By Jonas Du
Saturday, December 02, 2023
I often hear from progressives that “free speech” is
merely an excuse for conservatives to justify bigoted and hateful expression.
In the wake of their responses to the Israel–Hamas War, however, that idea is
no longer defensible.
As an editor of a student magazine promoting free speech
at Columbia University, I’m no stranger to these arguments. On a campus where
liberals outnumber conservatives almost six to one, promoting freedom of
expression necessarily requires elevating unpopular, right-leaning voices. The
Left frequently responds by asserting that “free speech” is just a veil for racism, sexism, or some other ism of the day
because otherwise, backward conservative ideas would have no place in our
campus discourse.
In 2016, Columbia Students for Justice in Palestine wrote
an op-ed condemning the appearance of former Israeli
minister of justice Ayelet Shaked at the law school. Shaked had shared a quote
on Facebook that called all Palestinians “the enemy” of Israel and expressed
hard-line stances on the conflict, leading SJP to call for her disinvitation.
“Free speech stops being free when it actively advocates and perpetuates the
end or oppression of an entire group of people. That is when it becomes hate
speech,” SJP wrote.
The group’s op-ed has not aged well. On October 9, two
days after Hamas terrorists murdered more than 1,300 Israelis, including women
and children, SJP circulated an open letter signed by over 20 student groups and 1,200
university affiliates standing in “full solidarity with Palestinian
resistance.” It characterized the attack as an “unprecedented historic moment.”
Later, SJP solicited signatures for a statement asserting that “the weight of responsibility
for the war and casualties undeniably lies with the Israeli extremist
government and other Western governments.” It took SJP nearly a month to write
an addendum on November 5 claiming it only used such reprehensible language
because they thought the terrorist attacks were “exclusively a military
operation.” Still, it only regrets the tone and language but “would not have
altered the content of the statement itself.”
To put it lightly, characterizing a terrorist attack in
which women were raped and children were shot in the head and burned as a
historic moment to be celebrated feels like hate speech to many. And blaming
the deadliest day for Jews since the Holocaust on the world’s only Jewish state
seems like it would constitute advocating the “oppression of an entire group of
people.” SJP was never serious about limiting harmful speech. It is, instead,
opportunistic: It cites hate speech when censoring ideas it disagrees with and
free speech to justify ideas it does agree with.
The hypocrisy is not unique to Columbia students. A
September poll found that three-quarters of Democrats believe
the government has a responsibility to limit “hateful” social-media posts,
compared with half of Republicans. Yet the overwhelming majority of hate speech
following the Hamas terrorist attacks seem to come from the Left.
Organizations like the Democratic Socialists of America
and Black Lives Matter had chapters across the country that released statements
justifying the attacks as a legitimate struggle for decolonization. It’s hard
to imagine that such people would not be part of the proportion of Americans
who think the government ought to police hate speech. After all, they fervently
believe in “social justice” and ideologies such as critical race theory,
which argues for hate-speech regulation to protect oppressed
races.
Such hypocrisy came full circle when some students and
faculty began citing free speech to justify antisemitic protests and
oppose doxxing campaigns that have been common at Columbia
and Harvard. Columbia SJP wrote in a subsequent op-ed (co-written with Jewish
Voice for Peace): “We demand that the administration take immediate action so
that no student . . . feels unsafe on campus due to their advocacy for or
association with Palestine.” One student claimed simply to be “fighting for our political
beliefs” like any other student. Close to 200 faculty members signed an
open letter defending students who supported Hamas’s
“military action” by signing SJP’s statement. “Efforts to chill otherwise
protected speech on campus are unacceptable,” they wrote.
To be clear, I support the right of pro-Palestinian
activists to blame Israel for the terrorist attack or even to shout genocidal
slogans, as abhorrent as I think such actions are. Our college campuses benefit
from political messages of all kinds, even those that are deeply wrong or
offensive. We cannot claim the right side of history without hearing out the
wrong side. The doxxing of students must also be condemned as a form of
harassment. Students at Columbia and Harvard, many of whom are unrelated to pro-Hamas
statements, have had highly personal information publicized online,
possibly constituting defamation. Cancel culture is still cancel culture even
when it’s levied against the Left. But we should stop pretending that those who
promulgate the idea that free speech is just a veil for bigotry have any moral
standing remaining. Those who believe we must regulate hate speech while they
also openly support terrorism should stop pretending that they care about free
speech at all. Or just admit their own hate.
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