| Don’t Don't Mind The Hypocritical Censors Behind The Curtain |
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| Written by Mitch |
| Wednesday, 16 April 2008 05:51 |
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“The University of Saint Thomas took the correct approach in resolving the Desmond Tutu flap, safeguarding academic and intellectual freedom while preventing Tutu from insulting Jews. The school has an obligation to protect students from inflammatory speech”. The Strib stirred up a hornet’s next of controversy last fall when they put a period on the end of the Desmond Tutu controversy by endorsing a paternalistic, authoritarian approach to the controversial event. OK. No, they didn’t. They reconsidered and re-invited the Bishop. But can you imagine how the local media and Sorosphere would have reacted if they had?
The Strib dignifies Saint Thomas’ position by omission. Oh, it’s true - but they also banned Star Parker because the Young Americas Foundation had booked Ann Coulter. Jane Canney’s objections - as I noted yesterday from Katherine Kersten’s piece…
Which goes a lot deeper than just “not booking a pro-life speaker”. It means Saint Thomas indulges in institutional bigotry against conservative thought on its campus.
Let’s come back to that last statement in a bit.
Of course, the University had no problem bringing Al Franken and transgender activist Debra Davis to campus - and, let’s be clear, I don’t want them to have a problem with it, since I’m a conservative and therefore value genuine intellectual freedom - even though both of their messages are, unlike Parker’s, fundamentally anti-Catholic. What “control” is it that the Strib thinks Saint Thomas needs?
Except liberal groups’ speakers are not subjected to this paternalistic, discriminatory guilt by less-than-association!
It might be, perhaps, if it were consistently applied. As it is, it’s merely further evidence of Saint Thomas’ intellectual cowardice - and the Star/Tribune’s hypocrisy. |








