Massachusetts College Decides Criticizing The Chinese Government Is Hate 
Speech, Suspends Conservative Student Group

https://share.newsbreak.com/36stzgws

Tech Dirt


from the highly-educated-but-apparently-low-on-common-sense dept

A college has done something dumb and unconstitutional. Not all that 
surprising. Neither is the response, coming from Adam Steinbaugh and FIRE 
(Foundation for Rights in Education). 

Emerson College may be a private university, but that doesn't mean it can just 
ignore the First Amendment. In fact, it says it won't ignore these rights, 
which obligates it to uphold them. This is Emerson College in its own words 
(archived link in case the college decides to disappear it): 

As an institution dedicated to Communication and the Arts, the first amendment 
of the US Constitution is of high importance. The right to freedom of speech, 
freedom of press, freedom of political belief and affiliation, freedom from 
discrimination, freedom of peaceful assembly, and petition of redress or 
grievances is not only a right but a community responsibility.

[...]

The College encourages students to present ideas, express their individuality 
and culture, and be open to thoughts or life styles that differ from their own.

Truly inspiring. And Emerson College truly respects this right. Except when it 
doesn't. 

Emerson College suspended a campus chapter of conservative student group 
Turning Point USA on Oct. 1 after members passed out stickers critical of 
China’s government.

The "conservative group" was Turning Point USA, one created and led by 
unfortunate human being Charlie Kirk and supported by people who think Charlie 
Kirk actually has anything useful to offer anyone. 

No matter what anyone thinks about TPUSA (including me!), this response is not 
only overblown, but completely ignores the content of the stickers Emerson (and 
some of its students) got all investigatory about. 

Under pressure from other student groups who accused TPUSA of anti-Asian bias 
and xenophobia, including the Emerson Chinese Student Association, the college 
launched an investigation into the group. In an Instagram video, the TPUSA 
chapter said the stickers are critical of the Chinese government, not the 
Chinese people.

On Oct. 1, the TPUSA chapter’s leaders received a letter from Julie 
Rothhaar-Sanders, Emerson’s director of community standards, stating that the 
college had launched a formal investigation of TPUSA under Emerson’s 
Bias-Related Behavior and Invasion of Privacy policies. While the investigation 
is active, TPUSA faces “interim action,” meaning the group is barred from 
normal activities, such as hosting events or reserving campus space for 
meetings.

Is this really "anti-Asian bias" and/or "xenophobia?" This is the sticker in 
question, which references a famous meme that originated in a multiplayer game: 



If you can't see the picture, it features a little "Among Us" spaceman guy 
dressed in red with a hammer-and-sickle insignia. Underneath it is the phrase 
"China Kinda Sus." "Sus" being short for "suspicious." 

Notably it does not say "Chinese people are sus" or "Orientals are sus" or 
anything else that suggests this sticker refers to anything but the country 
and, by extension, its government. 

Is China kinda sus? You be the judge. It refuses to recognize Taiwan as a 
country, has turned Hong Kong's government into an extension of its own 
following months of pro-democracy protests, subjects its citizens to intrusive, 
omnipresent surveillance, censors its citizens and companies providing internet 
services, and is engaged in the ongoing persecution of certain minorities. 
That's all pretty "sus." 

Yet, the college chose to believe this was actually an offensive thing to say 
and bypassed its own stated support for protecting First Amendment rights to 
limit TPUSA's activities on campus. 

That has led to FIRE and Adam Steinbaugh not-too-gently reminding the college 
about First Amendment protections and the college's promise to respect these 
rights. This is from FIRE's letter [PDF]: 

The stickers distributed at Emerson and elsewhere are critical of China’s 
government. They follow a long tradition of student protests on American 
college campuses criticizing foreign nations, whether those opposing South 
Africa’s apartheid or, more recently, the government of Israel.

Freedom of expression entails the right to criticize not only our own 
government, but those of foreign nations, even when that criticism is offensive 
to the “dignity” of those states or threatens to upend “vital national 
interest[s.]”

Even if the college is concerned about its obligations under Title VII, which 
requires it to investigate and respond to allegations of hostile student 
environments, this sticker ain't it. 

First, the speech is not based on race, ethnicity, or national origin. The 
stickers do not invoke or traffic in stereotypes associated with people of 
Chinese descent or origin. Instead, the stickers are speech critical of China’s 
government. The stickers utilize the familiar emblem of the sole governing 
party of the country, superimposed over a video game character bearing the same 
red color of China’s flag. The sticker’s text (“China kinda sus”) refers to the 
name of the country, not its people. Criticism of a foreign government is not 
inherently criticism of the people it purports to represent, even if people who 
hail from, descend from, or support that particular nation find that criticism 
personally offensive.

Second, even assuming the stickers’ message was capable of being construed as 
speech based on race, ethnicity, or national origin, it does not rise to the 
level of peer-on-peer harassment as properly defined under the law.

If Emerson wants to stay out of the lawsuit defendant business, it will drop 
this investigation and reinstate TPUSA's rights and privileges. If it would 
rather continue to pretend that criticism of a foreign government is somehow 
harassment of the student body, it should probably give its legal counsel 
department heads up that it will be expected to defend the indefensible in the 
near future. 

Oh, and even if you could make the argument that the combination of TPUSA and 
its stickers were problematic, Emerson took all this up a notch when its 
Twitter account started "hiding" any tweet that referenced China, including 
images of Winnie the Pooh. In case you don't recall, China has a longstanding 
policy of censoring images of Winnie the Pooh because its President, Xi 
Jinping, vaguely resembles the fictional bear. 

Wow. Emerson College—which is investigating a student group for stickers 
critical of China’s government—is hiding tweet replies that mention China. 
*Including ones that only show Winnie the Pooh, which is censored in China 
because people mockingly compare him to Xi Jinping.* 
https://t.co/PhwjFwnOHopic.twitter.com/q0A6dgUF2s

— Sarah McLaughlin (@sarahemclaugh) October 7, 2021

So, yeah, an American college was literally hiding tweets in the identical 
manner as the Chinese government, to avoid upsetting the Chinese President. Of 
course, that only resulted in a lot more posts about Winnie the Pooh, nearly 
all of which Emerson College has hidden. It also blocked users who were 
tweeting Winnie the Pooh images. Kinda sus, actually. And really, doesn't live 
up to the promise of a college that "encourages students to present ideas, 
express their individuality and culture, and be open to thoughts or life styles 
that differ from their own." 

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Filed Under: 1st amendment, charlie kirk, china, free speech, hate speech, 
kinda sus, massachusetts, winnie the pooh, xi jinping

Companies: emerson college

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