Thursday, April 20, 2017

3rd year Berkeley student Juniper Angelica Cordova-Goff, glad Coulter cancelled

Date: April 20th, 2017 2:29 PM
Author: Non sequitur

Third-year Berkeley student Juniper Angelica Cordova-Goff, 20, said she was glad the event was canceled. She believes Coulter’s rhetoric targets marginalized communities, including African Americans, Latinos and LGBTQ students, who have the right to feel safe on their own campus.


“I don’t think that anyone’s free speech is being impaired,” said Cordova-Goff, who is studying political science and Chicano studies. “I think sometimes the free speech amendment is used as a way to frame violent conversations as a matter of free speech.”

Andre Luu, 21, a junior at Berkeley and a member of the school’s student government, said he thought Berkeley made the right decision. “Ultimately our university’s obligation is to ensure the safety of students,” Luu said. He didn’t think the cancellation infringed on free speech.

Luu, who studies peace and conflict, said that invited speakers should be held accountable to Berkeley’s “principles of community,” a list of seven principles meant to guide behavior on campus, and “promote constructive dialogue rather than destructive dialogue.”

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=3590277&forum_id=2#33119703)

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