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Free speech and academic freedoms are under violent siege by the administration of Donald J. Trump. There is no other way to view the current onslaught against the U.S. Constitution.
In a recent social media post, Trump said that federal funding would end for schools that allow “illegal protests” (without defining illegal). That’s a problem. “Agitators,” he continued, “will be imprisoned/or permanently sent back to the country from which they came. American students will be permanently expelled or, depending on the crime, arrested. NO MASKS!”
That missive is part of the administration’s unrelenting demonization and punishment of colleges and universities that don’t toe their line on speech, research or curriculum demands on college campuses. At Columbia University last weekend, Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents arrested and detained former graduate student Mahmoud Khalil, a leader of pro-Palestinian protests at the school. He is now reportedly being held at a detention center in Louisiana for allegedly being pro-Hamas — but the circumstances of his arrest are unclear. A judge recently ordered the administration not to deport him pending legal adjudication of his detention.
Here at home, University of Minnesota President Rebecca Cunningham wrote a series of messages meant to assure staff and students that the values and mission of the U “remain unchanged.”
What does that mean?
A U of M spokesperson explained the school’s public-facing demeanor like this: “(We are) fully committed to freedom of individual expression that occurs within the framework of University policy and existing law … We will continue to fully comply with federal laws related to visas for international students and employees, as well as those governing freedom of expression and student privacy."