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Stanford Law is a Case Study in how Mobs Enforce Social Isolation

Updated: Sep 21, 2023

In today's essay at the Federalist I try to dissect the recent travesty at Stanford Law School in which a mindless mob shut down yet another campus speaker. The designated speaker was a federal judge, invited by the Stanford chapter of the Federalist Society. You can read the whole piece here: Stanford Mob Shows How Speech Restrictions Reinforce Social Isolation. Video of the disgraceful scene appeared on Twitter:

https://twitter.com/FreeBeacon/status/1634426288260743168

Clearly, Fifth Circuit judge Kyle Duncan's dedication to natural law, due process, and civil society is why he and others like him are constantly targeted by mobs that despise the idea of real conversation. There's no question we will descend into barbarism as members of such mobs get credentialed to practice "law." They will be sure to shut down speech everywhere, right down to your personal relationships. This is exactly what they are being taught to do by University administrators (their tepid letters of apology notwithstanding) who are ruled by deans of so-called "diversity, equity, and inclusion" (DEI.)

As I've written many times before, free speech is a use-it-or-lose it proposition. And mobs of mindless narcissists like those at Stanford are hellbent on making sure we all lose it. We can't let that happen because it is the path to total social atomization. And that means the end of social trust, the end of civil society, and, yes, the end of any path to friendship at all. Because if you can't speak openly to people, you simply cannot develop real relationships with people. That's exactly why totalitarians throughout history have always made a point of shutting down speech, even between two people: they see it as a threat to social engineering and control.

I love a recent Twitter post in which a young man duly spouts off woke narratives and apologizes about how he's unfairly "privileged." He has been conditioned to do that by mob enforcement. When challenged by his interviewer, a young woman of color named Savanah Hernandez, he discovers he can actually speak openly. He is able to have a REAL conversation: "Wow, these are the kinds of conversations I love having!" he says. "Now I know where we're at and I can go for real!" Watch:



Indeed. People are starving to break free of the isolation--and the loneliness--that mobs are enforcing on them. People are starving for the real conversation and real friendship that's impossible to have without free speech.

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