Stanford Law School’s website touts its “collegial culture” in which “collaboration and the open exchange of ideas are essential to life and learning.” Then there’s the culture I experienced when I visited Stanford last week....
When I arrived, the walls were festooned with posters denouncing me for crimes against women, gays, blacks and “trans people.” Plastered everywhere were photos of the students who had invited me and fliers declaring “You should be ASHAMED,” with the last word in large red capital letters and a horror-movie font. This didn’t seem “collegial.” Walking to the building where I would deliver my talk, I could hear loud chanting a good 50 yards away, reminiscent of a tent revival in its intensity. Some 100 students were massed outside the classroom as I entered, faces painted every color of the rainbow, waving signs and banners, jeering and stamping and howling. As I entered the classroom, one protester screamed: “We hope your daughters get raped!”
It was a big protest, generated by the real human beings the law school had assembled as its student body, not propaganda on the institution's website. It's real life, like the life experienced beyond the courthouse and beyond the law school, and it's not that polite. You know, it's also not polite to put "trans people" in quotation marks. It's a more polished form of incivility, but law students have long protested about the way law dresses up and glosses over injustice.
Of course, “We hope your daughters get raped!” is crude and ugly, but the right to defend one's own body has been taken away by the judges, and now, in America, a woman who has been raped may be forced to endure a pregnancy from that rape. In that context, “We hope your daughters get raped!” means: You might feel some empathy for us if it happened to someone close to you.
I had been warned a few days before about a possible protest. But Stanford administrators assured me they were “on top of it,” that Stanford’s policies permitted “protest but not disruption.” They weren’t “on top of it.”
Yes. The school failed him. Not only did the website promise collegiality, administrators, it seems, directly promised conditions that he relied on. You could parse their promise. What does it mean to be "on top of it"? What is "it"? They didn't say they would stop the protest. The students had a right to protest. The line was drawn at disruption, and where's the line between protest and disruption? Can we have a collegial debate about that? I'll bet we can't!
Before my talk started, the mob flooded the room. Banners unfurled. Signs brandished: “FED SUCK,” “Trans Lives Matter” (this one upside down), and others that can’t be quoted in a family newspaper. A nervous dog—literally, a canine—was in the front row, fur striped with paint....
Speaking of empathy... don't bring a dog into a noisy, chaotic scene. And don't paint your dog. I wonder what size and breed. It is dangerous to everyone to have a "nervous dog" in a place like that, and it's cruel to the dog.
When the Federalist Society president tried to introduce me, the heckling began.... Try delivering a speech while being jeered at every third word. This was an utter farce, a staged public shaming. I stopped, pleaded with the students to stop the stream of insults (which only made them louder), and asked if administrators were present. Enter Tirien Steinbach, associate dean for diversity, equity and inclusion.
Ms. Steinbach and (I later learned) other administrators were watching from the periphery. She hadn’t introduced herself to me. She asked to address the students. Something felt off. I asked her to tell the students their infantile behavior was inappropriate.
One could hardly expect the dean for diversity, equity and inclusion to take the judge's instruction and call the students babies. She had a lot of interests to mediate and an important, ongoing relationship with the students.
She insisted she wanted to talk to all of us. Students began screaming, and I reluctantly gave way. Whereupon Ms. Steinbach opened a folio, took out a printed sheaf of papers, and delivered a six-minute speech addressing the question: “Is the juice worth the squeeze?” What could that mean?
It's impossible for Wall Street Journal readers to guess what that could mean. It's out of context. Metaphors look weird when you don't know what they refer to. Clearly, it's questioning whether some effort is worth what you get from it. It's not that weird.
While the students rhythmically snapped, Ms. Steinbach attempted to explain. My “work,” she said, “has caused harm.” It “feels abhorrent” and “literally denies the humanity of people.” My presence put Ms. Steinbach in a tough spot, she said, because her job “is to create a space of belonging for all people” at Stanford. She assured me I was “absolutely welcome in this space” because “me and many people in this administration do absolutely believe in free speech.”
I didn’t feel welcome—who would? And she repeated the cryptic question: “Is the juice worth the squeeze?”
It's not that hard to understand, and you've deprived readers of the context. Steinbach's remarks made sense and dealt with the relationship between the speaker and the protesters that she needed to manage. She told him he was "absolutely welcome in this space," but he wants us to care about his feelings — he didn't feel welcome — but the students had their feelings too. Steinbach stood in a crossfire of feelings, and she did well enough.
I asked again what she meant, and she finally put the question plainly: Was my talk “worth the pain that this causes and the division that this causes?”
Again she asserted her belief in free speech before equivocating: “I understand why people feel like the harm is so great that we might need to reconsider those policies, and luckily, they’re in a school where they can learn the advocacy skills to advocate for those changes.”
That is, Steinbach acknowledged that there are different legal positions that are taken about free speech and this, too, is a subject for debate in law school. That is certainly true. Free speech rights could be lost if people don't believe in their value. It's not that difficult to articulate the arguments for limitations on free speech. Those of us who care about free speech rights need to be vigilant. They've been under attack for centuries, and they are under attack right now, from people, like those students, who would characterize some spoken words as a physical injury.
Then she turned the floor back over to me, while hoping I could “learn too” and “listen through your partisan lens, the hyperpolitical lens.”
That sentence needs editing to put "hoping" closer to "she," but you can figure it out. She told him that she hoped he could not just talk to the students and teach them but listen to them and learn from them. She accused him of being political — hyperpolitical.
In closing, she said: “I look out and I don’t ask, ‘What’s going on here?’ I look out and I say, ‘I’m glad this is going on here.’ ”
She was suggesting that protesting be seen in a positive light. Perhaps somehow the judge could have taken a lighthearted tone — I love protests! I was a student protester myself and I know how it feels to be righteously angry, etc. etc. — and connected it back to the things he came prepared to say. There was a path in that direction, but it was a road not taken.
This is on video, and the entire event is on audio, in case you’re wondering....
I've heard the audio. The judge becomes impassioned, and he expresses a good amount of hostility toward the students. As a law professor (retired), I can't imagine openly expressing hostility toward students who were aiming hostility at me. I lock into professor mode, mostly because I believe I have a duty to care for the students but also because I think a dispassionate, professional demeanor is more effective — especially when your interlocutors are highly emotional. Set the right example, and maybe they will meet you where you can coexist in something approaching conversation.
Two days later, Jenny Martinez and Marc Tessier-Lavinge, respectively the law school’s dean and the university’s president, formally apologized, confirming that protesters and administrators had violated Stanford policy. I’m grateful and I accepted.
The matter hasn’t dropped, though. This week, nearly one-third of Stanford law students continued the protest—donning masks, wearing black, and forming a “human corridor” inside the school... protesting Ms. Martinez for having apologized to me....
I don't think it was right to apologize for what Steinbach did. And I think the students had the right to protest. If they crossed the line into disruption, Martinez (and Tessier-Lavinge) should specify exactly where that happened. And they ought to apologize for the institution's failure to do enough to prevent the disruption or to deal with it quickly.
The protesters showed not the foggiest grasp of the basic concepts of legal discourse: That one must meet reason with reason, not power. That jeering contempt is the opposite of persuasion.
I don't think the students needed to limit themselves to "legal discourse." This wasn't the courtroom or the classroom. They were protesting, going outside of the "legal discourse" that the judge would have preferred. Protesting is an old tradition, and it's important, though sometimes rude and ugly. The students seem to have thought — with some reason — that judges like Duncan deserve to be made to feel ashamed of themselves and they went into the familiar theatrical protest style we Americans have loved and hated for so many years.
That the law protects the speaker from the mob, not the mob from the speaker.
He keeps calling students "the mob." Where's the love? These are our young people. They did not commit violence or threaten imminent violence, so there was no occasion to protect him, as First Amendment law is traditionally understood. There's no First Amendment right not to be heckled! And calling the speaks "the mob" doesn't take away their rights.
Worst of all, Ms. Steinbach’s remarks made clear she is proud that Stanford students are being taught this is the way law should be.
She wanted the students to know that the First Amendment — which Stanford, though private, is bound to follow — is subject to interpretation and they may apply their legal skills to working to develop strong exceptions to free speech. Ironically, Duncan is arguing for a strong exception to free speech if he means to say that the students may not shout him down.
I have been criticized in the media for getting angry at the protesters. It’s true I called them “appalling idiots,” “bullies” and “hypocrites.” They are, and I won’t apologize for saying so. Sometimes anger is the proper response to vicious behavior.
All right, then. He stands by his angry expressions. As I said, I would not, as a law professor, talk to students that way. But he wants the freedom to lean into anger. That puts him on the same page with them. Whatever happened to "the foggiest grasp of the basic concepts of legal discourse."
There's a lot of fog here!
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«সবচেয়ে পুরাতন ‹পুরাতন 230 এর 201 – থেকে 230Replying to Hey Skipper: The point is not that Judge Duncan is correct, so he should not be challenged. The point is that he should be challenged directly responding to what he said, not by shouting him down and refusing to let him speak. The fact that the Judge Duncan opponents refused to let him speak makes it appear to an uninformed outsider that they were unable, or afraid, to confront his opinions directly and quietly.
Robert Cook said..The Dean and the faculty should not abase themselves in the face of childish tantrums but should make clear that such behavior is not appropriate and will not be tolerated, even in the name of policies and social goals that may be desirable.
Well slow down, though: that sounds good and seems obviously correct to me but Professor Althouse seems to think that behavior IS appropriate, or at least it MIGHT BE appropriate and unless the appropriatness is settled (right then) via debate then it'd be wrong of us to make any conclusive judgement. See, Prof Althouse says the First Amendment allows that behavior (crude and ugly as it may be) and that seems to be the end of it--if it's allowed under the 1st A. then it's a-ok, apparently.
When someone interrupts a speech and demands "debate me, bro!" Professor Althouse would have us believe she thinks the proper course of action is to do exactly that--to stop the speech and have the debate the heckler demands.
That *may* only apply to certain speakers, though; not sure what cruel neutrality dictates, there.
Interesting back and forth. The professor's rationalization of the conduct of students and faculty in an "elite" institution is depressing, contributing to a growing contempt for the prevalent mentality in our universities. These students seem to believe that they are untouchable as members of a howling mob. Eventually, a howling mob will answer them. Nihilism vs. nihilism. Just perfect.
rcocean said...I don't like either side in this dispute. What is Judge doing at Stanford anyway? He's not a politican running for office and its not his place to Debate with college students
He was invited by a group of students who wanted to hear him speak.
The protestors and DEI admin take the position that he shouldn't go to the campus, that his very presence there is hurtful and harmful (that's what the question of whether the juice {his giving a speech} was worth the squeeze {their disruption/anger/alleged harm}). The twin goals of disrupting speeches you don't like is both deprive that speaker and his audience of the experience they desire AND to dissuade potential future speakers you dislike from being willing to come to campus (to raise the cost, to them, of giving speeches).
Allowing those disruptions to succeed, as Prof Althouse seems to recommend, incentivizes future bad behavior and harms the ideal of free speech.
If Hitchens' one visit to Beirut is any indication, he wouldn't have just spoken vigorously back to the Maoists, he would have gone around ripping down the Wanted posters and maybe some of the others.
Yeah, I miss him too (even if he was desperately wrong about Mother Teresa.)
I beseech you, in the bowels of Christ, think it possible you may be mistaken.
Anne, that was a nice Fisking of his article.
It would have been great to see his response to your Fisking, but then again, no one can ever respond to a Fisking, which is what makes a Fisking so juvenile.
As a law professor (retired), I can't imagine openly expressing hostility toward students who were aiming hostility at me. I lock into professor mode, mostly because I believe I have a duty to care for the students but also because I think a dispassionate, professional demeanor is more effective — especially when your interlocutors are highly emotional.
Because of my enormous respect for her, I have actually trying hard...away from this blog...to see this from Ann's point of view. I can certainly agree with her that the judge was assuredly on notice that something like this could happen, and he should have prepared himself accordingly with Plan B and Plan C. To that end, I agree with our hostess that his performance, while perfectly understandable, was inadequate for the task. Since this was a planned hit job with the active participation of the DEI dean, I doubt that any approach on his part, as suggested by Ann, would have magically changed the outcome.
However, her alarming comment above has captured my attention. During my years in law school, I don't recall a single classroom incident during which the professional demeanor of a professor was tested in response to hostility of students in or out of the classroom. Any administration that tolerates that behavior is spineless and invites more of the same.
One warning, and then expulsion as an example to others.
- Krumhorn
Replying to Hey Skipper: The point is not that Judge Duncan is correct, so he should not be challenged. The point is that he should be challenged directly responding to what he said, not by shouting him down and refusing to let him speak.
You are correct.
However, a week or so ago, Ann defended Dean Steinbach's conduct as correct — that she was competently doing her job as Dean of DIE.
Assume, arguendo, that Steinbach took sources like Lambda Legal at face value. And that all such sources were as mistaken, or devious, as Lambda Legal. That can only mean one of two things. Either Steinbach lacked the intellectual capacity to perceive the need to consult primary sources before making grave moral accusations, or that alternative views, to the extent that they contradicted DIE, were de facto evil, and were going to get what they deserved.
This is what Ann, Chuck, Inga, Left Bank, Guitar Hero, et al have utterly failed to address. Aside from the First Amendment, the applicability of the Heckler's Veto, or Stanford's Code of Conduct, what if Steinbach's email to the students ahead of Judge Duncan's talk grossly mischaracterized what he has said? What if these elite law students, en masse, couldn't be fussed to find out for themselves seemingly essential, and easily found, information?
If there is a third option beyond fools or liars, I'd love to hear it.
Otherwise, Dean Steinbach is a hazard to any institution that hires her for deeper thought or greater integrity than can be found among county fair goldfish. And the students have proven beyond doubt that they are threats to society.
Our hostess would have cheered on the murderous youth of the Khmer Rouge as they killed everyone who offended their leftist sensibilities. And the Cultural Revolution. These are young Marxist, brownshirted thugs, and you defend them. Shame on you.
The Federalist Society kids should have been ready to respond. When Mx Holier than Thou started lecturing the judge, they should have shouted her down. MAD - mutually assured destruction.
“The school failed him. Not only did the website promise collegiality, administrators, it seems, directly promised conditions that he relied on.”
Oh really? The law school website says the school is “known for our collegial culture.” It doesn’t promise collegiality. As to what administrators promised what conditions, the judge is mighty vague. Let’s remember he has speaking not at a university function but at a luncheon organized by a student political club. In that context, it’s understandable that the administrators didn’t intervene until asked to do so. It wasn’t their event.
The bait, it is stinky. Must need more clicks.
In my opinion, the only differences between the Stanford Law students in this case and Maoist Red Guards are the facts that they refrained (just!) from physically assaulting the speaker, and did not force him to wear a three-foot-tall dunce cap.
"Ann Althouse said...Do you not remember how the ACLU staunchly defended the KKK and the Nazis?"
It was , literally, one lawyer for the ACLU who defended the Nazis right to protest. A black guy. He shamed the rest of the ACLU into backing him. The ACLU only backs those rights that the ACLU agrees with and that are profitable for the ACLU. Only one lawyer of the ACLU agreed that free speech is for everyone.
Free speech is free speech. You don't like my argument? Don't shout me down. Give a counter argument.
I would never hire someone who participated in a “protest” like this because you can be sure that they’d be a huge problem employee.
Left Bank: Oh really? The law school website says the school is “known for our collegial culture.” It doesn’t promise collegiality. As to what administrators promised what conditions, the judge is mighty vague. Let’s remember he has speaking not at a university function but at a luncheon organized by a student political club. In that context, it’s understandable that the administrators didn’t intervene until asked to do so. It wasn’t their event.
Judge Duncan was invited by a Stanford student organization, to a Stanford approved event in Stanford facilities. It was Stanford's event. Which part of the following should the administrators found optional?
From Stanford's Fundamental Standard:
ii. Students are expected to uphold the integrity of the university as a community of scholars in which free speech is available to all and intellectual honesty is demanded of all.free speech is available to all and intellectual honesty is demanded of all.
From Stanford's Advancing Free Speech and Inclusion:
Second, we must ensure that a diversity of views is not just a possibility but also a reality at Stanford, both in the classroom and outside it. It is imperative that as a university, we avoid a culture in which people feel pressured to conform to particular views. One way to encourage that is to ensure that diverse perspectives are actively discussed at Stanford. As one new initiative, we have asked some university thought leaders, in conjunction with student leaders, to organize a series of discussions with well-known individuals who hold contrasting views on consequential subjects.
...
What is not acceptable is to disrupt speakers and not allow them to speak. This is inconsistent with our values and carries consequences as a violation of the university’s Fundamental Standard and Code of Conduct.
Law school profs are renowned for their arrogance and closed-mindedness, and for years Althouse avoided that. That changed. No credible person, right down to the Stanford President and Dean, viewed what the DEI person did as appropriate. Inviting a Circuit Court judge to speak for the purpose of insulting him is unprofessional and, in a better era, would have led to the firing of the DEI dean and expulsion of students.
To be candid, why any judge appointed by a Republican agrees to speak at these known hotbeds of radicalism is a mystery. They know they will be treated poorly and disrespected, and there will be faculty voices cheering on that behavior.
This bizarre take is why I have largely left this blog.
"Blogger HoodlumDoodlum said...
I have to admit: I never thought I'd see Prof Althouse make excuses for someone shouting that they hope someone's daughters get raped, but here we are."
This was a very fine set of comments sir/madam.
The goading of Judge Duncan is reminiscent of the Kavanaugh hearings: erect an intimidatory wall of hatred, contempt and lies, then when the man finally offers some resistance, shake your head and say that this demonstrates a lack of proper judicial temperament.
I don't recall Ann siding quite so blindly with the mob on that occasion as she has here. Same with the invasion of the Madison Senate many years ago.
"Blogger GRW3 said...
The Federalist Society kids should have been ready to respond. When Mx Holier than Thou started lecturing the judge, they should have shouted her down. MAD - mutually assured destruction."
I agree completely, if conservatives are not willing to fight, then they will get their face smashed in.
"Blogger cronus titan said...
To be candid, why any judge appointed by a Republican agrees to speak at these known hotbeds of radicalism is a mystery. They know they will be treated poorly and disrespected, and there will be faculty voices cheering on that behavior."
Because some people have courage.
Hmm. Surprised to althouse so blind and wrong
"pain" "Harm" and similar concepts.
Humans, including, tentatively, law students, aren't that weak.
Concepts they find unfavorable to their narrative are called "painful" and similar nonsenses, and the admin, as the adult in the room, must take care to protect the kids from "harm" as if they were in Romper Room and a bad man came in.
After which, after some version of Judge Duncan is sent packing, both sides wink at each other, already knowing the steps to the dance and await the next opportunity.
Now, if there truly are people there who are harmed by the idea of somebody speaking on legal issues, they should be under serious mental health care, not running around loose where they could get hurt, or, worse, hurt others under the idea they'll get excused on account of they're being harmed by somebody with a different idea and need to defend themselves from HARM.
If that Dean of Diversity et. al. truly understood what the term meant she would have told those students that true diversity is diversity of thought and that it was her job to defend it. She would then have told them that Stanford's Code of Conduct explicitly forbade disrupting an event of that nature (I'm typing on my phone, no cut and paste but you can look it up) and then told them to sit down and shut up or they'd get thrown out.
So disappointed in Ann for defending that obnoxious behavior. How can one ever have a discussion when being shouted down. If this is what this country has come to, we are in a terrible place.
Even Bill Maher realizes that this was a complete failure ( and condoning ) on the part of Stanford. Amazing that one of his guest took the Althouse approach and chastised the Judge for being to wimpy to shout through this.
I wonder how Maher's show would do with the same protestors. Heh
Maydaygal45 said...
So disappointed in Ann for defending that obnoxious behavior. How can one ever have a discussion when being shouted down. If this is what this country has come to, we are in a terrible place.
Me too. But the only response we seem to get from her is "That's not what I said. Why don't you go reread it and come back and apologize for not being prepared."
This used to be a good place to go to learn something. I'm thinking not so much anymore. I can do without the smug.
I watched an old Dick Cavett episode last year. An author he was interviewing had made an argument unpopular with feminists, so they disrutpted the show.
To my surprise Mr. Cavett (aka The Lion of the Jungle) stepped to the stage edge and told them they had two choices: knock it off or be thrown out. His guest you see, was his guest.
I haven't a clear idea where Cavett's sympathies were to be found, but I know he realized his responsibilities as host.
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