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+====Status quo solves – you can organize an independent newspaper or make a website and it’s been done at several colleges already==== |
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+Kabay ’10 (M.E, December, Contributor at Network World, “Free speech issues: Controlling content in college newspapers.” Network World, http://www.networkworld.com/article/2195630/data-center/free-speech-issues~-~-controlling-content-in-college-newspapers.html~-~-ghs//sk) |
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+If students feel strongly that a university administration is clamping down too strongly on their |
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+AND |
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+classic example of what not to do with non-random sample data. |
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+====Free speech is for the privileged few – dominant social groups coopt free speech and silence oppressed voices – marginalized groups are stuck in a binary between being heard and being dismissed==== |
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+Manne and Stanley 15, Kate Manne assistant professor of philosophy at Cornell University and Jason Stanley professor of philosophy at Yale University. He is the author, most recently, of How Propaganda Works (Princeton University Press), "When Free Speech Becomes a Political Weapon," Chronicle of Higher Education, 11-13-2015, http://www.chronicle.com/article/When-Free-Speech-Becomes-a/234207, ghs//BZ |
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+Students at the University of Missouri recently succeeded in pressuring the institution’s president and chancellor |
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+AND |
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+speech is radically undercut by what is aptly known as "tone policing." |
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+ |
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+====Marginalized viewpoints are ignored in the marketplace – the only result is the empowerment of already existing power structures==== |
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+Bietzke 97, Paul H. Brietzke, “How and Why the Marketplace of Ideas Fail,” Valparaiso Scholar, 1997, http://scholar.valpo.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1846andcontext=vulr, ghs//BZ |
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+Advocates of a broad and absolutist political speech are right: dissenters are protected against |
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+AND |
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+series of analogies to isolated transactions on the New York Stock Exchange.4 |