Our poetic Willetts protest was peaceful - banning a student for it is absurd | Rees Arnott-Davies
Cambridge University is trying to defend freedom of expression by silencing dissent and destruction of the academic career of a young
me last November, with students and staff of Cambridge University, took part in a protest against David Willetts, the Minister of Universities and Science. He had been invited to speak as part of a series on the idea of ??the university, by the senior members of government, celebrities and became a government minister. None of the students, underpaid employees or members of the community of Cambridge were invited to express their ideas. All speakers have a title, most had more than one, and most if not all were Oxford and Cambridge. As if this blindness of privilege was not enough, the government minister who spoke also becomes responsible for the wholesale demolition of public higher education in the UK, its established policies damage the lives of millions in coming years.
During this event, students and staff, collectively recited a text label in various ways, such as an address, a letter or poem. In this flowery prose Willetts said: "You're not welcome because they come with a knife hidden under his coat." Referring to the strike took place on November 30 that "we are not consumers, are students - and be with our teachers in their picket lines. "Willetts finally chose to leave the building without his speech. Our protest was entirely peaceful, and was only the latest in a long history of intervention in Cambridge.
- Then counsel for the University has decided to initiate disciplinary proceedings against a student. Selected from a group of more than 60 recognizable without cause, which was considered by the Disciplinary Tribunal, a court that nominally independent of the university. This student was "rustic" - or suspended from their studies - for the next seven mandates. This is two and a half years, nearly as long as its general title was expected to take. Two and a half years of a peaceful demonstration which has not violated any laws, has harmed anyone and only served to highlight the dangers faced by universities today cuts the British government.
- To illustrate the absurdity of this decision, it is useful to recall that the defender of the university itself had asked for only one term as the suspension of a sentence. It is impossible to know what was behind the court's decision, but certainly intend to make an example of this student, so people next time were little more than fear of the line. The university seeks to defend freedom of expression by silencing dissent.
However, amidst all this controversy would be easy to forget the simple fact that no sanctions would be appropriate for a student to exercise their right to protest peacefully. It is not and should never be a crime - however small - and we must never allow it to be treated as such
University of Cambridge
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