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Oud 9th December 2015, 00:21
D*ies Van Mechelen D*ies Van Mechelen is offline
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Geregistreerd op: Oct 2013
Locatie: Turnhout
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Universiteit van Colorado schorst student voor 2 jaar omwille van grap.

Colorado College Suspends Student for Two Years for Six-Word Joke on Yik Yak

Colorado College has suspended and banned a student from campus for nearly two years in response to a comment intended as a joke on the anonymous social media application Yik Yak.

In November 2015, Thaddeus Pryor sent an anonymous reply to the comment “#blackwomenmatter” on Yik Yak. Pryor’s response read, “They matter, they’re just not hot.” On November 20, Colorado College found that Pryor’s post violated its “Abusive Behavior” and “Disruption of College Activities” policies and suspended him from the college until August 28, 2017. In the meantime, the college has banned Pryor from setting foot on campus and has forbidden him from taking classes at other institutions for academic credit. Pryor has appealed his suspension.

In a letter sent on November 25, 2015, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) urged Colorado College, a private institution, to honor its moral and contractual obligation to keep the promises of freedom of expression that it makes to students. Colorado College’s Student Guide, The Pathfinder, provides that “all members of the college community have such basic rights as freedom of speech….”

“Colorado College’s disciplinary action toward Pryor—a 21 month suspension—for posting what was intended to be a joke on social media completely contradicts the school’s promises of freedom of speech,” said FIRE Senior Program Officer Ari Cohn. “The college’s punitive and heavy-handed overreaction to Pryor’s social media post will have a chilling effect on campus discourse.”

TAKE ACTION: JOIN FIRE IN DEMANDING COLORADO COLLEGE RESPECT FREE SPEECH

Colorado College first contacted Pryor about the post on November 19, 2015, and summoned him to Senior Associate Dean of Students Rochelle T. Mason’s office. In his meeting with Mason, Pryor admitted to authoring the reply and explained that it was meant to be a joke. That evening, Pryor received an email from Mason requesting that they meet again to discuss Colorado College’s response to the post. The next day, Pryor met with Mason and was informed in a letter of his suspension.

Although Colorado College is private, and not legally bound by the First Amendment, it has repeatedly stated its commitment to freedom of expression. Yet Colorado College receives FIRE’s poorest, “red light” rating for its speech codes. In fact, Colorado College’s Abusive Behavior policy—one of the policies Pryor was found guilty of violating—was named FIRE’s Speech Code of the Month in November 2011 for banning any act “which produces ridicule, embarrassment, harassment, intimidation or other such result.”

“In an academic climate that has become increasingly censored, the expression of a preference, in my case even a joking preference, is being squashed with impunity,” said Pryor. “A two year suspension during which I am prohibited from studying elsewhere is unwarranted and unreasonable. I made a six word comment that I freely admitted to authoring, thinking honesty was the first step to helping the community get past the incident. I support constructive discipline, but I believe the school’s reaction neither educates me on my act of insensitivity, nor benefits the community, nor consoles offended students, to whom I am extremely sorry.”

Just last month, Colorado College wrote a letter to the campus community proclaiming that its commitment to diversity is intertwined with its commitment to dialogue. FIRE again urges Colorado College to uphold its promises of freedom of speech on campus.

“Colorado College may not claim to respect freedom of expression while throwing a student out for two years for making a six-word joke,” said Cohn.

Bron: https://www.thefire.org/colorado-co...oke-on-yik-yak/

Mening:


Ik ben hier nogal uitgesproken over. Het lijkt echt een boechtverhaal maar dit is meer dan dat. Ik denk dat de meeste van ons beseffen dat de wereld aan het veranderen is. In het bijzonder die van de VS. Of alleszins hun mentaliteit. Homohuwelijken worden geaccepteerd, vrouwenrechten worden meer en meer naar de politieke agenda 'gepushed'. Gelijkheid is overal.

In dit specifieke verhaal gaat het over een student genaamd Thaddeus Pryor die een reactie plaatst op de app 'YikYak' Dit is een app dat meestal lokaal is en waar men anoniem kan op posten. Echter dit is niet volledig anoniem want men kan gewoon je gps signaal van je gsm traceren om te vinden wie je bent. Dit is eerder voorgekomen met bedreigingen op de app.

http://www.ibtimes.com/yik-yak-thre...problem-2181663

Echter de post was op een hashtag genaamd: #blackwomenmatter.
Een post die reacties uitlokte op het feit dat Afro-Amerikaanse vrouwen benadeeld worden. Pryor poste bij deze hashtag de volgende reactie:

“They matter, they’re just not hot.”

Nu dit is een slechte, maar dan ook een héél slechte grap. Het uit gewoon zijn voorkeur. Het is een beetje racistisch maar niet tot op het punt waarin hij voor 2 jaar geschorst moet worden. Hadden de rollen omgedraaid geweest en de huidskleur ook, had dit geen probleem geweest. De jongen zijn schoolcarrière is zo goed als geruïneerd omwille van een stomme grap. Er zijn ergere dingen aan de hand dan dit.

Soms gaat het enorm hoge gehalte aan politiek correct willen zijn in de VS er toch zwaar over.
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