4 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 21, 1993 cbe £id iwug niaiIg 420 Maynard Ann Arbor, MI 48109 Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan JOSH DuBow Editor in Chief SAM GOODSTELN FUNT J. WANESS Acting Editorial Page Editors i 1 Unless otherwise noted unsigned editorials reflect the majority opinion of the Daily editorial board. All other cartoons, articles and letters do not necessarily represent the opinion of the Daily. (Jr r"S 'S ~ (ALL ' 101, Insight Speech and Two weeks ago, I talked about buzzwords in general, and "political correctness" in par- ticular. This week, I am going to talk a bit about another buzzword: Free Speech. Free Speech, many have argued, is one of the foun- A dationsofthiscoun- -r K. try. As with"politi- "' cal correctness" two arguments are usu- ally associated with it. One posits that it is only through the rigorous debate of opposing ideas, can progress be reached through a "survival of the fittest" pro- cess. Even the most obscene of speech must be protected, in order to ensure that the other forms of speech which have beneficial purposes, are also pro- tected (I guess this argument goes back to the quote "I disagree with what you say but I will defend unto the death your right to say it" or something like that). Others have argued that certain types of speech are actually detrimental to the "survival of the fittest" process and in order to produce a truly free dis- course, some forms of speech-particu- larly those forms that have a negative affect on women, and people from dif- ferent cultures-should be regulated at least in certain spaces, like the class- room. In the mid eighties this led to the call for speech codes, which punished those individuals who made deroga- tory statements towards individuals based on sex, "race" (I'll discuss in another column why I put that in quotes), and sexual orientation. The University of Michigan was one of the first universities to put such a code into effect. Although I suppose that there are certain merits to these two points of view, I choose to take a third side. I don't think that the issue should be about "free" speech, but about respon- sibility. What do I mean here? Political scientists like to talk about two kinds of freedom, the freedom from, and the freedom to. The first Spence's column appears every other Thursday in the Daily. Responsibiity freedom refers to the freedom from external checks, and the second refers to the freedom to act without having to worry about these checks. Free speech would mean then, the freedom to speak without fear of being checked by oth- ers. Looking at this as I write, it seems to make perfect sense. However, this argument overlooks a very crucial relationship-the one be- tween speech and action. Speech how- ever is related to action, and people have recognized this since before the Old Testament talked about God creat- ing the world through the Word. The Egyptians for example talked about speech "having power in the limbs." More recently, the Supreme Court rec- ognized this when they said that scream- ing "Fire" in a packed theater was illegal, because the actions that fol- lowed from what was said was detri- mental to the public. Some media critics also recognized this when they decried Do The Right Thing for its "rabble-rousing" capability (in this case though their analysis was absurdly off- base). This establishes a firm tradition going back thousands of years, linking speech to action. The relationship between speech and action doesn't mean that I believe in governmental legislation of harmful speech (because of its relationship with harmful action). It does mean though that rather than speech being made "freely," it should be made "responsi- bly." Just as it would be absurd to say that people should be able to do what they want without taking responsibil- ity for their actions, they shouldn't be able to say what they want, without taking responsibility for their actions. I'll give you two opposing examples which may produce clarity. While a black man waited at a party store, a white man ("W") stepped up to him looked at him, and called him a "nigger." The black man ("X") asked him to step outside. At this point the white man looked at the manager of the store and asked him to call the police. The manager wouldn't do it, so "W" was forced to step outside with "X". "X" knocked him out with one punch, and left. "Y" got his license plate number, and filed assault charges against him. Another example is presented by Martin Luther King jr. (as well as Malcolm X, and others). The speeches he made were very radical, in that they called for the fundamental restructur- - ing of society. He knew that because his speeches would have this effect, he would die. Knowing this though, he continued to speak until his death at the hand of the society he spoke against. The first example is an example of someone saying something that would produce a certain action, but not taking responsibility for that action. The sec- ond is an example of someone who ended up taking ultimate responsibil- ity for his speech. Note that in King's case he wasn't necessarily being re- sponsible, in that if he was he would have told Blacks to accept their lot as ordained by God. But he did take re- sponsibility, and in conclusion it seems nonsensical to ask individuals to take responsibility for their actions, but not for the speech which led to them. How does speech as I have con- ceived it, relate to the classroom, where most of these battles are being waged?t How does it relate to those students, and (perhaps more importantly) to those professors who espouse views that may be labeled controversial? In this case, I think it is up to both the professor and the student to realize that the professor is not infallible. Too often students take classeswith- out questioning the information pre- sented by the professor. The professor must realize also that if he/she presents information that may contradict the experience of his/her students, he/she should be prepared to be questioned at best, and raked over the coals at worst, by his/her students. In this case, re- sponsibility goes both ways. Hopefully this may provide some clarity to the argument. Just so you know I practice what I preach, I take personal responsibility for everything I write (two weeks ago though, my erst- while editors made a crucial mistake while typing my column-I never spoke to Lani Guinier personally) and will never pass off this responsibility by calling for "free speech." If you can't get with what I am saying, try to "take meout." I wouldn't have it any other way. College Roundup I 0 00 M:4:1 Former Detroit police officers Larry Nevers and Walter Budzyn learned their fates Tuesday morning as Detroit Recorder's Court Judge George Crockett III handed down their sen- tonces for the beating deathofmotorist Malice Green. Neversreceived a12to 25 year sentence and Budzyn got eight to 18 years. Although these are stiff penalties, ti ey are not harsh enough. When considering these sentences, it nustbetaken into account that Nevers peated strikes of aweighty, metal flash- light. The former officers, therefore, should not have been treated so lightly. Their punishments should have been nothing short of life -because that is what they were found guilty of depriv- ing Green of: the rest of his life. Not that these officers should have been treated with unnecessary harsh- ness to provide an example for other cops with a propensity toward vio- lence. Rather, this should be consid- against them and become a threat to their safety. If police cite a lack of self-defense training as the reason for their panicked overreaction to violence, this concern must be addressed. Police forces should be given self- defense training and ought to be pro- vided with alternatives other than wield- ing a weighty flashlight. If they are given other options, then perhaps the public will avoid such lashing out and be spared of hearing excuses like a lack Christians should be vocal To the Daily: This is in response to the letter "The Religious Right does not speak for all Christians" from October 18. The modern era faces a crisis of meaning. No one wants to be labeled, and everyone is mislabeled. There are no communists now; only socialists, for "communist" is an unwanted label. Do we need to be reduced to such a mindless anti- intellectual level? If I talk with someone who calls himself a socialist and find that the principals he advocates are classically communist, I am ,ninirn tcallhim anmmini t' from which they claim to derive their knowledge of Christ? Such people follow a new religion. In the words of Christian expert Dr. John Gerstner, "While not all fundamentalists are Christians, the only Christians are fundamentalists." Should, then, the fundamentalists be speaking for all Christians? Who else could consistently speak for them? And is it surprising that those who follow a new religion under the appropriated name of Christianity are prone to misrepresent issues of Christian doctrine like that of the sinfulness of homosexual acts (I Tim. 1:10,I Cor. 6:9, etc.)? The writer has criticized fundamentalist Christians for being on the Diag. At noon, during the National Coming Out Week Kiss-In, a student was leading an orientation group on a campus tour. When this tour came through the Diag, the leader of this orientation prefaced her speech with an apology to the group for having taken them through the Diag during such a demonstration, but it was part of the organized tour and couldn't be avoided. It offended me that someone representing the students at my school would be so close-minded and insensitive as to apologize to potential students for making them witness reality. Would she have apologized if it had been a Pro-Choice rally (a very controversial topic on campus), a . 1 I