The Mercury News

Petaluma High learns censorship doesn’t work

- By Leonard Pitts Jr. Leonard Pitts Jr. is a Miami Herald columnist. © 2018, Chicago Tribune. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

Here’s an axiomatic truth: If you want to make sure people see or hear something, ban people from seeing or hearing something. That predates the internet, as any former teenager who hid out to listen to “Louie Louie” with the volume down can attest.

We are talking about a long time ago. If censorship didn’t work then on something as inconseque­ntial as a pop song, you can imagine how ineffectiv­e it would be now on something as important as sexual assault.

Somebody at Petaluma High School should know that. Instead, the school apparently cut the microphone on its valedictor­ian, Lulabel Seitz, 17, at her graduation ceremony earlier this month. Lulabel says officials had warned her not to mention being the victim of an alleged sexual assault on campus and what she claims was the school’s failure to take action when she reported it.

She began her speech with the standard-issue stuff: hopes, dreams and overcoming adversity. But when Lulabel turned to the forbidden topic, her microphone mysterious­ly stopped working.

“Let her speak!” people cried out. But Lulabel was not allowed to finish.

That wasn’t the end of the story, though. The next day, she took to YouTube, where she gave her speech in its entirety, including the banned sentence, a paean to perseveran­ce that went as follows: “And even learning on a campus in which some people defend perpetrato­rs of sexual assault and silence their victims, we didn’t let that drag us down.”

At this writing, Lulabel’s video has been viewed 335,379 times. We can’t say how many people attended the graduation, but it was likely somewhat fewer than 335,379. And this story has been reported by CNN, NBC, NPR and The Washington Post to name a few.

It seems that in trying to hush Lulabel’s message, the school only magnified it. Petaluma High School, citing privacy concerns, has declined to comment. But what were they thinking? This is not 1963. When you shut off a microphone, you don’t silence a speaker. In the era of YouTube, Twitter and Facebook, we all have microphone­s.

More to the point, have we not yet learned our lesson? Are we not yet prepared to take seriously the pain of our daughters, wives, sisters and mothers? With Harvey Weinstein, Matt Lauer, Roy Moore, Scott Baio, Morgan Freeman, Louis C.K., Glenn Thrush, Charlie Rose, John Conyers, R. Kelly, Ben Affleck, Donald Trump, George H.W. Bush and dozens of other famous men standing accused of various degrees of sexual misconduct, with Bill O’Reilly unemployed, Bill Cosby facing prison and Bill Clinton once again stumbling over Monica Lewinsky, it should be clear that the era of women suffering in silence and humiliatio­n is over.

But apparently, the memo has not yet reached Petaluma High School administra­tion. A bright young girl alleges that she was sexually assaulted and that the people who should have helped her didn’t — and administra­tors respond by telling her, in effect, to shut up? In so doing, they misread the morality of the moment and the limits of their own power.

“Let her speak!” demanded the crowd. “Let her speak!” Which was noble of them. But the lesson of this moment is that things have changed.

And women no longer need permission.

 ?? ERIK CASTRO — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT VIA AP ?? Lulabel Seitz, right, argues with Petaluma High School Principal David Stirrat after her microphone was shut off by school officials during her valedictor­ian speech at the school’s graduation ceremony.
ERIK CASTRO — THE PRESS DEMOCRAT VIA AP Lulabel Seitz, right, argues with Petaluma High School Principal David Stirrat after her microphone was shut off by school officials during her valedictor­ian speech at the school’s graduation ceremony.

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