Those poor Emory
students so terrorized by someone chalking “Trump 2016” on sidewalks have
attracted international scorn and ridicule. Now the alumni are organizing on
Facebook to challenge school President James Wagner’s response to the butthurt.
From the open letter:
As
the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Washington Post and other media outlets
recently reported, a small contingent of vocal Emory students claimed to have
been harmed on campus and stormed the office of the president of the university
in protest. The locus of this alleged harm? Chalked political slogans featuring the name
of a leading presidential candidate. What should have become an opportune
teaching moment to instruct students in the value of free speech and healthy
debate, once radical ideas that serve as the foundation of American society,
morphed into something else entirely. President Wagner, and by virtue of his
position, Emory itself, officially endorsed the opposite: the rights of all to
freely express their political views must give way in the event some believe their
feelings are harmed by such speech. Indeed, as President Wagner stated in a
recent campus-wide e-mail in response to the student-led protest, it is now
Emory’s policy to recognize the “calls to provide a safe environment”. Freely
expressing a constitutionally protected right, in Wagner’s view, creates an
unsafe environment. Let the implications sink in.
Emory is a
private university, and as such can do what it pleases. But as we found out at
the University of Missouri, capitulation to the politically correct can trickle
down to the bottom line quickly.
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