In the 1960s, students at Berkeley helped change the world by igniting the Free Speech Movement, a seminal moment in the history of 20th-century civil liberties. Fifty years later, Berkeley leftists seem to have decided that free speech was a mistake — and the administration seems intent on helping them roll it back.
You've already read about the riot that attended a speech by conservative stirpot Milo Yiannopoulos. You may have missed the destruction of College Republicans' property, and the cancellation of a speech by conservative writer David Horowitz, after Berkeley officials told College Republicans that in order to provide adequate security, the speech would have to be held outside the middle of campus, and in the middle of the day, when many students are still in class. Faced with similar demands when proposing to bring Ann Coulter to campus, BridgeUSA, a nonpartisan group, actually agreed to the terms — and then their event was cancelled anyway. Or maybe just postponed? The administration said it had not had adequate notice to provide adequate security.
(For now the event has been rescheduled to a later date, but administrators are still insisting that Coulter's speech end before 3 p.m., because obviously if people are threatening a speaker violence, the solution is to give the speech at a time when few people can attend.)
For a reporter, this sequence of events is eerily reminiscent of conversations that we sometimes have with sources who want to dodge an interview without admitting they're doing so.
"Mr. Smith is traveling."
"That's OK, a phone interview is fine."
"He's abroad and very busy. The only time he could do an interview would be 3 a.m. in your time zone."
"That's OK, I'll set an alarm and drink a Red Bull. What day can he do it?"