Author Topic: CU regents consider new policies supporting freedom of speech, even if considered 'offensive' by som  (Read 410 times)

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Offline WingNot

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The University of Colorado is discussing establishing new policies around freedom of speech on campus modeled after the University of Chicago's stance arguing colleges shouldn't ban speakers or censor speech, even if thought "offensive" or "disagreeable."

The proposal to craft CU's own free speech stance was brought during a CU regents' meeting Wednesday morning in Denver.

An excerpt of a draft proposal of CU's policy reads: "Speech related to political, academic, artistic, and social concern serve vital purposes, both in society and within the university itself. Speech related to these topics is within the boundaries of free expression, even when others construe that speech as wrong or insensitive. The proper response to ideas that members of the university community find offensive or unwarranted is to challenge those ideas through the exercise of reason and debate, rather than attempt to interfere with or suppress them."

The draft goes on to say free expression doesn't include speech that's "a true threat, fraudulent, harassing, obscene, defamatory, or otherwise unlawful."

Regents Heidi Ganahl, Republican at large, and John Carson, Highlands Ranch Republican, are spearheading the effort with Patrick O'Rourke, vice president of university counsel and secretary of the board, working on the language of the policy. Regents agreed, if moved forward, CU's policies would be more detailed and stronger than the University of Chicago's statement.

The motivation behind the push for stricter freedom of speech rules, Ganahl said, came from hundreds of conversations she had with students and faculty experiencing forms of political discrimination on campus.

"This would be giving voice to people who don't feel they have a voice," Ganahl said. "I am their voice now. I think this would send a very encouraging and strong message for them."

Free speech flared up on the Boulder campus last year when CU College Republicans and the CU chapter of Turning Point USA, a conservative activist group, organized a speaking event for conservative provocateur Milo Yiannopoulos.

http://www.dailycamera.com/cu-news/ci_31600895/cu-regents-policies-freedom-speech
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Offline truth_seeker

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The Free Speech Movement in the 1960s started at UC Berkeley. From the Left.

Most true civil libertarians thru the decades respected the resolution.

To find universities falling into idiotic (leftist) censorship is ridiculous.

Jordan Peterson, Canadian, is an important figure in their movement to restore free speech in universities.(pretty interesting guy)
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