Culture UC Berkeley "Free Speech Commission" unveils right-wing conspiracy to make school look bad.

http://www.berkeleyside.com/2018/05...cal-clashes-tore-at-the-campuss-social-fabric

Why did some students host a series of conservative and far-right speakers at UC Berkeley in 2017? Why did the left and far-left, after ignoring similar events in the past, respond with outrage and, in some cases, violence?

“Our conclusion,” wrote the campus’s Commission on Free Speech in a reportsent to students Wednesday, “is that the rise of ultra-conservative rhetoric, including white supremacist views and protest marches, legitimized by the 2016 presidential election and its aftermath, encouraged far-right and alt-right activists to ‘spike the football’ at Berkeley. This provoked an at-times violent (and condemnable) response from the extreme left, tearing at the campus’s social fabric.”

The commission of faculty, staff and students was assembled by Chancellor Carol Christ in October 2017, toward the end of a tumultuous year at UC Berkeley. The group was charged with analyzing the political clashes that had rocked the campus and recommending new policies and procedures to maintain freedom of expression at Cal while warding off further disruptive and costly events.

The new report includes recommendations on how the campus should finance security at future events, how police presence could be lightened, how professors could educate the campus about the First Amendment, and other steps UC Berkeley community members can take to address ongoing tensions.


However, the commission said UC Berkeley cannot legally prohibit provocative speech, nor should it.

“More than eighty years of First Amendment law would need to be overturned” for the campus to ban speaking events because they could be disruptive or fail to promote discourse, the report said, citing a book by UC Berkeley School of Law Dean Erwin Chemerinsky.

But the commission was clear that its members found the content of the events, and the outside speakers and funders involved, a threat to another UC Berkeley commitment — “fostering an inclusive community, especially for those traditionally under-represented.” In the list of recommendations, the report authors explained how they believe UC Berkeley can reduce “the likelihood of disruption from provocative events” and “take steps to avoid harm to the community when such events occur.”

The chain of speaking engagements and protests began when the Berkeley College Republicans invited far-right personality Milo Yiannopoulos, known for claims such as “feminism is cancer,” to speak at Cal in February 2017. Antifa demonstrators descended on campus, launching explosives and smashing windows, to try to stop him from speaking. They succeeded in canceling the event, but BCR, often with funding and encouragement from the national Young America’s Foundation, invited a string of other controversial speakers to campus in the ensuing months, and sued UC Berkeley for, they said, imposing illegal restrictions on the proposed events.

In some cases the speakers never showed up and, in others, right-wing demonstrators protested and brawled with antifa counter-protesters elsewhere in the city. In one case in September 2017, an event with conservative writer Ben Shapiro was held successfully. After much fanfare, Yiannopoulus returned to campus that month as well, but only spoke for about 30 minutes while most who came to see or protest him were stuck behind a security line. In several cases, the university, with help from the UC Office of the President, shelled out hundreds of thousands of dollars — $4 million for all the events in total — to line the campus with police and put up barricades.

The debate and protests at Cal reflected a national conversation and events on campuses around the country. However, the College Republicans and their supporters often said they were targeting Berkeley in particular, to test whether it would honor its legacy as the “birthplace of free speech,” and to expose what they viewed as a hypocritical administration that censored conservatives.

The Commission on Free Speech members wrote that they believed the series of events in 2017 was deliberately orchestrated by outside groups to undermine the university.


“At least some of the 2017 events at Berkeley can now be seen to be part of a coordinated campaign to organize appearances on American campuses likely to incite a violent reaction, in order to advance a facile narrative that universities are not tolerant of conservative speech,” the authors said.


In response to the report, Naweed Tahmas, a Berkeley College Republicans leader, said it was “irresponsible” for the commission to say “there is a right-wing conspiracy to cause riots on college campuses.”

“It is insulting that the commission placed blame on our student organization rather than holding the violent, leftist groups — who riot and threaten to shut down speakers — accountable for their actions,” Naweed wrote in an email to Berkeleyside late Thursday afternoon. “The Commission missed an opportunity to diagnose a campus and academic culture that silently approves of censoring conservative speakers; the report itself seems to be subtly justifying the violent response to our speakers.”

He challenged the report’s assertion that many of the speakers invited have no interest in substantive discourse, and said that should not be basis for excluding a speaker from campus regardless.

In analyzing the events, the commission conducted interviews, held public meetings and sought input from members of the campus community. Much of the feedback, the report said, referenced the heavy police presence during the protests, which made many students and staff uncomfortable.

Given the violence at Yiannopoulos’s first appearance, and the recent killing of counter-demonstrator Heather Heyer at a white supremacist march in Charlottesville, Virginia, “the UCPD would have been reckless had it not barricaded Sproul Plaza and invited hundreds of police from other jurisdictions to assist in protecting speakers, the speakers’ audience and demonstrators,” during the Shapiro event, the report said.


The commission recommended that UCPD increase its plainclothes officers, and have students serve as safety monitors who report disturbances to the police.

The report also included recommendations for the administration, faculty and students.

The commission said an additional “free speech zone” could be established, possibly on the Crescent lawn on Oxford Street. In free speech areas, anyone can hold events without pre-registering. Currently upper and lower Sproul Plazas are such zones, but when UC Berkeley barricaded the areas to prepare for some of the 2017 events, other well-used campus buildings and sites were necessarily barred off too.

The commission also suggested the university might schedule alternative simultaneous events to counter controversial speakers.

UC Berkeley might also, as Chemerinsky and co-author Howard Gillman mention in their book, set a bar for the amount of money it is willing to spend on event security, and deny any controversial events after the threshold is reached, the report said.

“The question is: how high would this threshold be?” the authors wrote. They recommended the campus and the UC system ask the state for financial help to promote free speech.

“The Berkeley campus is a lightning rod for free speech issues and therefore carries the burden of protecting the First Amendment for the State of California and for public universities across the nation,” the report explained.

While the 23-person commission, chaired by School of Education Dean Prudence Carter and philosophy professor R. Jay Wallace, was carrying out its charge, the campus remained relatively quiet. There have been no events and demonstrations at last year’s scale in 2018.

“It is impossible to predict whether politically polarizing events will continue to roil the campus; much will depend on the national zeitgeist,” the authors wrote.

The campus has meanwhile changed its policies governing “major events,”aiming to clarify the rules that prompted debate and litigation last year, and preempting similar instances in the future. In its report, the commission called the policy “a considerable achievement.”

However, the commission does not purport to speak for the whole campus, noting that more data is needed on student perceptions of the events of last year and knowledge of free speech rights. Some faculty are working on a survey to gather that information, the report said.

Sections are made by bold by the poster for emphasis**

What an amazing turn of events that isn't really all that surprising considering the Orwellian naming of the commission. Weird how higher learning institutes are basically Resetera with a building...

Not surprising considering: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3R6dzZdceT4
 
So after that embarrassing year of trying to purge all right wing thought they're trying to blame their embarrassing behavior on right wingers? Fucking yikes, it's almost admirable how ballsy you'd have to be to do that.
 
So after that embarrassing year of trying to purge all right wing thought they're trying to blame their embarrassing behavior on right wingers? Fucking yikes, it's almost admirable how ballsy you'd have to be to do that.
Few times have people demonstrated their belief that they can literally do no wrong in such an autistic way.
That school is absolutely fucked
 
Much of the feedback, the report said, referenced the heavy police presence during the protests, which made many students and staff uncomfortable.
Translation: Man, having those police guys around sure is nerve-wracking. What if they spotted the Molotov tucked under my hoodie?
I'm not even sure that's hyperbolic, especially because of the school's horrible track record of aiding and abetting violent protesters, with some professors even participating. Asking 'members of the campus community' what they need to do to fix the situation is like polling a bunch of prisoners about how they would improve the prison's security (and expecting any response other than 'longer lunch breaks for the guards' health' and 'shiny new aluminum cell-bars').
 
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Best part of all this is colleges are now having to cut social programs and support for these groups. Donations for many schools are drying up because of shit like this, ontop of student debt from retarded activists going to school and doing this shit.

When the wallets of the schools (be they public or private because they get a fuck load of grants and other such things) start to get impacted hard they will shape up quick. Because at the end of the day many of these schools give no fucks about the activism. If they really really did, then they would let all the blacks, trannies, etc. in for free and give them everything ever. Its just to keep up appearances of them being the vanguard of intellectual thought in the west, even as they destroy it in a mockery of it all.
 
The heavy police presence made staff and students uncomfortable? Didn’t several political speakers needed security to safely be escorted off campus because of the students’ massive chimp outs? Yeah, that’s bullshit for several reasons. Also, please tell this is the only school with a dumbass commission like that.
 
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Best part of all this is colleges are now having to cut social programs and support for these groups. Donations for many schools are drying up because of shit like this, ontop of student debt from exceptional activists going to school and doing this shit.

When the wallets of the schools (be they public or private because they get a fuck load of grants and other such things) start to get impacted hard they will shape up quick. Because at the end of the day many of these schools give no fucks about the activism. If they really really did, then they would let all the blacks, trannies, etc. in for free and give them everything ever. Its just to keep up appearances of them being the vanguard of intellectual thought in the west, even as they destroy it in a mockery of it all.
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Yeah, they are totally shitting themselves.
 
Words are violence, though. To these people there’s not a single difference between someone threatening to throttle you and the alt-right ranting or debating with you.

That's what scares me the most. They're closed off to any new information that might be beneficial to their own personal growth or understanding of the topics around them. I remember seeing an ANTIFA video where Louder with Crowder sent an undercover guy to one of their meetings. They were talking about bringing knives and even shotguns(!) to the rally...

The only way these people will learn is if the law thumps it in their skulls for them. (Although they may not actually learn, but instead become discouraged.)
 
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Yeah, they are totally shitting themselves.
and how much of that funding gets tied up in a billion different departments/enterprises/events/maintenance/wages or gets pocketed by the higher ups before the spare change filters through to the where these programmes operate?

dont get me wrong. In this day and age it has been demonstrated time and time again that out of touch and hilariously inept institutions will pour literal billions into dumb SJW shit that winds up as a major net-loss and loses them supporters and donors....and then do the same thing all over again in a desperate effort to double-or-nothing their shit, but frankly I think that any department/programme that haemorages shekels and only gets grief and further monetary loss in return would be looked upon very unsympathetically by whoever is accounting all this shit.
 
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"It's not our fault we burnt our local Starbucks down, it was the right wings fault for inviting those people we hate so much that we had to smash our local Starbucks over it".
 
and how much of that funding gets tied up in a billion different departments/enterprises/events/maintenance/wages or gets pocketed by the higher ups before the spare change filters through to the where these programmes operate?

dont get me wrong. In this day and age it has been demonstrated time and time again that out of touch and hilariously inept institutions will pour literal billions into dumb SJW shit that winds up as a major net-loss and loses them supporters and donors....and then do the same thing all over again in a desperate effort to double-or-nothing their shit, but frankly I think that any department/programme that haemorages shekels and only gets grief and further monetary loss in return would be looked upon very unsympathetically by whoever is accounting all this shit.
Endowments aren't really "funding". UC Berkeley uses budgeted state funds for operating capital, just like every other state school. Colleges use endowments to buy up real estate and erect buildings. When they run of out room for that shit, they sit on it and save until they can buy things like Venus or the Small Magellanic Cloud.
 
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