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Alumni seek to rewaken the forgotten fight for free speech at UC San Diego

UC San Diego officials gagging a koala

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History is rarely lost all at once. More often, it slips away 鈥 one forgotten battle at a time.

For Daniel Watts, that revelation arrived with the quiet ping of an alumni email. The Guardian, the campus newspaper at the University of California, San Diego, was seeking alumni donations to stave off financial collapse. Watts, who used to write for the paper, took interest 鈥 and noticed something unusual.

Buried in their appeal, the editors blamed The Guardian鈥檚 decline, in part, on a now-defunct satirical campus paper. The Koala, informally known as 鈥淭he Motherfucking Koala,鈥 had a reputation for irreverence 鈥 in 2003, it  an issue titled Jizzlam, a parody of Playboy Magazine for Muslim men. 

But for Watts, The Guardian鈥檚 jab at The Koala represented a fading understanding of the hard-won battles for a free press at UCSD.

Censorship is like poison gas: effective when your enemy is in sight 鈥 but the wind has a way of shifting.

The Koala wasn鈥檛 just a juvenile snark sheet, but an unruly bulwark of the First Amendment. In 2015, after lampooning 鈥渟afe spaces,鈥 The Koala faced defunding efforts by a student government, prodded by administrators. But with the help of FIRE and the ACLU, they fought back and won. In , a federal appeals court affirmed that public universities can鈥檛 defund a student publication just because they dislike what it prints, marking a victory for all campus newspapers 鈥 including The Guardian.

But that history, along with nearly $800,000 in public funds that UCSD spent on litigation in an effort to silence its own students, now seems to have vanished. 

鈥淩eading that email,鈥 says Watts, 鈥渁nd realizing that even the official student newspaper had no idea about UCSD鈥檚 history 鈥 or the sacrifices made to protect their right to publish 鈥 was a galvanizing moment.鈥

He adds, 鈥淚f the university won鈥檛 teach students the history and value of free speech, then who will?鈥

ASU rooftop, downtown Phoenix campus

Love, loyalty, and liberty: ASU alumni unite to defend free speech

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The mission of ASU Alumni for Free Speech is to promote and strengthen free expression, academic freedom, and viewpoint diversity, both on campus and throughout the global ASU community.

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So Watts stepped into the breach, founding , an independent group of UCSD alumni committed to defending free expression at their alma mater.

Watts knows the terrain well. 

As an undergraduate, he battled administrative efforts to censor TV broadcasts and student publications. Late nights were spent scrolling the internet and cold-calling local lawyers in search of anyone to defend them. 

鈥淣o one ever answered,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淔IREwould write letters, but they didn鈥檛 litigate back then and the ACLU was spread thin. We were on our own.鈥

It was a lonely education but a clarifying one. Watts decided to go to law school. 鈥淚 wanted to be the kind of lawyer who would pick up the phone,鈥 he says. 

Over the past 15 years, Watts has built a robust legal career defending the First Amendment rights of students and journalists across California, arguing an anti-SLAPP case before the California Supreme Court and even  for governor in 2021 on a platform of 鈥淔ree Speech. Free College.鈥 

Now, through Tritons United for Free Speech, Watts is channeling those lessons into a new kind of advocacy. The group鈥檚 mission is threefold: educate students about the history of free speech, especially at UCSD; reform campus policies that stifle free expression; and connect students under fire with alumni who can offer legal aid, journalistic expertise, or public advocacy.

鈥淔IREare like a country without an army,鈥 says Watts. 鈥淭hey have moral suasion, but they lack resources 鈥 funding for litigation, experience navigating bureaucracy, or simply the wisdom of age. Alumni bring all that, as well as staying power and historical memory.鈥

But the fight won鈥檛 be easy. 

FIRE鈥檚 most recent College Free Speech Rankings  UCSD at a middling 133 out of 251 schools overall. More troublingly, UCSD ranks 205th on the question of whether students feel comfortable expressing ideas. Among UCSD students surveyed, 78% say shouting down a speaker is sometimes acceptable; 28% say using violence to stop speech is sometimes acceptable; and 48% say they self-censor on campus at least once or twice a month.

These numbers reflect a striking cultural shift. 

鈥淲hen I was at UCSD in 2001,鈥 Watts recalls, 鈥渢he student government would occasionally vote on whether to defund The Koala. Every time, it was unanimous 鈥 20 to 0 against censorship.鈥

By 2015, the vote was again unanimous 鈥 22 to 0, with 3 abstentions 鈥 but this time to defund The Koala. Even The Guardian greeted the news with a  article, quoting the immortal words of American diplomat Paul Bremer after the fall of Saddam Hussein: 鈥淟adies and gentlemen, we got him!鈥

Watts was appalled. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e a newspaper! And you鈥檙e celebrating censorship?!鈥

Today, he fears, many students seem to believe that free speech is conditional. Good for me, but not for thee. They鈥檝e forgotten, or more likely have never learned, as former ACLU Executive Director Ira Glasser warns, censorship is like poison gas: effective when your enemy is in sight 鈥 but the wind has a way of shifting.

As students cycle through every four years, faculty grow fearful of speaking out, and administrators grow ever entrenched with power, institutional memory slowly fades. 

Alumni are the living link to that past 鈥 and the stewards of its future.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why Tritons United for Free Speech exists,鈥 Watts says. 鈥淎nd that鈥檚 why I鈥檓 not giving up.鈥


If you鈥檙e ready to join , or if you鈥檙e interested in forming a free speech alumni alliance at your alma mater, contact Bobby Ramkissoon at bobby.ramkissoon@thefire.org. He will connect you with like-minded alumni and offer guidance on how to effectively protect free speech and academic freedom for all.

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