First Amendment doesn’t let you say ‘hateful things,’ Mizzou’s new vice chancellor says
College Fix Staff •January 4, 2016
You’d think a law professor would know that the First Amendment, by its very nature, protects speech that is deeply unpopular.
But the interim vice chancellor for inclusion, diversity and equity at the University of Missouri has apparently not brushed up on the Bill of Rights since he took his position this fall.
Paraphrasing Chuck Henson, “an experienced trial lawyer” who once ran a cable-TV giant’s legal department before taking the (interim) reins at Mizzou, The Economist says “the First Amendment does not give people a free pass to go round saying hateful things”:
To help students and faculty realise this, Mizzou has developed a new guide to “inclusive terminology” which ensures a healthy level of respect for all minority groups. It includes terms such as “adultism” (prejudice against the young), “minoritised” (when under-represented groups are made to feel inferior) and intersextionality (obscure).
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It’s not clear from this report whether Henson or other top officials – who took their (temporary) positions in Mizzou’s clean sweep of its leadership – plan to punish students or faculty for saying “hateful things.”
The Economist is a bit credulous in reporting on alleged Mizzou incidents at face value, including the so-called poop swastika and a professor who claims she’s been called the N-word by other faculty.
http://www.thecollegefix.com/post/25730/