Sympathy is hard to find in conversations about politics. But at recent events on college campuses, this response is in especially short supply toward disruptive mobs with a political axe to grind. For the second time in two weeks, demonstrators intent on canceling an event have shouted down an invited speaker, and on both occasions, observers on the right and left, on- and off-campus, were quick to condemn the censorship.
On Wednesday, a student mob at UPenn blocked a speech from former U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency Director Tom Homan. A video posted on CampusReform.org shows students shouting over at least two adults who tried to maintain order.
Goldwater Senior Fellow Jonathan Butcher writes about the surprising reaction to the UPenn mob, another troubling incident at Georgetown, and how states can follow the Goldwater Institute model to ensure that the freedom of speech is protected at public universities. Read Butcher’s latest article here. Meanwhile, the Goldwater Institute is calling for discipline at the University of Arizona, where students shouted down Border Patrol speakers in March. Read more here.
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