Needless to say, Mr. Neimeyer’s Wednesday column, which referred to the recently deceased Ronald Reagan as “the anti-Christ,” attracted a rather colorful exchange on the Letters page of the Daily Mississippian.
Thursday:
- Sgt. Chris Hankins.
- Prof. William F. Shugart II (yes, that William F. Shugart II).
Friday:
- Monty Horne.
- Steve Phillips.
- Kenneth Jones (who somehow manages to work in a reference to Matthew Shepard, thereby invoking what has to be the 21st century corollary to Godwin’s Law).
- Prof. David Sansing.
For what it’s worth, I was never a huge Reagan fan—I was more of a Thatcherite in my youth, albeit perhaps a bit more of a “wet” Tory than she was. But in a world with Kim Jong-Il, Saddam Hussein, Robert Mugabe, and the entire leadership of the Chinese Communist Party still around, I think one can find much better candidates for the title “anti-Christ.”
I also think Dr. Shugart might have more properly addressed his remarks to Mr. Neimeyer for having written such ignorant drivel, rather than complaining that the paper failed to exercise proper editorial judgment—although the idea expressed by Mr. Jones that Dr. Shugart’s rather brief letter constitutes a “chill” on free speech only serves to highlight the widespread misconception among undergraduates that the right to hold an opinion somehow includes the non-existent “right” to have that opinion go unchallenged if articulated in public, no matter how ill-informed or poorly-argued it is.
1 comment:
This reminds me of the time that PJ O’Rourke went back to his alma mater, Miami of Ohio. While there he visited the college newspaper. And the newspaper staff was going back and forth about whether or not an ad denying the holocaust shouldn’t be printed (because it’s hate speech) or if it should (to protect the advertiser’s first amendment rights).
The question that PJ asked himself is why it occurred to none of them to throw it out because it was a piece of shit.