I think local police don't want to have to deal with people who come into a place to intentionally start trouble like Coulter does.
So? If the students actually respected the concept of "free speech" there would have been absolutely no risk of "trouble starting".
Are you serious about this one? How many others avoided the event because the fire alarm was pulled? What is that supposed to mean? Is there somehow an implied threat to Coulter's life, instead of a typical juvenile action defying authorities?
Pulling a fire alarm is juvenile. But it is also disruptive. (It leads to delays, it has the potential for interrupting the flow of things.) Sorry, I just don't accept that because a tactic was "juvenile" that it is acceptable.
You think that all the loud yelling by protesters (you DID watch the video link I gave earlier, didn't you?), many of whom were actually in the hall, would actually have stopped when she actually started to give her speech?
I don't give a crap. If she doesn't have the courage of conviction (on free speech) to speak anyway, that's
her failure.
First of all, whether she has "conviction" or not should be irrelevant. Freedom of speech should not mean "freedom of speech but only if you feel strongly about it".
Secondly, why exactly should anyone be forced to "yell" to make their ideas heard?
The only one who limited Coulter's speech was Coulter by not showing. And frankly, I don't believe you that you'd react differently were it Moore.
Thank you. You just called me a liar.
Are you a mind reader? If so, I know where you can get $1 million easily.
Ummm.... not sure if that sentence makes sense...
Did you actually mean she backed out when she was going to be facing heavy opposition?
I mean that she has a history of disliking any situation where her target or target audience isn't kissing her ass or cowering at her verbal assault.
Yes, I assumed you meant that... But your previous post had stated she "
backed out of an appearance when it became obvious that she wasn't going to be facing heavy opposition". It was your use of the word "wasn't" that didn't make sense.
A couple of things should be noted:
With free speech, you should be able to deliver your message without being shouted down. You are also under no obligation to allocate time during your message to opposing views
That's a funny world you live in. Unfortunately, "opposition must be quiet while the speaker is talking" does not happen to be any kind of current rule for free speech...
Actually, whomever is providing the forum for the speech/message/presentation can and should be allowed to set the rules (whether they want the presentation to take the form of a basic speech, Q&A, or full debate.) People who do not like the rules should not attend the presentation. Those who violate the rules should be removed.
We regularly see protesters removed from other meetings for violating rules:
http://www.dailycal.org/article/25061/protesters_arrested_at_uc_board_of_regents_meeting
http://www.wate.com/Global/story.asp?s= 1599859
Frankly, I find your suggestion that opposition should be silenced while a speaker is talking to be antithetical to free speech.
Nope. You see, I have a belief that the right of "free speech" should not belong to just the person who happens to have the loudest megaphone.