Austin American-Statesman

Free speech lost in protests at the University of Texas

- Your Turn

I have years of experience defending students' rights to freedom of speech and assembly on college campuses, so when I heard that protesters were being arrested in my own backyard at the University of Texas, I had to go check it out.

When I arrived on campus, the South Lawn, a large area where free speech could take place without disrupting the flow of traffic, was roped off by campus police. While this was intended to prevent students from camping as they have at other campuses, it left no alternativ­e location to assemble other than on the sidewalks and walkways (thus impeding the flow of traffic).

I did not see any protesters doing anything remotely violent. No chants were directed at individual­s. The protest had the energy of a pep rally, not a riot. Despite this, the students had already received orders to disband due to “Disorderly Conduct” and “Rioting.”

Shortly after I arrived, Texas State troopers (many on horses) began pushing the protesters back further, off the sidewalks and onto Guadalupe Street. Mind you, Guadalupe Street was in no way closed off. Dozens of people were forced into oncoming traffic by DPS, when suddenly the troopers disappeare­d, and most of the protesters got out of the busy road and went right back to the south lawn where the whole protest had begun in the first place.

Witnessing all of this was no shock to me, but the hypocrisy from Texas state government and University administra­tion was clear. It's not real freedom of speech if you can't say what the authoritie­s disagree with.

I'm no Hamas supporter. Far from it. It's heartbreak­ing to see that the energy of these activists is being wasted on supporting a destructiv­e foreign conflict instead of defending freedom and justice here at home.

For those of us who have spent our lives fighting for liberty, defending our freedoms here is much more important than owning our tribal political opponents. Which is why it is so important to defend the rights of students to peacefully protest, no matter what side they're on.

Just a few years ago, to the applause and support of conservati­ves, Greg Abbott passed a campus free speech bill: signaling to the world that Texas was going to be prioritizi­ng their students' rights to freedom of speech. Now that students are protesting something the governor and his supporters disagree with, their means of protest are restricted and they are being violently shut down.

This reminds me of the political atmosphere of 2020: the same liberals who were screaming at us freedom-minded people to stop protesting lockdowns were happily supporting massive, violent gatherings in support of BLM and others. The same conservati­ves who were raising the alarm about anti-pharma researcher­s being raided by the FBI celebrated black-van pickups of communist protesters in Portland.

Each time either political tribe is challenged for having a double-standard there are many arguments as to why one is different from the other. “Your side is killing people, my side is fighting for justice.” While it often seems obvious to us that we're on the side of the angels, it's imperative that we remember who the Bill of Rights was created to restrain: the soldiers on horseback. The power of censorship is more dangerous than the people we disagree with.

I have spent my adult life fighting for people's freedom to speak. I defend this right so freedom-minded people can stand against tyrannical lockdowns or gun grabs. But this means I must defend the rights of those I disagree with.

We've reached a breaking point where every legitimate avenue for students to protest is being taken away, and students have been backed into a corner where the options are to stay silent or get arrested – a dangerous place to put the young people of this country. I might not agree with what they're saying, but I will fight to the death for their right to say it.

Kirby is the founder and CEO of Student Rights Incorporat­ed, whose mission is to give people tools to be politicall­y effective. He lives in Austin

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