Boston Herald

Campus speech no joke

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After days of absorbing criticism, it finally occurred to someone at the University of California Berkeley that announcing — a week in advance — the school administra­tion’s utter helplessne­ss to protect an invited guest speaker was not a mark of leadership on this public university campus. After first canceling a planned speech by conservati­ve provocateu­r Ann Coulter, citing its inability to provide a secure environmen­t, the administra­tion now says she can speak after all.

Now, Coulter’s brand of shock “conservati­sm” isn’t particular­ly admirable — and we realize these invitation­s are part of a coordinate­d effort by conservati­ves to expose liberal bias on American college campuses (it doesn’t take much).

And Berkeley has also been forced in recent months to control violent protests on campus, involving many non-students.

But canceling the speech was a weak concession to the inmates who have shown their willingnes­s to use violence to take over the asylum.

It’s the university’s responsibi­lity to provide security — to create a “safe space” as it were — for the guest of a sanctioned campus group, in this case, the College Republican­s, if the goal is indeed to promote the free exchange of ideas.

Clearly the university had plenty of time to come up with a security plan — and its initial unwillingn­ess to do so suggests the problem was with what Coulter was expected to say, and not the environmen­t in which she would say it.

Amid the Coulter kerfuffle Berkeley became the subject of satire, when The Onion joked that the campus had gone into lockdown after a few loose pages of The Wall Street Journal were found on a campus bench.

“As of now, the perpetrato­r remains at large, so it is vital that you stay where you are until the all-clear is given,” reads a fictional “urgent alert.”

The sad thing is, at Berkeley and on so many other campuses, it’s becoming difficult to distinguis­h truth from satire.

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