The odds that Ron Paul would win the Republican Presidential primary this year were always pretty slim. But you wouldn’t know that from the overheated response one student supporter at Auburn University in Alabama got when he dared to place a sign supporting Paul’s candidacy in his dorm room window last fall. Perhaps fearing that a wave of Ron Paul mania would sweep uncontrollably over Auburn, the sign was only up for three hours before officials demanded that student Eric Philips remove the poster from his window, ostensibly for safety reasons. Philips recounts the shameful saga in a new video from the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), where I work.
What sets Auburn’s censorship apart from other, similar episodes of sign
censorship is the university’s sheer laziness about the whole
situation. For instance, at Sinclair Community College in Ohio,
protesters at a pro-life/religious freedom rally were told they could not hold up signs,
period. At first, FIRE thought Sinclair’s insane ban on all signs at
protests was politically driven, but it looks like it might not have
been: campus police admitted that they had been banning protesters from
holding up signs for more than 20 years. (Needless to say, there’s no
support in the Constitution for such a ban.) And during the last
election, the University of Texas at Austin banned all political signs in windows until students on all sides complained. It took UT Austin’s president a single day after the ban became public to “suspend” the ban indefinitely.
More @ College Insurrection
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