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Opinion | The Laws of Campus Culture War
  + stars: | 2023-11-02 | by ( David French | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +15 min
They represent the moral and philosophical foundations for the concrete constitutional rules of culture war that directly apply on campus. One of the most powerful and compelling arguments for free speech in American history was born out of mob suppression. In 1860, Frederick Douglass wrote his “Plea for Free Speech in Boston” after a violent mob shut down an antislavery event. Every college and university — public or private — that receives federal funds has an affirmative duty to protect students’ civil rights. In the recent past, schools have sometimes been too enthusiastic about stopping harassment, defining the term so broadly that university anti-harassment policies actually violate students’ free speech rights.
Persons: George Washington, , , Abraham, ” Washington, Johnson, Watts, they’re, Deactivating, Frederick Douglass, ” Douglass, Biden, Davis, VI, Scott Alexander’s, it’s, Organizations: State University System of, Justice, Cooper Union, Cornell University, Trees School, . Ohio, Klan, Hamas, Civil, of Education, Cornell, Democratic Locations: State University System of Florida, Palestine, New York City, Ithaca, N.Y, , United States, America, Newport, R.I, Texas, Terminiello, Chicago, Brandenburg, ., Ohio, , Gaza, Florida, Boston, Monroe County
Everyone Likes Reading. Why Are We So Afraid of It?
  + stars: | 2023-06-21 | by ( A.O. Scott | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +3 min
Among Douglass’s most powerful and painful revelations is that, on the subject of reading, his master was right. Substitute “reading” for “freedom” in that last sentence and the meaning stays the same. Reading liberates and torments us, enlightens and bewilders us, makes and unmakes our social and solitary selves. The methods of reading instruction associated with Columbia University’s Teachers College were in full bloom there. The rooms were furnished with well-stocked, low-slung bookshelves and carpeted risers where young readers could curl up with “just-right books,” selections matched to their interests and levels of proficiency.
Persons: Frederick, , Hugh, Mandeville, Prometheus, Organizations: Reading, Columbia University’s Teachers College Locations: Brooklyn
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