Monday, August 25, 2008

Nerd News: Group of US Professors Oppose Canadian Speech Restrictions

I'm no fan of the Canadian Human Rights Commissions with their loopy hate-crime prosecutions and attempts to put limits on free speech (I was squarely in Mark Steyn's corner recently), so I am tickled pink to read this in a Canadian paper:
A group of U. S. professors launched a campaign this week protesting plans by a prominent political science organization to hold its annual conference in Toronto next year, claiming that Canada's restrictions on certain forms of speech puts controversial academics at risk of being prosecuted.

Bradley Watson, professor of American and Western political thought at Pennsylvania's St. Vincent College, said he will present a petition calling for the American Political Science Association (APSA) to re-evaluate its selection of Toronto for its 2009 conference at this year's annual meeting, taking place over the Labour Day weekend in Boston.

His protest has garnered support from dozens of professors across the United States, including prominent scholars such as Princeton University legal philosopher Robert P. George and Harvard University's Harvey Mansfield.

. . . Mr. Watson said that professors signing the petition are concerned that recent human rights commission investigations into Maclean's and Western Standard magazines over articles concerning Islam, and the conviction of pastor Stephen Boisson, who was ordered by Alberta's human rights tribunal in May to cease publicizing criticisms of homosexuality, suggest that professors risk being chilled from discussing important academic subjects, or ending up in legal trouble.

I'm also tickled to see some profs doing something newsworthy that's actually GOOD. Well, pigs do fly on occasion. Of course, there's a healthy dose of self-interest in the Toronto opposition -- the profs don't want to be constrained themselves or, I suppose, find themselves hauled off to the Human Rights Commissions -- but at least they recognize that there's something rotten in the state of Canadian speech freedom.

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