Student Prevented From Handing Out Copies Of The Constitution Wins Lawsuit Against College

from the free-speech-can't-be-'zoned' dept

Robert Van Tuinen, the Modesto Junior College student who was told by school administration that he couldn’t pass out copies of the Constitution on campus, has won his lawsuit (filed with FIRE [Foundation for Individual Rights in Education]) against the school.

California’s Modesto Junior College (MJC) [has] agreed to settle a First Amendment lawsuit filed last October by student Robert Van Tuinen, whom the college prevented from handing out copies of the Constitution on Constitution Day…

As part of the settlement, MJC has revised its policies to allow free speech in open areas across campus and has agreed to pay Van Tuinen $50,000. Van Tuinen was represented by the firm of Davis Wright Tremaine LLP in Washington, D.C., and assisted by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).

The college, which previously “fought back” by complaining about negative press and “hatred and cruelty” directed at its staff, has overhauled its free speech policies, opening up the campus to students who wish to exercise their First Amendment rights.

Limited public forums on Modesto Junior College’s campus are “areas generally available to students and the community,” defined as grassy areas, walkways, or other similar common areas.

This is a significant improvement over MJC’s previous “free speech area,” which was a small concrete slab only accessible to students who had been granted “permission” by the administration in advance to exercise their free speech rights.

The timeframe available to students has also been expanded and is no longer limited to one-hour reserved slots.

Use of free speech areas is permitted every day from 8:00 am to 9:00 pm. Speakers who will be using the free speech areas outside normal working hours (Monday-Friday from 9:00 am to 5:00 pm) are encouraged to notify the Office of Student Development and Campus Life to coordinate their event.

Note the fact that contact is “encouraged” but not required. These new policies are now in effect not just at Modesto Junior College, but at all schools within the Yosemite Community College District.

While this is a heartening win for free expression on MJC’s campus, FIRE notes that 59% of colleges nationwide still uphold policies that restrict free expression on campus. That this particular situation resulted in litigation is unfortunate, considering the application of a little common sense by school administrators would have saved the college $50,000 plus whatever it racked up in legal fees defending a stupid, restrictive policy.



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Comments on “Student Prevented From Handing Out Copies Of The Constitution Wins Lawsuit Against College”

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71 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

Anybody else find it ironic that they attempted to censor a document that gives Americans the right to free speech?

Remember that education systems are generally aligned with the “Free speech for me but not for you” political crowd. The general left clearly has no problem with oppressing someones rights so long as it fits their agenda. It used to be the right that did this. Funny how those that rightfully opposed slavery now seek to impose another form of slavery in response, eh?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:

The Left is responsible for the PC enforced “Free Speech Zones” on campuses.

Case in point, Harvard has printed this speech stifling article to push the “Free speech for me, but not for you” agenda where the Left gets to decide what is “oppressive”, thus creating “Free Speech Zones” in journalism.

In the Harvard Crimson, Sandra Korn’s article:
“The Doctrine of Academic Freedom: Let?s give up on academic freedom in favor of justice.?

Its author, a Harvard undergraduate named Sandra Y.L. Korn, argued that the concept of academic freedom should be replaced by one of academic justice. ?When an academic community observes research promoting or justifying oppression,? she proposed, ?it should ensure that this research does not continue.? To a large extent, of course, the American academy is already under the thumb of the left-wing Thought Police; Ms. Korn only wants to complete the job.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

More speech is the answer, not stifled/censored speech.

Argue against a position until you’re exhausted, but don’t do as Harvard has condoned in the Crimson article: “When an academic community observes research promoting or justifying oppression,…it should ensure that this research does not continue.?

The academic community should not be determining what is oppressive, period. The best way to “out” oppression is to let the speaker shoot themselves in the foot.

The TD article is about a person handing out literature that the school found unacceptable outside the “Free Speech Zones” and prosecuted the offender.

Who inhabits academia? Of the majority of Top academic centers, the Left clearly holds the leading positions setting the tone for “Free speech for me, but not for you” attitude with “Free Speech Zones”.

Please post anything to appose this study…

“…studies on this subject was conducted in 2003 by the Center for the Study of Popular Culture (CSPC)”

“In its examinations of more than 150 departments and upper-level administrations at the 32 elite colleges and universities, the CSPC found that the overall ratio of registered Democrats to registered Republicans was more than 10 to 1 (1397 Democrats, 134 Republicans). Although in the nation at large, registered Democrats and Republicans were roughly equal in number, not a single department at any of the 32 schools managed to achieve anything even remotely approaching parity between the two. The closest any school came to parity was Northwestern University, where 80% of the faculty members were registered Democrats and 20% were registered Republicans. At other schools, the ratios of faculty Democrats to faculty Republicans were as follows:”

Brown University: 30 to 1
Bowdoin College: 23 to 1
Wellesley College: 23 to 1
Swarthmore College: 21 to 1
Amherst College: 18 to
Bates College: 18 to 1
Columbia University: 14 to 1
Yale University: 14 to 1
University of Pennsylvania: 12 to 1
Tufts University: 12 to 1
UCLA: 12 to 1
UC Berkeley: 12 to 1
Smith College: 11 to 1
At four schools, the researchers could not identify a single Republican on the faculty:

Williams College: 51 Democrats, 0 Republicans
Oberlin College: 19 Democrats, 0 Republicans
MIT: 17 Democrats, 0 Republicans
Haverford College: 15 Democrats, 0 Republicans

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

October 24, 2012
The data come from the University of California at Los Angeles Higher Education Research Institute, which surveys faculty members nationwide every three years on a range of attitudes.

Here are the data for the new survey and the prior survey:

Far left – 2010-11= 12.4% / 2007-8= 8.8%
Liberal – 2010-11= 50.3% / 2007-8= 47.0%
Middle – 2010-11= 25.4% / 2007-8= 28.4%
Conservative – 2010-11= 11.5% / 2007-8= 15.2%
Far right – 2010-11= 0.4% / 2007-8= 0.7%

http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/10/24/survey-finds-professors-already-liberal-have-moved-further-left

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Your partisanship has blinded you to the fact that this is not something unique to the “left” (I put that in quotes because there hasn’t been an effective liberal political force in the US for a long time now). The right is just as eager to suppress people’s rights when it fits their agenda.

Neither side has high ground here.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Clearly you need to define liberal if you think-
“there hasn’t been an effective liberal political force in the US for a long time now”

Two recent developments that the liberal (defined in the US) political force has produced:
Obamacare and announcement of the Downsizing the US military

Where do you live?

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Two recent developments that the liberal (defined in the US) political force has produced:
Obamacare and announcement of the Downsizing the US military

Obamacare (you know, health insurance provided by private for-profit corporations) was originally an idea from a conservative think tank. Republicans only opposed it because Obama. The military downsizing was proposed by Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel, a Republican.

John Fenderson (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Obamacare was an overtly conservative plan thought up by a conservative think tank and very popular amongst conservatives — until a Democrat backed it, then it became evil. So I’m not sure of your point.

As to downsizing of the military — what does that have to do with liberal vs conservative?

I say there is no effective liberal political force in the US today because its’ true. Can you name such a force? Obama isn’t liberal, he’s centrist. The corporate media isn’t liberal, it’s corporate. There are a handful of actual liberals in congress, but only a handful.

What has happened is that conservatives have been consciously and systematically redefining “liberal” and “conservative” to push everything further to the right, so what they call “liberal” now is actually right-leaning. In terms of what these labels actually mean, liberalism in the US government is all but dead.

I am actually a liberal. When I was in my 20s, I fell a bit to the left of “centrist”. Now, I’m a howling liberal radical. My views and attitudes have not shifted one bit — but the way the terms are defined have.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

So John ?Mr. BIG Govt? Fenderson, are you still confessing that Govt is easier to control than Corporations –
Quote reference: John Fenderson http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20121204/13310521223/mmmmm-mmmmm-monopoly-uspto-to-hit-new-record-granting-utility-patents.shtml?threaded=true#c125

“if we had to choose between those two Bigs (and I don’t think we do), then I choose Big Government. It’s easier to fix the government (who is us) than major corporations (whose behavior we have little to no say in.)”

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:5 Re:

Not sure why you can’t figure out the phrase.
“Conservatives were historically (with reference to past events) correct (verb – put right an error or fault)

Progressive Woodrow Wilson – Racist / KKK Marcher

This from Republican 1960’s party platform:
“The Republican Party?the party of Abraham Lincoln?from its very beginning has striven to make this promise a reality. It is today, as it was then, unequivocally dedicated to making the greatest amount of progress toward the objective.

We recognize that discrimination is not a problem localized in one area of the country, but rather a problem that must be faced by North and South alike. Nor is discrimination confined to the discrimination against Negroes. Discrimination in many, if not all, areas of the country on the basis of creed or national origin is equally insidious. Further we recognize that in many communities in which a century of custom and tradition must be overcome heartening and commendable progress has been made.

The Republican Party is proud of the civil rights record of the Eisenhower Administration. More progress has been made during the past eight years than in the preceding 80 years. We acted promptly to end discrimination in our nation’s capital. Vigorous executive action was taken to complete swiftly the desegregation of the armed forces, veterans’ hospitals, navy yards, and other federal establishments.”

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=25839

Baron von Robber says:

Re: Re: Re:6 Re:

You seem to be confusing conservative with Republican and liberal with Democrat.

It would be better phrased “Republicans were historically correct”.

As I pointed out, Conservative Democrats in the past were pretty much on the wrong side of things, up until around the 80s thru 90s where things seemed to reverse. Conservative power shifted to the Republicans during the Regan Administration.

You don’t hear of Conservative Democrats anymore.

Pragmatic says:

Re: Re: Re:4 Re:

I don’t think you understand what “conservative” and “liberal” mean.

It is a partisan thing, in the wake of the “ideological purity” movement on the right, to deem all Republicans conservative and all Democrats liberal/socialist. This is not the case, and it never really has been.

Actually, back in the day, Republicans were the left-leaning liberals. Now they’ve shifted right, and have been moving in that direction since the Seventies due to the Southern Strategy: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southern_strategy

Stop letting other people do your thinking for you.

Elena (user link) says:

Re: Re:

Freedom of speech as demonstrated by the constitution is neither followed not distinguished from the Hatred of Speech. And that’s because of we people. It is us that converted Freedom of Speech to Hatred by regularly diminishing the personalities around in the name of Freedom and that’s how we ended up suppressed by the constitution.
No Offence.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: How it should work:

“You need to move to one of the designated ‘Free Speech Zones’ if you want to continue to talk, and you’re only allowed to talk after receiving permission from the proper authorities”

“I’m already in the ‘Free Speech Zone’, it’s called the entire gorram country. As for ‘permission’, I’ve already got that too, courtesy of some musty old piece of paper, maybe you’ve heard of it, the bill of rights, in particular the first entry on it.”

Anonymous Coward says:

We know you read this, Just Sayin’/horse with no name, so enjoy the fact that the due process you regularly shit on got enforced. Again. Despite your hand-wringing and teeth-gnashing about how the Techdirt writers got it wrong, wrong, wrong, looks like you got the shit end of the stick of being disproved. Makes your little dick sad, we know.

Ramanasri IAS (profile) says:

Ramanasri IAS Institute plans to create among its understudies a serious disposition alongside sound scholastic base with quality educating and individual consideration as its trademark. The Academy composes courses and workshops with the assistance of government employees and specialists in delicate abilities to prepare the competitors to think, feel and express like executives. This far-reaching approach towards IAS planning has gotten a staggering reaction and has prompted the dish India nearness of Ramanasri IAS Institute.

https://www.ramanasriias.com/agriculture-optional

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