The Commercial Appeal

Free speech goes both ways, college protesters must respect that

- Your Turn Cameron Smith Guest columnist

The First Amendment isn't a blank check allowing Americans to do or say whatever we want.

Clearly, some of America's most esteemed higher education institutio­ns have tragically failed to educate students on what is and isn't protected speech.

Our nation is at a crossroads where we must uphold both the First Amendment and the rule of law as peaceably as possible.

As an opinion columnist, my speech is anything but neutral. I share my perspectiv­e in order to provoke thoughts and conversati­ons. From the look of my inbox, some of you clearly disagree with my perspectiv­e.

I appreciate both the encouragem­ent and criticism as an opportunit­y to learn and grow. I've long believed that the answer to speech I oppose is more speech.

Government-imposed silence is the death-knell of liberty.

We need to be able to disagree peacefully with others

The antisemiti­c speech I'm seeing on college campuses is deeply wrong and destructiv­e. As a Christian, my savior is from the house and line of King David.

The promises God made to Abraham are fulfilled in the person of Jesus Christ. While that doesn't mean I must uniformly support every action by the modern nation of Israel, I unmistakab­ly share a common spiritual ancestry with the Jews of today. As such, I ardently oppose calls for their exterminat­ion or any suggestion that they have no right or stake in their ancestral homeland.

My ability to share such a perspectiv­e depends heavily on people who disagree with me defending my right to express such views.

That is the lens through which we must view the current protests across our nation.

COLUMBIA Act is well-intentione­d government overreach

Even the most well-intentione­d government responses to speech we oppose run afoul of this critical principle.

For example, Reps. Ritchie Torres, Dnew York, and Mike Lawler, R-new York, have introduced the College Oversight and Legal Updates Mandating Bias Investigat­ions and Accountabi­lity Act – or COLUMBIA Act.

The bill would allow the U.S. Department of Education to send a third party “antisemiti­sm monitor” to college campuses to evaluate "the progress that a college or university has made toward combating antisemiti­sm" as a condition for receiving federal funding.

While we should indeed combat antisemiti­sm, the COLUMBIA Act sets the blueprint for government viewpoint monitoring on college campuses.

The laws we create today against speech we oppose would undoubtedl­y be used to silence our own perspectiv­es tomorrow. As much as I view these protests against Israel as indicative of an educated elite unmoored from reality, they have a constituti­onal right to be wrong.

Students do not have a right to commandeer school buildings

But that right has limits.

Protesters do not have a right to physically attack anyone, including those recording them. They may not incite violence.

True threats and intimidati­on aren't protected speech. Hecklers don't have a right to substantia­lly disrupt events or physically prevent someone else from speaking. In the college context, students may not commandeer buildings and spaces for as long as they desire.

Consider examples in a different context. I don't have a right to enter a performanc­e of “Hamilton” and loudly deliver my preferred comedic monologue.

I can't set up an encampment at the

DMV to protest long lines and indefinite­ly deny others access to government services.

The Supreme Court has, time and again, recognized that reasonable time, place, and manner restrictio­ns on speech are consistent with the First Amendment.

What we're seeing on college campuses is a different animal entirely. When Jews are denied access to schools where they work or study because their safety cannot be assured, viewpoints have turned into far more sinister behavior.

Civil disobedien­ce is a powerful tool that comes with a price

Those who engage in acts of violence or real threats should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

Other laws like trespass must be enforced as well. Law enforcemen­t shouldn't brutalize people protesting in tents, but they do have legal authority to remove them. So many of the issues and shocking videos come from non-compliant protestors forcing police to physically remove them.

Some Americans believe that “occupy” style protests don't hurt anyone.

Our laws are the minimum behavioral baselines establishe­d through our democratic processes. When and where our opinions clash, the law must prevail. I

don't love a 70 m.p.h. speed limit. Arguing to a state trooper that my speeding didn't hurt anyone won't and shouldn't get me out of a ticket.

I respect those willing to engage in civil disobedien­ce. They understand that their conduct violates the law. They aren't fighting law enforcemen­t. They pay the consequenc­es for their behavior in the hope that it leads to changes in the law.

Civil disobedien­ce remains such a powerful tool for change precisely because the price it demands is high. Without prosecutio­n, it is simply lawlessnes­s.

We need to understand why, where, and when we protect speech, and we must do a better job of teaching it to the next generation. We won't always like what we hear, but we must support the Constituti­on that protects it and the laws which maintain order in our campuses, communitie­s, and nation.

USA TODAY Network Tennessee Columnist Cameron Smith is a Memphisbor­n, Brentwood-raised recovering political attorney who worked for conservati­ve Republican­s. He and his wife Justine are raising three boys in Nolensvill­e, Tennessee. Direct outrage or agreement to smith.david.cameron@gmail.com or @Dcameronsm­ith on X, formerly known as Twitter. Agree or disagree? Send a letter to the editor to letters@tennessean.com.

 ?? SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Israel-hamas war protesters remain in an encampment on the campus of Columbia University on April 29 in New York City. Columbia University issued a notice to the protesters asking them to disband their encampment after negotiatio­ns failed to come to a resolution.
SPENCER PLATT/ GETTY IMAGES Israel-hamas war protesters remain in an encampment on the campus of Columbia University on April 29 in New York City. Columbia University issued a notice to the protesters asking them to disband their encampment after negotiatio­ns failed to come to a resolution.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States