insidehighered.com  Read Later
Video shows Mizzou student press clash with protesters
by Josh Logue  Nov. 11, 2015  5 min read  original

On Monday, an encampment of student protesters on the University of Missouri
quad featured signs that declared "No Media, Safe Space." By midday Tuesday,
those signs had gone, and students were handing out leaflets reading
"Teachable Moment."



The fliers say, "Media has a 1st amendment right to occupy campsite" and
"the media is important to tell our story and experiences at Mizzou to the
world," so "let's welcome and thank them!"

That represented quite a change in a day.

On Monday, protesters locked arms and surrounded the camp to block press
access, a Mizzou faculty member called for "muscle" to remove a student
journalist, and that journalist's video of the confrontation sparked
outrage, particularly on social media, over press freedom, First Amendment
rights and media's relationship with students and activists.



The video behind all the furor depicts hundreds of members and supporters of
the organization Concerned Student 1950, a driving force behind weeks of
protest on campus that have included both a hunger and football team strike
and culminated recently in the resignation of the University of Missouri's
system president and the Columbia campus chancellor.

In the video, protesters form a giant circle around the encampment, arms
interlocked, chanting, at one point, "Ho ho, reporters have got to go." Mark
Schierbecker, the local photographer who filmed and upload the video, soon
focuses on a student, Tim Tai, who was there taking photos for ESPN. Tai
stands his ground as the protesters try to advance, pushing the press
farther back.

"Back off our personal space," someone says.

"We don't want you to tell our story, not if you're going to act like this,"
says another.

"The First Amendment protects your right to be here and mine," Tai insists,
several times. The images of a student being blocked was particularly
incongruous given that Missouri has long been proud of having a leading
journalism school.

The incident echoes another episode in September when students clashed with
campus journalists over race and press freedom. A group of students at
Wesleyan University urged the student government to cut funds to the campus
newspaper after it published opinion essay critical of the Black Lives
Matter movement.

Observers watching the Missouri, Wesleyan and other debates are asking, "Can
we start taking political correctness seriously now?" Others, meanwhile, are
criticizing the press for focusing on First Amendment issues and not the
grievances of protesters at Missouri and elsewhere about the treatment of
minority students.

To experts on freedom of the press, Monday's incident was not ambiguous at
all.

"Legally, the photojournalist [Tai] was on completely rock-solid ground,"
said Frank LoMonte, executive director of the Student Press Law Center.
"That's not debatable at all." The entire episode unfolded in the middle of
a public quad at a public university. The protesters had every right to camp
out and rally, and Tai had every right to take photos, he said.

Beyond that, LoMonte said, "All journalists use discretion from time to time
as to what they shoot and don't shoot." Sensitive situations that warrant
discretion, like funerals, arise all the time, and "all photojournalists
make ethical judgment calls all day." Whether something was going on in
those tents that would necessitate a call like that isn't clear, but,
LoMonte said, "This is a historic moment, and history belongs to all of us.
History is not the private property of the people who make it."

The yak about Free Press below is absurd. The Bill of Rights concerns
ACTIONS BY THE STATE.  It is totally irrelevant to the situation described
below.

Carroil


Concerned Student 1950 did not respond to requests for comment, but as
Schierbecker's video began to get traction online, the group posted several
tweets defending the signs and rejection of the media.



"We ask for no media in the parameters so the place where people live,
fellowship, & sleep can be protected from twisted insincere narratives,"
read one tweet that has since been deleted.

Others who took to social media, Twitter in particular, echoed that
sentiment.




Jonathan Butler, the graduate student whose seven-day hunger strike
catalyzed the protests and administrative shake-up at Missouri, explained in
a Tuesday interview with The Los Angeles Times the original impetus behind
the media ban. "We were having some difficult dialogues there, talking about
race," he said. "That's a very sensitive space to be in and be vulnerable
in. It was necessary to keep that space very healthy, a very open space for
dialogue, versus it being a space where people are going to cover a story,
exoticize people who are going through pain and struggle."

Butler also echoed charges that the press ought to have been covering the
story before it got to the hunger strike stage. "You saying in that moment,
'That was the only way to cover the story' -- that wasn't you doing your due
diligence," he said.

Many of the journalists who encountered the "No Media" signs while they
still stood were on the receiving end of multiple requests for media
coverage from the same protesters. Since removing those signs requesting
that media members keep their distance, Concerned Student 1950 has replaced
those tweets with photos of the "Teachable Moment" PSA and a student
removing the "No Media" signs alongside a note saying, "From original
organizers! We're learning and growing from this."



As that debate dies down, however, another is brewing.

Near the end of the original video, Schierbecker finds himself on the wrong
side of the circle, but as he approaches the tents, several people,
including a University of Missouri communications professor, Melissa Click,
demand that he leave.

"Who wants to help me get this reporter out of here," Click shouts. "I need
some muscle over here. Help me get him out."

Later, in an expanded version of the video, Schierbecker captures Click
behind the circle as she says to the interlinked protesters, "The work
you're doing is really important. We've got a lot of press trying to get in.
Don't let those reporters in."

Some have called for Click's dismissal. Mitchell McKinney, chair of the
communications department, said in a statement, "The University of Missouri
Department of Communication supports the First Amendment as a fundamental
right and guiding principle underlying all that we do as an academic
community. We applaud student journalists who were working in a very trying
atmosphere to report a significant story. Intimidation is never an
acceptable form of communication."

Click is not a faculty member at the University of Missouri's renowned
School of Journalism, however, she has held a courtesy appointment there,
which "Journalism School faculty members are taking immediate action to
review," the school's dean, David Kurpius, said in a statement. "The
Missouri School of Journalism is proud of photojournalism senior Tim Tai for
how he handled himself," Kurpius said. "The events of Nov. 9 have raised
numerous issues regarding the boundaries of the First Amendment. Although
the attention on journalists has shifted the focus from the news of the day,
it provides an opportunity to educate students and citizens about the role
of a free press." (This morning, The New York Times reported that Click has
cut her ties to the journalism school.)

Click issued an apology Tuesday evening. "I have reviewed and reflected upon
the video of me that is circulating, and have written this statement to
offer both apology and context for my actions," she said in a formal
statement. "I have reached out to the journalists involved to offer my
sincere apologies and to express regret over my actions. I regret the
language and strategies I used, and sincerely apologize to the MU campus
community, and journalists at large, for my behavior, and also for the way
my actions have shifted attention away from the students' campaign for
justice."

The National Press Photographers Association, of which Tai is a member,
reached out directly to Kurpius to express "strong concerns" over Click's
conduct Monday. "Both the students and their teachers are 'ill informed,'"
said NPPA lawyer Mickey Osterreicher about the video, which includes one
student who says, "You don't have a right to take our photos."

"It should be understood that people do not have a reasonable expectation of
privacy in a public place. Journalist Tai did not need permission to take
anyone's photograph. It is one thing to politely ask someone not to take a
photograph, and quite another to try to intimidate someone from doing so,"
Osterreicher said. "We hope the school administration will investigate this
incident and take appropriate disciplinary action if necessary."

Yesterday's incident in Missouri is only the latest to spark concerns that
free speech on campus is in danger of eroding. Some, though, are lashing
back at the backlash, saying critics of students like those shunning press
at Missouri trumpet the First Amendment too quickly and too hastily. "The
freedom to offend the powerful is not equivalent to the freedom to bully the
relatively disempowered," Jelani Cobb wrote in The New Yorker.

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