National Post

Duelling petitions target professor

Free speech or attack on the vulnerable?

- Brett Bundale

HALIFAX• An associate professor at Acadia University is facing a growing backlash over incendiary social media comments, stoking a national debate about free speech on campus amid calls for his ouster from the Wolfville, N.S., school.

Rick Mehta, a psychology professor and advocate of free speech, has commented publicly on a range of controvers­ial issues from decoloniza­tion to multicultu­ralism, prompting both public outcry and support.

While his defenders say his voice is an antidote to political correctnes­s run amok, his critics say his online comments attack marginaliz­ed people and perpetuate harmful stereotype­s.

The acrimoniou­s debate has spurred a Halifax- based activist to launch a petition demanding his removal from the small- town Nova Scotia university, while a counterpet­ition is calling for him to stay in the classroom as a beacon of freedom of expression.

“I fear that if I say something, I’ ll be labelled as a racist,” Mehta said in an interview Monday, referring to the Indigenous residentia­l school system in Canada. “If you dare question the orthodoxy, you’re automatica­lly a racist and labelled a colonialis­t who somehow endorses what happen in the past.”

The controvers­y follows an uproar at Wilfrid Laurier University in Waterloo, Ont., last fall when a teaching assistant was discipline­d for airing a debate clip featuring a controvers­ial figure.

Lindsay Shepherd was reprimande­d for failing to condemn the views of University of Toronto professor Jordan Peterson, though it later came to light that no formal complaint was filed against her. Peterson, a psychology professor, refused to use gender- neutral pronouns to address students.

Although the cases of Peterson, Shepherd and now Mehta differ, they underscore a divisive debate about freedom of speech on university campuses in Canada.

A spokesman for Acadia University said the school has not received a formal complaint against Mehta, although it is aware of his social media comments and the petition against him.

“Dr. Mehta does not speak for the university and, as I understand it, is expressing his personal opinions on free speech and other matters,” Scott Roberts said in an email.

At issue is Mehta’s response to a decision by Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer to remove Sen. Lynn Beyak from his party’s parliament­ary caucus.

Scheer booted the senator after she refused to remove offensive letters with racial undertones from her website, which were penned in support of her praise of residentia­l schools.

In a tweet, Mehta called out Scheer for claiming to support free speech and yet removing Beyak from caucus.

“Where is the evidence of racism? Are you saying that the Aboriginal people should have a protected status and therefore can’t be criticized?” he tweeted earlier this month, adding that her ejection from the Tory caucus was a “bad move” for race relations.

Mehta clarified in an interview that he supported Beyak’s right to speak her mind and post letters to her website, but that he does not agree with or endorse her views.

His position on Beyak’s departure — and on topics including Indigenous issues and transgende­r rights — has galvanized both supporters and opponents.

Critics say his comments de mean marginaliz­ed groups and are tantamount to hate speech.

“He attacks marginaliz­ed groups and perpetuate­s harmful stereotype­s,” said Jessica Durling, a Halifax human rights activist who launched the petition to remove Mehta from Acadia.

“This isn’t free speech,” she added. “This is hate speech. He’s kicking down and attacking marginaliz­ed people and regurgitat­ing stereotype­s.”

For example, Durling points to his retweet of a post on Twitter that said it is “statistica­lly impossible for all Native children to have had a negative experience with residentia­l schools.”

He also retweeted a comment about the “Aboriginal industry agenda,” which “exploits western values of justice” and suggests Indigenous People “play the helpless victim” and “cash government cheques.” In retweeting the post, Mehta emphasized that this is the agenda of the socalled industry, which claims to represent the needs of the entire Aboriginal community, and should not be interprete­d as an attack on Aboriginal People.

But Durling said university professors cannot propagate abhorrent comments and not expect consequenc­es.

“Freedom of speech is not freedom of consequenc­e,” she said. “He’s being held on a pedestal as a university professor. You can’t just do whatever you want without consequenc­e.”

Mehta’s defenders, however, say he’s a champion of free speech and civil liberties in a society obsessed with political correctnes­s.

Encouraged by what they call his critical thinking, Mehta’s supporters have launched a counter- petition to keep him in the classroom.

The online petition said he is being “attacked by Marxist and Socialist forces that are trying to stifle debate and shut down free speech.”

Contrary to what his critics claim, the petition launched by Jay Andrew said Mehta “has expressed he is fully in support of trans rights as he is for all human rights.

“He believes former residentia­l school attendees that claim the schools did good in some cases should be heard as well, as part of the overall conversati­on,” the petition said. “He believes that there are people ‘ self- identifyin­g’ as Indigenous spokespeop­le that are exploiting the general public by not speaking openly regarding both sides of the above issues.”

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