A little decorum
Wednesday April 12th 2023, 8:57 pm
Filed under: History,Politics

It has been in the news that a far-right Federalist Society judge was asked to speak at Stanford and was shouted down by the crowd. Many, including me, are disappointed in those students and think they could have handled it better.

So it was interesting to read these two comments in the NY Times, with #1 providing context I’ve seen nowhere else and #2 being exactly what I think they should have done. (Hey! The Mighty Moo! WJ was built next to one of the last dairy farms in Montgomery County, Maryland, sold ice cream to the kids during lunch break, but later became the new headquarters of Marriott International while the cow mascot lived on. The resident alumna can brag all day about what a great high school it is.)

Quote 1: “I’m a Stanford law student and feel it’s important to share some missing context here. Judge Duncan did not enter the room with the intention to give a lecture. He taunted people. He recorded a video as he walked in of the people in the room, his phone inches from students’ faces, seemingly to force a reaction to escalate the situation. When students engaged peacefully, such as by asking him pointed questions, he mocked them. (Two examples: one student prefaced a question by sharing that it was a personal question to her, as a survivor of sexual assault, to which Judge Duncan told her “nice story”, and moved on. Another student asked about another one of his decisions that also impacted minority rights and, rather than respond to the question, Judge Duncan told them to read his judicial opinion and moved on.) He called students “appalling idiots”, among other names. Meanwhile, trucks paid for by some unidentified groups have been circulating around campus with students’ names and alleged quotes from the event printed on the side. These trucks were even driven outside the homes of parents of four separate students. Not to mention the threats they’ve been getting. Many many students engaged much more civilly with Judge Duncan than he engaged with them. And yet they’re the ones being targeted.”

(Me: Yeah, I’d like to hear a lot more reporting on that aspect, if it was as described here. I believe doxxing is illegal in California and threatening certainly is.)

Quote 2: “In 1969 I was a student at Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda, Maryland. Members of the American Nazi Party were allowed to visit the school and present their point of view that the Holocaust had not happened. The event was held after school in the cafeteria, and expectations for students who chose to attend were made absolutely clear to us by the principal. We were to be respectful at all times; we were not to interrupt the speakers; anything we had to say could be said in the Q & A afterwards. Those of us who attended prepared ourselves extremely well and did as we had been directed. During the presentation we took notes, sat on our hands, kept our mouths shut, and did not interrupt the speakers in any way. Then afterwards in the Q & A we absolutely shredded them. When they left, they knew they had been soundly trounced by a bunch of high school history geeks. It was a very valuable experience to me, and a lesson that ideas, no matter how vile, should be argued, defended, and defeated in public.”

Now: just imagine if those Stanford students had kept their silence and instead simply recorded what Duncan did and how he treated them and had waited for the Q&A afterward to speak up. Who then would be being excoriated nationwide?

He wouldn’t have been able to twist a thing.


3 Comments so far
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I have some very conflicting emotions about this.
It might be helpful if it had been recorded and I could watch and listen.
My first response, without more info, would not be as balanced as it should be. So, I think it best not to comment.
Thanks for bringing this to my attention and I will try to do a little more research for my own satisfaction.

Comment by Chris+S+in+Canada 04.13.23 @ 7:05 am

Sounds like he baited them…and got the reaction and the kind of publicity he wanted. Too bad.

Comment by Jayleen Hatmaker 04.13.23 @ 7:54 am

In my experience, there is no “right” way to respond to or protest this kind of baiting behaviour. As someone who has faced antisemitic hate in the past, there is no way to “take it.” Not fighting back, not sitting on your hands, not politely offering a Q&A. The whole thing is an attempt to shame and belittle the people standing up for civil rights/etc and the bad actor will find any way at all to do that. I think if protestors shout back, that is just as valid a response to this as pointed Q&A at the end that also serves as a way for the bad actor to mock them. The goal for me is to take back the power and stop the hate and misinformation.

Comment by Joanne 04.13.23 @ 8:55 am



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