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I believe in the
principle of
Due Process
Picture of JALLEN
posted
National Review
Jack Crowe

The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled on Friday that Marquette University had wrongly fired a conservative professor after he criticized a colleague who he believed to be curtailing student discussion of gay marriage.

The court found that Marquette violated the academic-freedom clause in professor John McAdams’ contract when it fired him over a 2014 blog post accusing a graduate student of refusing to allow undergraduates to express opposition to gay marriage during her class. McAdams wrote the blog post after a conservative undergraduate provided him with a recording of a conversation he had with the graduate student instructor after the instructor refused to allow students to critically discuss gay marriage.

McAdams sued over his dismissal in 2016, alleging he was fired over the content of the blog post. The school, however, claimed he was fired because he named the student-teacher and linked to her personal website and email address, reportedly prompting a flood of hateful messages.

“Had he written the exact same blog post and not included the student-teacher’s name and contact information he would not have been disciplined,” Ralph Weber, Marquette’s attorney, had argued. “He’s being disciplined for his conduct, not any viewpoint.”

McAdams’ attorney called Marquette’s defense “fundamentally dishonest,” pointing out that all of the information his client provided in the blog post was publicly available.


The court’s conservative majority sided firmly with McAdams, finding that the faculty panel displayed “unacceptable bias” in firing him. Its liberal minority called the decision “far reaching” in a dissent, and said academic freedom “does not protect McAdams from discipline.”

McAdams was given the opportunity to return to work after a brief suspension, provided that he write a letter of apology to the student-teacher, but he refused.

Link




Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.

When you had the votes, we did things your way. Now, we have the votes and you will be doing things our way. This lesson in political reality from Lyndon B. Johnson

"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." - Justice Janice Rogers Brown
 
Posts: 48369 | Location: Texas hill country | Registered: July 04, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
delicately calloused
Picture of darthfuster
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quote:
Originally posted by JALLEN:
..........freedom “does not protect McAdams from discipline.”


Link


Someone fundamentally does not understand freedom.



You’re a lying dog-faced pony soldier
 
Posts: 29607 | Location: Highland, Ut. | Registered: May 07, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
10mm is The
Boom of Doom
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There is much the left either doesn't understand or fails to acknowledge.




The budget should be balanced, the Treasury should be refilled, public debt should be reduced, the arrogance of officialdom should be tempered and controlled, and the assistance to foreign lands should be curtailed lest Rome become bankrupt. People again must learn to work, instead of living on public assistance. ~ Cicero 55 BC

The Dhimocrats love America like ticks love a hound.
 
Posts: 17459 | Location: Northern Virginia | Registered: November 08, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
I believe in the
principle of
Due Process
Picture of JALLEN
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by darthfuster:
quote:
Originally posted by JALLEN:
..........freedom “does not protect McAdams from discipline.”


Link


Someone fundamentally does not understand freedom.


Few really do, having never given the concept more than ten minutes of mostly uninformed thought.




Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.

When you had the votes, we did things your way. Now, we have the votes and you will be doing things our way. This lesson in political reality from Lyndon B. Johnson

"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." - Justice Janice Rogers Brown
 
Posts: 48369 | Location: Texas hill country | Registered: July 04, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
No double standards
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For liberals, tolerance and diversity are one-way streets.




"Liberty lies in the hearts of men and women. When it dies there, no constitution, no law, no court can save it....While it lies there, it needs no constitution, no law, no court to save it"
- Judge Learned Hand, May 1944
 
Posts: 30668 | Location: UT | Registered: November 11, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
I believe in the
principle of
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Picture of JALLEN
posted Hide Post
More insight:

The Wisconsin Supreme Court on Friday handed down what could be a landmark decision on academic freedom in higher education.

In the widely watched case of McAdams vs. Marquette, the court ruled that the Jesuit university violated professor John McAdams’s free speech rights and its own contractual obligations when it suspended him for writing a blog post.

“The undisputed facts show that the University breached its contract with Dr. McAdams when it suspended him for engaging in activity protected by the contract's guarantee of academic freedom,” Justice Daniel Kelly wrote for the court’s majority.

The high court reversed a lower court decision and ordered it to enter “judgment in favor of Dr. McAdams, conduct further proceedings to determine damages (which shall include back pay), and order the University to immediately reinstate Dr. McAdams with unimpaired rank, tenure, compensation, and benefits.”

The case was viewed as a test of the scope of academic freedom protections, even in private universities. “The Wisconsin Supreme Court has struck a major blow in favor of free speech,” McAdams’s lawyer, Rick Esenberg said in a written statement.

Esenberg, the president of the Wisconsin Institute for Law and Liberty (WILL), had argued McAdams’s case before the court in April. “Since the beginning, the only thing professor McAdams wanted to do was to teach students without having to compromise his principles,” Esenberg said.

“Yet Marquette refused to honor its promises of academic freedom and now, thanks to the Supreme Court, he will be able to teach again. Make no mistake about it, this is a major day for freedom."


According to Marquette's Faculty Statute, a tenured professor was subject to "discretionary" dismissal only for "serious instances of illegal, immoral, dishonorable, irresponsible, or incompetent conduct." The university's rules make it clear that a tenured professor cannot be fired for anything that is protected by academic freedom:

In no case, however, shall discretionary cause [for dismissal] be interpreted so as to impair the full and free enjoyment of legitimate personal or academic freedoms of thought, doctrine, discourse, association, advocacy, or action.

The statute reiterates Marquette’s commitment to protecting academic freedom: "Dismissal will not be used to restrain faculty members in their exercise of academic freedom or other rights guaranteed them by the United States Constitution."

As Esenberg explained to me, because “the contract used terms that are generally used in academia, this could have a very significant impact.”

Marquette had vigorously defended its punishment of McAdams, enlisting support from several business groups for its case and taking out full page ads in the Wall Street Journal and the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel touting the support of the “business community.”

But in the end, the state’s high court rejected the attempt to equate private businesses with academic institutions that had explicitly promised to protect free speech rights.

Ironically, the blog post at the center of the center of the controversy dealt with the question of academic freedom. Some background on the case from WILL:

In Fall 2014, John McAdams, a political science professor at Marquette University, blogged about a graduate instructor who refused to allow debate about same sex marriage in her classroom (in a situation where same-sex marriage was relevant to the class discussion), claiming that any opinion against gay marriage was homophobic and would not be permitted in her class. On his blog, Dr. McAdams wrote that the topic should be debated, not suppressed. Marquette responded by first suspending Dr. McAdams and banning him from campus as if he posed a physical threat.

Marquette then sent Dr. McAdams notice that it would terminate his tenure and fire him from the faculty. The suspension, banishment, and termination were then reviewed by a faculty hearing committee. That process, however, was significantly flawed. For example, Marquette allowed Dr. Lynn Turner to sit on the faculty hearing committee, despite the fact that she signed a public letter condemning Dr. McAdams before all of the facts were known.


Friday’s ruling flatly rejected Marquette’s defenses of its handling of the case, including its argument that McAdams should be held responsible for the third-party reactions to his blog post. The court forcefully rejected the university’s case:

But the University did not identify any aspect of what Dr. McAdams actually wrote to support its charge. Instead, it used third-party responses to the blog post as a proxy for its allegedly contempt-inducing nature.

Here again, the University demonstrates that reverse-engineering a conclusion is not the most reliable method of conducting an analysis. In this instance, the University caught itself up in the "post hoc ergo propter hoc" fallacy. Just because vile commentary followed the blog post does not mean the blog post instigated or invited the vileness. The University must identify which part of the blog post is supposed to have been responsible for eliciting the offensive remarks. It did not even attempt to do so.

Our review of the blog post reveals that it makes no ad hominem attack on Instructor Abbate, nor does it invite readers to be uncivil to her, either explicitly or implicitly.


Justice Rebecca Bradley filed a concurrence supporting the majority opinion, underlining the importance of academic freedom in the current environment on campus. The question before the court, she wrote, was whether “the sacred ‘right of faculty members to speak as citizens’—that is, 'to address the larger community with regard to any matter of social, political, economic or other interest without institutional discipline or restraint'— [would] succumb to the dominant academic culture of microaggressions, trigger warnings and safe spaces that seeks to silence unpopular speech by deceptively recasting it as violence?”

In this battle, only one could prevail, for academic freedom cannot coexist with Orwellian speech police. Academic freedom means nothing if faculty is forced to self-censor in fear of offending the unforeseen and ever-evolving sensitivities of adversaries demanding retribution.

Link




Luckily, I have enough willpower to control the driving ambition that rages within me.

When you had the votes, we did things your way. Now, we have the votes and you will be doing things our way. This lesson in political reality from Lyndon B. Johnson

"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." - Justice Janice Rogers Brown
 
Posts: 48369 | Location: Texas hill country | Registered: July 04, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Thank you
Very little
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It appears with the limited amount of intel we have that the student prof engaged in suppressing of free speech as well as the exchange of ideals/ideas that Universities are supposed to encourage.

If anyone should have been remanded it was her...



 
Posts: 23238 | Location: Florida | Registered: November 07, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Step by step walk the thousand mile road
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quote:
Originally posted by HRK:
It appears with the limited amount of intel we have that the student prof engaged in suppressing of free speech as well as the exchange of ideals/ideas that Universities are supposed to encourage.

If anyone should have been remanded it was her...



Progressive reprimanded by university faculty?

You funny man.





Nice is overrated

"It's every freedom-loving individual's duty to lie to the government."
Airsoftguy, June 29, 2018
 
Posts: 31376 | Location: Loudoun County, Virginia | Registered: May 17, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
delicately calloused
Picture of darthfuster
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by JALLEN:
quote:
Originally posted by darthfuster:
quote:
Originally posted by JALLEN:
..........freedom “does not protect McAdams from discipline.”


Link


Someone fundamentally does not understand freedom.


Few really do, having never given the concept more than ten minutes of mostly uninformed thought.


I agree. Freedom is messy. It requires personal responsibility governed by a high moral code based in selflessness. It is a hard life that is completely free. What too many do not understand is that any argument used to justify trespassing another's liberty will also eventually be used to justify attenuating one's own liberty. Liberty as described by the defense is not liberty.



You’re a lying dog-faced pony soldier
 
Posts: 29607 | Location: Highland, Ut. | Registered: May 07, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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