Why don’t college students care about free speech?

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by Alex Berenson, Unreported Truths:

I spoke yesterday on the First Amendment and social media at the University of North Carolina; great event, but 80 percent of the people who showed up were over 50.

Last night, James Lawrence – my lawyer in Berenson v Biden – and I had the privilege of speaking at the University of North Carolina about the threats to free speech.

The event, at the student union, was well-publicized and -run. Our hosts, the university’s Student and Alumni Free Speech Alliances, even offered free pizza.

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The good news is that close to 100 people showed up to hear us talk over the need to end government efforts to restrict “misinformation” on social media.

The bad news is that they were nearly all alumni. Fewer than 20 students came.

The sparse student attendance gave me a chance to see for myself what surveys increasingly reveal.

College students, especially those on the left, don’t particularly care about freedom of speech, or see it as a value worth defending. In fact, some view it as actively dangerous and will try to block speech they don’t like.

Their tactics begin with soft intimidation and escalate from there. Yesterday, four conservative-leaning University of North Carolina law students told me how other students had stood outside their events in prior years, writing down the names of attendees, to hint that they would be ostracized for their participation.

At first I found this difficult to believe, particularly at a law school, where the value of free expression and inquiry should be held in the highest regard.

Then I remembered the 2023 incident where Stanford Law School students shouted down a conservative federal judge, with the apparent encouragement of the school’s then-associate dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (yes, an actual job).

(As she famously asked: Is the juice worth the squeeze, judge? Issss the juuuice worth the squeeze?)

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The growing passivity of college students was visible during Covid, when students did little to protest the tight restrictions schools put on them long after it was clear Covid posed them essentially no risk.

It is equally apparent this fall, when modest threats from administrators have effectively squelched the pro-Hamas – or, if you prefer, pro-Gaza – protests that broke out last spring. (It also suggests those protests had more to do with cosplaying and virtue signaling than closely held views.)

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