Abcarian, also writing for the Times, :
Maher may be willfully ignorant, and he may be insensitive, but surely the graduating students of Berkeley are smart enough -- and resilient enough -- to grasp that the man does not threaten their safety. He may be promulgating stereotypes, but he's not advocating violence.
Exactly. Thankfully, some UC Berkeley students seem to understand that censorship is not the answer to speech with which one disagrees. captured some comments posted on a about the controversy:
UCB is a bastion of freedoms; students died fighting for a university where Free Speech could prevail, diversity survive and serious debate occur. Banning Maher is a travesty, an act of gross misunderstanding of robust discourse. If Maher offers a faulty argument, critique it with eloquence and clarity.
Yesterday brought us a ābad news, good newsā situation. The āCalifornians,ā the undergraduate committee tasked with recommending commencement speakers (who initially chose Bill Maher to speak in December), .
The university administration has rejected this vote, however, and is standing by the decision to have Maher speak. A posted on UC Berkeleyās website reads in part:
The UC Berkeley administration cannot and will not accept this decision, which appears to have been based solely on Mr. Maherās opinions and beliefs, which he conveyed through constitutionally protected speech. For that reason Chancellor Dirks has decided that the invitation will stand, and he looks forward to welcoming Mr. Maher to the Berkeley campus. It should be noted that this decision does not constitute an endorsement of any of Mr. Maherās prior statements: indeed, the administrationās position on Mr. Maherās opinions and perspectives is irrelevant in this context, since we fully respect and support his right to express them. More broadly, this university has not in the past and will not in the future shy away from hosting speakers who some deem provocative.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS commends Chancellor Dirks and the rest of the administration for taking a stand in favor of a true āmarketplace of ideasā on campus. This is the spirit that should be shared by everyone celebrating the Free Speech Movement.
As Abcarian wrote, āThese constant fights over college commencement speakers are becoming so tedious.ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS agrees. But itās good to see a university refuse to cave to pressure from students who simply donāt want to hear viewpoints with which they disagree.
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