Daily Archives: March 2, 2017

Watch live: April the giraffe continues to progress toward giving birth – FOX31 Denver

Posted: March 2, 2017 at 2:09 pm


FOX31 Denver
Watch live: April the giraffe continues to progress toward giving birth
FOX31 Denver
HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. April the giraffe continues to progress as normal as she nears giving birth at the Animal Adventure Park in New York, officials said Thursday. It has been a week since thousands of people began tuning in to the park's live stream, ...

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LGBT equality a work in progress – Journal Advocate

Posted: at 2:09 pm

By Jeff Rice

Journal-Advocate staff writer

Progress has been made in the area of LGBT rights in Colorado, but that progress has to be preserved and built on.

That was the message Tuesday evening to a handful of local residents who attended a One Colorado briefing on the organization's work over the past six years. The Sterling briefing was part of a 10-stop statewide tour by One Colorado to update Coloradans on progress in gaining and retaining equal rights for LGBT citizens.

One Colorado was founded in 2010 and Executive Director Daniel Ramos told the group discrimination against the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual community has actually gotten worst over the past five years.

"We don't know whether that's because there are more (LGBT) people out or whether it's just a growing backlash," Ramos said, "but in almost every aspect of life, discrimination is getting worse."

But the good news, Ramos said, is that Colorado continues to be generally a safe place for LGBT people, and Coloradans generally favor "the protection of individual civil rights and personal safety."

Ramos said school districts are getting serious about training their staffs to combat bullying, with more than 9,000 people trained in the past five years. He also pointed to the adoption of HB-1254 in 2011, which created a fund and established criteria for anti-bullying training and enforcement in Colorado, primarily in the public schools. That was followed by Proposition BB in 2015 that allowed the state to keep $66 million in marijuana tax revenues and divert $2 million of that into the fund created for anti-bullying training.

Ramos said the Colorado Genral Assembly continues to knock down legislation aimed at diminishing the personal rights of LGBT citizens, particularly in the area of "conversion therapy" for children. There is a widely held myth that sexuality can be changed through therapy, but subjecting children to such practices is illegal in Colorado. Nonetheless, some Colorado legislators repeatedly introduce legislation to repeal that law, and Ramos said constant lobbying is needed to fight that.

"It has been proven again and again that this conversion therapy actually is harmful to children, but people continue to try to get it legalized," he said. "Fortunately, we have a (partisan) mix in the legislature that doesn't allow that, but it's a constant battle."

Ramos said the Affordable Care Act, and Colorado's decision to expand Medicaid to cover state residents, has helped LGBT people access health care that wasn't available to them before.

"A lot of people are reluctant to come out to their physicians, so ACA brings more doctors into the system, and that makes it easier for people to find a physician they feel comfortable with," he said. "That's important, especially in mental health, because we've found that medical people actually tend to over-report their acceptance of LGBT people. Over 85 percent of caregivers said they were comfortable working with LGBT patients, but the patients report a comfort level of about 60 percent."

Attempts to modify Colorado's birth certificate law need to continue, Ramos said, and members of the state legislature are slowly beginning to change their minds about it. A "modernization" act was introduced in 2015 that would have allowed a transgender person to have their birth certificate changed even without sexual reassignment surgery. A House committee defeated the measure.

Ramos also played a video made by Gov. John Hickenlooper voicing support for the transgender community.

"Hickenlooper is one of the few governors who will even say 'transgender,' let alone give support and recognition," he said. "We're going to lose him in two years, and we need to work on getting an LGBT-friendly majority in the legislature."

Jeff Rice: 970-526-9283, ricej@journal-advocate.com

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How Does the New Turkish Curriculum Look Like? Conservative Changes Dominate – PoliticalCritique.org

Posted: at 2:07 pm

There has been another upgrade to the national education curriculum in Turkey. Among these changes, philosophy lessons have been reduced and the single-party rule applied to classes in the 1940s have been cut. The latest coup attempt has been added under philosophy and the social sciences.

On 16 January, the Ministry of National Education announced the new education curricula for secondary and high schools in Turkey.

The national curriculum has been a recurring topic of debate in Turkey for decades. It has always been controversial, given that all governments and political bodies have wanted to reinvent the educational system in the ideological image of the ruling party.

The number of chapters in the philosophy course books has been generally reduced, while keeping political philosophy and philosophy of science. According to the new curriculum, class hours will remain the same at 72 hours per term, while the expected learning outcome for philosophy has been slashed from 58 to 20 points on Turkeys assessment scale.

This major reduction of philosophys significance in the curriculum echoes the debate from a few years ago on the possibility of studying philosophy in the modern Turkish language. Recep Tayyip Erdoan, the prime minister at the time, said that this was inadequate, insisting that one needs to use the Ottoman Turkish, which borrows the alphabet and most of its vocabulary from Arabic and Persian, or English in order to study philosophy.

If we were to teach philosophy for 20 years, it would be a different country.

Istanbul-born philosopher and President of Philosophical Society of Turkey, Ioanna Kuuradi, said We make philosophy but he does not recognise us as philosophers. In an interview with Szc in March 2016, Kuuradi claimed that ignorance is at root of Turkeys current social and moral crises and that they could be overcome through proper philosophical education: If we were to teach philosophy for 20 years, it would be a different country.

A pro-government conservative education union, Eitim Bir-Sen, recently proposed the removal of Ataturkism, the official ideology describing the founding principles of modern Turkey, from the social sciences curriculum, and starting religious education at first grade.

While Eitim Bir-Sens proposal on compulsory religion classes for first grade students was not introduced, Ataturkism has indeed been scrapped, and the principle of encouraging the observance of religious holidays adopted. In line with the spirit of Eitim Bir-Sens proposal, Darwin & Evolution Theory was also purged from the school syllabus. It had been a controversial matter in Turkey for some time, especially since the Turkish Science Institutes prohibition of publications about evolution.

The new approach will now rely on values education, e.g. the notions of national unity & solidarity as well as national, moral and universal values. The new curriculum refers to values education as having a cultural impact, claiming that it is significant in turning these values into new norms and daily behaviours for society in the future. As part of the new elective course for secondary schools Basic Religious Teachings, jihad will be taught as part of religious values. Positivism and secularism will be categorised under the Problems of Faith chapter, dedicated to the promotion of individualism and the separation of state and religion. Also under the problems of faith heading, students will be taught about deism, agnosticism, atheism, nihilism, satanism, reincarnation and false prophets.

The coup attempt on 15 July 2016, which had a major impact on social and educational life in Turkey, has also been brought into the curriculum. Students will start learning about the coup attempt starting at sixth grade as a part of social science and philosophy classes. However, it is not certain whether previous coups will be referred to in the same classes.

At high school level, the students will now be asked to write essays on Social Resistance against the Anti-Democratic 15 July Coup Attempt within the framework of national-will, rule of law, and democratic understanding. National Will is a common reference in AKP (the ruling Justice and Development Party) campaigns, referring to the strong support behind the party in elections.

Contemporary Turkish and World History classes that focus on World War II will no longer refer to the anti-war efforts of Ismet Inonu, the president of the republic at the time and leader of the single-party CHP (Republican Peoples Party) regime. Nor will it refer to his contributions to Turkeys political and economic activities in the 1940s. Inonu was a general during Turkeys War of Independence, a friend of the founder of republic and was declared National Chief during World War II, while keeping Turkey out of the war at all costs. As Inonus efforts at neutrality are being erased from history books, the transition to a multi-party system and the history of the Democrat Party is put under the spotlight.

The class on contemporary history, which has a chapter on the Cold War Period, will now include topics on Political, Economic, Social and Cultural Developments in Turkey during the Time of the Democrat Party. This in itself was a controversial period, with the start of a multi-party system that brought about the grasp of power by the Adnan Menderes government, starting in 1946. The new topic will focus on the election systems that were initiated in this period, which was heavily criticised for authoritarian tendencies and gerrymandering, due to the Democrat Partys post-election downgrading of urban entities that did not predominantly vote for the ruling party.

The revised educational curriculum will honour Turkish citizens that have had international success. High school chemistry books will now have a topic on Prof. Dr. Aziz Sancar in the chapter on Relations between Inter Chemical Species with his Nobel Prize-winning study on DNA-repair. Contemporary History will include Galatasarays winning of the UEFA Cup in 2000, as well as the national football teams finishing third in the World Cup.

Rewriting the history books from a centre-right political perspective only replaces the existing problems with new ones.

Students will be informed about scientific and technological developments in Turkey, about its satellite programme and communications technologies.

While the new curriculum is being championed by some media outlets in Turkey as the new system that will generate geniuses and inventors, many critical eyes see the decreasing presence of philosophy in the curriculum and hostile approach to secularism and positivism as a problem.

Even though the AKPs efforts to erase ideological traces from national education may appear to modernise the education system through a more results-oriented approach, rewriting the history books from a centre-right political perspective only replaces the existing problems with new ones.

**

This piece was originally published on Katoikos.eu

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The Ideas Election – The Indian Express

Posted: at 2:05 pm


The Indian Express
The Ideas Election
The Indian Express
This terminology of rationalism, vivekvaad, secularism, freedom of speech, Hindu terrorism, anti-superstition became the weapons of (mass) culture destruction. The cultural politics of progressive activists, bound by NGOs indulging in festival ...

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Tucker Battles Member of EU Parliament Who Supports Free Speech ‘Kill Switch’ – Fox News Insider

Posted: at 2:04 pm

On Wednesday, a British member of the European Parliament expressed his support for a measure that would allow the presiding officer of the body to effectively "kill" a speech they consider "racist" or "xenophobic."

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Tucker Carlson asked Labour MEP Richard Corbett what formal "standards" are in place to decide which expressions of free speech can be curtailed.

Corbett said the measure prohibits the use of "racist terms and xenophobic language." Any speech considered such will be cut short and "purged" from live and archived television, he explained.

Carlson called the move "quite draconian" and "Orwellian."

Corbett said it would protect against a member prospectively unfurling a banner demanding Jewish people be killed, but Carlson pressed further on what official standard the Parliament had set.

Corbett said a "variety of views" can be expressed, underlining that the Parliament's speaker, who is in control of the rule, is elected by members "across the [political] spectrum."

"Did anybody acknowledge that this is a totalitarian measure?" Carlson asked.

Corbett assured him that the rule would not be imposed "willy-nilly."

"Free speech continues to die a sad death on the continent that created it," Carlson remarked.

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GVSU settles federal lawsuit, revises free speech rules – WOODTV.com

Posted: at 2:04 pm


MLive.com
GVSU settles federal lawsuit, revises free speech rules
WOODTV.com
GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) Grand Valley State University says it has reached an agreement with a group of students who were suing the university, saying it unfairly restricted free speech on campus. Attorneys for Turning Point USA filed the federal ...
GVSU reaches settlement with student group alleging it restricted free speechMLive.com
Grand Valley State agrees to settle lawsuit over free speechDetroit Free Press

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Milo Yiannopoulos is not the champion of free speech that he claims to be – The Miami Hurricane

Posted: at 2:04 pm

Milo Yiannopoulos claims to be a champion of free speech. Ironically, he entirely misunderstands the purpose and meaning of free speech. His argument that the general public has violated his right to free speech is wrong, both historically and practically.

Free speech does not grant the right to say whatever you want whenever you want. You cannot yell fire in a crowded movie theater when there is no fire, or yell bomb in an airport when there is no bomb. This is an opinion held by the Supreme Court of the United States and anyone with a shred of common sense. Such actions do nothing but elicit panic and public distress.

Much of the rhetoric put out by Yiannopoulos is no different. It has little to no basis in fact, misinforming the public. For example, he once likened rape culture to Harry Potter, saying that they are both fantasy. Lies like this can potentially weaken the public initiatives taken in the past several years to fight rape culture. As a result, his lie may contribute to continued sexual violence. His extensive lies fan the flames of radical and inflammatory factions within our country, creating panic when there should be none.

The truly ironic element of Yiannopoulos argument is that free speech is about the relationship between the government and the people. The government has in no way infringed upon his right to free speech. The TV stations that have prevented him from going on their shows are private companies, not government entities. The universities that will not allow him to speak are academic institutions, once again not the government. No one is preventing Milo from speaking entirely but merely refusing to allow him to use a specific university or network as a platform. Universities and TV networks have every right to do this.

Furthermore, just as Yiannopoulos believes that he can say whatever he wants, people have the right to say whatever they want back to him. It is preposterous for him to promote such blatant lies and deceit and not expect to be called out for it. The right to free speech protects an individual from government censorship. It does not protect an individual from backlash and consequences for inflammatory remarks.

Ryan Steinberg is a freshman majoring in political science.

Featured image courtesy Flickr user Hindi Pro.

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An inside look at the ‘Free Speech’ class UCLA blocked students … – The College Fix

Posted: at 2:04 pm

LOS ANGELES, Calif. Numerous empty seats pepperedthe large lecture hall. Multiple students strolled into class late while others trickled out early. That was the scene on a recent Wednesday nightas lecturer Keith Fink taught his popular class on free speech at the public university.

While there areplenty of seats available for many more students to take the class, more than 40 students have been blocked from this popular UCLA course.

The courses lecture hall holds nearly 300 seats, but just 200 of the 241 students who tried to sign up for the class were enrolled. Thats left more than three dozen students shut out of a course taught by a professor focused onteaching students the value of the First Amendment.

Such is the situation in Finks Communication Studies 167: Sex, Politics, and Race: Free Speech on Campus.

The class made headlines recently after Fink, a conservative who openly criticizes campus administrators during his classes for what he contends is their violation of students free speech rights, claimed his department is keeping students who are attempting to add the course from enrolling init because of politicalbias.

The chair of the department says its aboutmaintaining reasonable class sizes across the major.

Finks not buying it.

This is nuts. They are penalizing the students to get at me, hesaid.

I believe my role is to test students beliefs theyre holding at a young age, to probe the reasons for their belief, to criticize views they may have, to expose them to other views. Thats my role, Fink told The College Fix.

The labor and employment lawyer added his job as a professor is not to tell [students] how to think. Its to make them think.

The Free Speech course, which Fink has taught for nine years, focuses on how the First Amendment, case law, state statutes, and federal statutes affect students and teachers ability to express themselves both on and off campuses, per the syllabus.

(Pictured: Empty seats in class students seek to enroll in)

Course readings in part include a textbook written by Fink as well as case law. Class topics touch on harassment issues, speech codes, campus protests, the rights of student publications and due process rights, among others.

The course, held on Wednesday nights, delves into controversial, timely campus issues. For instance, a list of nearly two dozen discussion topics on the syllabus includes questions such as Should teachers provide trigger warnings before [discussing] a topic that some find sensitive? and Can students be punished for burning the American flag?

Fink, a former college debate champion, employs the Socratic Method in his teaching, guiding discussion and pushing students on the topic at hand.

And during a recent class, he wasnt shy about offering his own opinions. However, he also encouraged students multiple times to do their own fact checking and research.

Fink also isnt afraid to voice his opinions in class about issues at UCLA. During the Feb. 22 class attended by The College Fix, Fink questioned the mission of the universitys division of Equity, Diversity and Inclusion.

I think its more exclusion for people who have conservative views or perhaps Jewish views, but Ill let you guys make that conclusion, Fink said.

During class, Fink read aloud a CrossCheck written last spring by Jerry Kang, UCLAs Vice Chancellor for Equity, Diversity and Inclusion. Kang alleged that posters posted on UCLAs campus by conservative activist David Horowitz accused the Muslim Student Association and Students for Justice in Palestine of being murderers and terrorists.

Fink disagreed with Kangs allegation and his description that the posters were hostile.

Hostile posters. What does that mean hostile? Why are they hostile? [Its] political advocacy and who cares if theyre hostile, Finksaid.

He also focused on the language Kang used as he read the CrossCheck post line by line.

I have a big problem with the wording because I believe youre being threatened, he told his students.

Class discussion later pivoted to a recent controversial cartoon published in UCLAs student newspaper, the Daily Bruin, that included Israels Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. The newspaper later apologized for running the cartoon after some found it anti-semitic.

Fink told the class he thinks the newspaper shouldve have published the cartoon without an apology, but questioned the universitys lack of response given Kangs post on Horowitzs posters.

So, if I dont see a rebuke, I just put two and two together theres some kind of viewpoint discrimination going on here, he said. Somebody has to give me another explanation. Why isnt there a whisper that theres a problem here?

A UCLA grad himself, Fink (pictured) said his own intellectual training at the school came from his involvement in debate where his coach pushed him on both sides of the issue.

That notion of pushing both sides of an issue is something higher education has lost, Finksaid.

It has lost the marketplace of ideas because theres only one stream of thought thats acceptable. And yes, teachers will not provide a balance, he told The College Fix in an interview.

As for the fight regarding his class size, Fink said the UCLA administration is giving him a complete runaround.

Kerri Johnson, his department chair, previously told The Fix the enrollment situation is based on ensuring reasonable class sizes across the major.

Fink, whos taught more than 200 students in the past, said Johnsons statement doesnt hold merit.

Wheres the problem? I havent voiced a problem. [My Teaching Assistant] hasnt voiced a problem. Prior assessments, there was no problem, he said.

MORE: UCLA students step on U.S. flag in protest of Bruin Republicans event

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About the Author

Nathan Rubbelke is a staff reporter for The College Fix with a specialty on investigative and enterprise reporting. He has also held editorial positions at The Commercial Review daily newspaper in Portland, Indiana, as well as atThe Washington Examiner, Red Alert Politics and St. Louis Public Radio.Rubbelke graduated from Saint Louis University, where he majored in political science and sociology.

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Making space for speech: Georgia house bill seeks to expand free speech zones on college campuses – Red and Black

Posted: at 2:04 pm

For Keaton Law, a freshman political science and history major from Lilburn, free speech is more than a political theory. Its personal.

Last October, Law made it his personal mission to have a sidewalk preacher removed from the Tate Student Center Plaza, after the priest reportedly told passing students they were sinners and whores.

I dont think thats acceptable, said Law in a 2016 interview with The Red & Black. We shouldnt be subjected to that kind of verbal abuse all day.

Today, Law still stands by his position that speech zones on campus should be restricted. However, a new bill introduced to the Georgia House aims to do just the opposite.

On Feb. 24, Rep. Buzz Brockway (R-Lawrenceville) introduced House Bill 471 as a proposition to expand free speech zones to encompass any generally accessible outdoor areas of university campuses.

The only areas on campus where students may engage in protests, speeches or peaceful assemblies are the Memorial Hall Plaza and Tate Student Center Plaza.

These areas, often referred to as free speech zones, encourage a reservation at least 48 hours in advance through Associate Dean of Students. They are available for the purpose of expression between 8:00 a.m. and 9:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. University faculty members also have the responsibility to regulate the time, place and manner of expression, according to the University of Georgia Policy of Freedom of Expression.

The zones and regulations, however, may soon see a drastic change in the public university system of all Georgia schools, should this bill pass.

For some students, such as MaKayla King, a freshman dietetics major from Oneida, Tennessee, and president of the Turning Point chapter at UGA, this bill will bring positive revisions to UGAs current policy.

Thats the kind of thing were working for, King said.

Im hoping we can eventually do away with these free speech zones all together, King said.

Turning Point is a new student-activist organization on campus which advocates the importance of fiscal responsibility, free markets and limited government.

King said her organization has played a role in this potential expansion of speech zones through awareness campaigns and educating students on their current speech rights at UGA.

Josh Horne, vice president of Turning Point and freshman biochemistry major from Marietta, said the organization believes the purpose of the university is not to limit free speech but to encourage discussion and promote growth of ideas.

Since taxpayer dollars are funding this university in a large part, anyone should be able to say what they think, Horne said. If our money is going towards the university, then were supporting the university and they should support our right to be able to express what we think.

A public safety policy

Though the bill may seem like a crucial step for organizations such as Turning Point, students such as Law believe expanding free speech zones is a step in the wrong direction.

Law said he believes larger free speech areas on campus would encourage more hate speech.

Law said rather than expanding the free speech zones like the bill suggests, a more concrete, modernized version of the rules and regulations [of free speech] would be better.

We need to outline what hate speech is and be aware that people are allowed to come on campus and say whatever they want and that has the potential of being hateful, he said. Thats what causes a major distraction to what this university is all about.

Journalism professor John Soloski, on the other hand, supports the potential revisions to the Policy of Freedom of Expression because he believes students should be able to practice free speech anywhere.

Anything protecting students First Amendment rights is positive and adds to the marketplace of ideas, Soloski said. I dont believe in free speech zones and see them as counter to what a university is about.

Soloski said it is important to remember the role the university plays in students permitted execution of free speech.

We ought to be encouraging speech and not restricting it. Soloski said.

Other faculty members said though the bill is relevant, they didnt think there would be a notable change on campus right away, should the bill pass.

My guess is that most people dont know that they arent able to have free speech except on certain areas, said political science professor Michael Lynch. The university telling people they are not allowed to have free speech should be a concern to most students, yet theres not many students talking about it.

Lynch also said hes unsure what the bill will actually do in practice, considering the provisions present in the original policy will still be included.

Some of these provisions include students protection against harassment and bullying as well as restrictions against hateful organizations forming on campus.

Other restrictions will still include the universitys responsibility of providing their discretion to appropriate time, place and manner of expression.

Understandably, the university wants to balance public safety with students ability to publicize their political views, Lynch said.

Room for improvement

Political science professor Teena Wilhelm said its important to independently evaluate the current conduct of UGAs speech policies through organizations such as the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. FIRE has given UGA a green freedom of expression rating.

A green rating, as defined by FIRE, is given when a college or universitys policies do not seriously imperil speech.

This rating suggests in comparison with colleges across the nation, UGA is not lacking free speech protection on campus. However, Wilhelm said she believed there is still room for improvement.

The issue that I could see is that the regulation of speech on other areas of campus is still somewhat subjective with the time, place and manner restrictions, Wilhelm said. Since the bill opens up other places on campus for speech to happen, I suppose it opens to the door for more regulation or more challenge to regulation.

Soloski also voiced his concerns for the bill if it were to pass in its current form.

The bill states alongside the free speech zone expansion, there will also be a repeal of the requirement for students to pay activity fees.

No public institution of higher education in this state shall require any student to pay any student activity fee as a condition of matriculation, the bill states.

The issue with the bill Soloski is most concerned with is the potential repercussions which could surface from the limitation of student fees.

I am uncertain the bill [will do] this, Soloski said. But if the bill limits fees being used to support student organizations, this could indirectly limit speech.

Soloski said the elimination of students requirement to pay student fees for organizations on campus could do more than just limit free speech.

My concern is that this could be used to, in effect, defund and possibly help to stifle or eliminate student groups that do not have funds themselves to maintain their organization, Soloski said. Indirectly, this could put out of business worthy student organizations that rely largely on mandatory student fees to support themselves.

Without student organizations having the means to support themselves, the occurrence of free speech by students on campus could be significantly affected.

However, Soloski said the current UGA Policy of Freedom of Expression is already limiting to students free speech possibilities and First Amendment rights with its inclusion of free speech zones.

I do believe that restrictions on student speech, such as free speech zones, are contrary to what a university stands for, he said.

The regulations set in place by the policy, outlining the time, manner and place restrictions set by the university, are also seen as problematic to many for the limitations they set in place as well.

Details of these regulations may be subject to change, provided the bill passes and results in lasting revisions to UGAs Policy of Freedom of Expression.

If passed, this bill will be the second revision in less than three years to the policy, the first taking place in 2015 following a lawsuit against the university.

This lawsuit, gaining the most traction in 2015, resulted from the Young Americans for Liberty suing UGA for restricting free speech and demonstrations to just two areas which comprise less than one percent of campus.

The revision eliminated the requirement for a permit from the Dean of Students prior to a demonstration and enacted the 48-hour reservation policy in its place.

The revised policy also states spontaneous activities with less than ten people participating are allowed anywhere on campus.

If the crowd grows to be larger than ten, campus police must be notified.

Though revisions to the Policy of Freedom of Expression are still only a possibility at the time, students and faculty remain split in their support and predictions of what the bill could do for students if passed.

The campus and its protections really exist for the student body, Wilhelm said. So given the recent events concerning speech on college campuses, I suppose [this bills propositions] are not too surprising.

Currently, HB 471 is in the Georgia House. The bill will need to be voted out of the House by crossover day, Friday, March 2, in order to be considered by Gov. Nathan Deal.

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To all of Gurmehar Kaur’s trolls, the Delhi high court has a pertinent reminder of the importance of free speech – Quartz

Posted: at 2:04 pm


Economic Times (blog)
To all of Gurmehar Kaur's trolls, the Delhi high court has a pertinent reminder of the importance of free speech
Quartz
They shut her up. That was their most valiant act, their only claim to fame, in recent times. They are ministers of the mighty government of India, a cricketing great, a Bollywood star, an Olympic champ, and a whole army of rabid trolls. Her is ...
The right and wrong of free speechEconomic Times (blog)
Ramjas College and Gurmehar Kaur row: Debate rages on freedom of speech a day after social media backlashFirstpost
No Room for 'Intolerant Indian'; President Bats for Free Speech, Respect for WomenNews18
The Express Tribune
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To all of Gurmehar Kaur's trolls, the Delhi high court has a pertinent reminder of the importance of free speech - Quartz

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