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So to Speak Podcast Transcript: Heather Mac Donald on Trump and free speech

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Note: This is an unedited rush transcript. Please check any quotations against the audio recording.

Nico Perrino: All right. We鈥檙e good to go, folks. Welcome back to So To Speak, the free speech podcast where every other week we take an uncensored look at the world of free expression through the law, philosophy, and stories that define your right to free speech. Today, we have with us Heather Mac Donald. Heather is the Thomas W. Smith Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. Her most recent book is When Race Trumps Merit: How the Pursuit of Equity Sacrifices Excellence, Destroys Beauty, and Threatens Lives, and Heather has been on this podcast before, but it has been eight years!

Heather Mac Donald: Oh, no! That鈥檚 why I don鈥檛 remember. I know I鈥檝e got a bad memory but that鈥檚 more than anybody should be expected to remember.

Nico Perrino: I was living in New York City at the time. But the reason I鈥檓 having you on this podcast today is because I wanna get your take on the Trump administration鈥檚 free speech record. You鈥檙e a conservative. You鈥檝e been part of the conservative movement for quite some time, and you鈥檝e criticized the left鈥檚 censorialness. So, I鈥檝e been curious for your take on the Trump administration. What you鈥檝e been hearing from your conservative colleagues. Trump when he came into office some four months ago said he was bringing free speech back to America. Has he brought free speech back to America?

But again, before we turn to that larger Trump administration conversation, let鈥檚 take a step back because I think taking a step back might help us in framing this broader conversation. When you were getting shouted down at Claremont McKenna, I think it was April 6, 2017. You were talking about your book, The War on Cops and you faced or were hoping to face an audience but ended up facing an empty room. There were 300 protesters, if I鈥檓 not mistaken, who rung the auditorium that you were supposed to speak in. They were furious over your defense of policing tactics and your criticism of the Black Lives Matter movement. The school ultimately had to resort to live streaming your remarks.

Your Q&A session, if I鈥檓 not mistaken, barely got underway before they deemed the situation too volatile. I guess there were people banging on the windows, and you actually had to get hustled out the back kitchen door in an unmarked police van, which ended the event early. Unfortunately, for those who are familiar with the situation on college campuses, this has been a somewhat regular occurrence on college campuses since 2014. Speakers getting shouted down, evidence of barricading buildings or violence against speakers. So, Heather, let鈥檚 start there. You speak a lot on college campuses. What has the situation been like for free speech on college campuses since say maybe 2014, in your experience?

Heather Mac Donald: Well, I think things have gotten a little bit better. We don鈥檛 have quite as many of the censorial shout downs. We have had the eruption of I would argue an equal level of ignorance and mania with regards to the pro-Palestinian protests. It鈥檚 really something. You can read about these student vandals and thugs, but to be on the receiving end of this degree of irrational hysteria is really quite sobering. These are very young people that have no knowledge of the world that have worked themselves up into a state of ecstasy believing that they are fighting some source of profound existential evil.

All too often, the university leaders have just sat by and allowed them to take over, to shout down speakers without reprimanding them at the very least to have some humility, have some epistemological humility. You鈥檙e here to learn. You鈥檙e here because you鈥檙e ignorant and our job is to cram as much knowledge as possible into your empty noggins in a mere four years. Of course, that鈥檚 a mandate that universities have themselves shredded and ripped up in their refusal to actually have a core curriculum. Nevertheless, while there may not be the same degree of hugely theatrical preening narcissistic protests, the informal censorship among faculty among students is if anything stronger.

It is a career of hazard, a handicap, a suicidal gesture to challenge reigning orthodoxies regarding systemic racism, the reason for low Black representation in meritocratic institutions or Black overrepresentation in the criminal justice system. If you suggest that there are behavioral components to that test score gap, you will be silenced. We鈥檝e seen that with Amy Wax at University of Pennsylvania. If you disagree with the idea that biological sex is an oppressive convention that can be wished away at will as Carole Hooven did at Harvard, she found her life so miserable that she ended up leaving.

If you have challenged in the past the idea that racial preferences are a valid form of university selection for students or for professors as Dorian Abbot a climate scientist did at the University of Chicago鈥nd then you鈥檙e invited to give a speech on climate science at MIT that has nothing to do with your position on diversity, equity, inclusion, you鈥檒l still be canceled. So, there鈥檚 definitely an intellectual monoculture enforced by threat of violence. We鈥檝e also had professors who are fired for questioning racial preferences in private conversations. I鈥檓 thinking here of two adjunct clinical professors at the Georgetown Law School, who in a private conversation lamented to each other the fact that there were so few Black law students at the top of their classes and they were fired for having forbidden thoughts. This is absolutely typical.

Nico Perrino: Do you talk to trustees of these colleges, maybe even presidents or administrators at these colleges? Did they recognize what you see as the problem over the past 10 years? That in some cases these universities have been captured by an activist class that doesn鈥檛 have any respect for academic freedom or free speech. This is a long way of asking. Were they trying to reform themselves?

Heather Mac Donald: No. I testified at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill recently. There鈥檚 a very savvy group of trustees or regents there that are completely unblinkered about the ideological monoculture that was Chapel Hill. I spoke there about the diversity bureaucracy. It's a complete lack of need. The diversity bureaucracy is simply an epiphenomenon of racial preferences. You bring in students who are not competitively qualified. They don鈥檛 do well, and the only allowable explanation is systemic racism. You create bureaucrats to tell them that their academic difficulties are because they are the victims of racism. It鈥檚 a codependent relationship.

The President, however, who鈥檚 since left the university system, was a complete defender; denied that there were double standards in admissions. I thought that the diversity bureaucracy was great. The problem with the trustees is so many of them are self-selecting.

Then there鈥檚 the problem of the alumni. I recently spoke at the University of Wisconsin Madison, and there was a dinner afterwards for conservative leaning professors. I was invited by a libertarian economics professor of legislators from the state of Wisconsin. There was a guy there who was an alumnus of Madison, had done very well in engineering, and he was also totally unblinkered about the pro-Hamas hysteria on campus, the lack of viewpoint diversity. It was admirable because so many alumni keep a deliberate veil of ignorance so they can continue giving their money and feel good about it.

Well, this guy knew everything you needed to know, so he was completely informed and yet he was giving the university a new humanities building and a new engineering building. Well, you can imagine how much a new engineering building would cost. I said, 鈥淲hy are you doing this? Don鈥檛 you understand you are simply fueling the very things that you deplore. All money is fungible.鈥 He said, 鈥淭hey gave me a free education.鈥 Good for him for his gratitude, but I said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not the same 鈥榯hey.鈥 It鈥檚 not that institution.鈥 And he just shrugged his shoulders.

I concluded on the one hand there鈥檚 something very admirable about American philanthropy. It鈥檚 a unique tradition. They don鈥檛 have it in Europe. Tocqueville celebrated it. It鈥檚 part of our civic institutions. On the other hand, after that exchange I became a bit more jaundiced. I thought if this guy is acting in what is in fact an irrational way, maybe some of these people really are just egomaniacs and they鈥檙e there to get their names on the buildings.

Nico Perrino: Well, one of the things that we鈥檝e experienced in our history at FIREis that when donors do start pulling their money, we see the free speech reforms that were advocated for start to percolate on campus.

Heather Mac Donald: Yes.

Nico Perrino: If they tell the administration, for example, that we are not going to give you anymore money until you get a FIREgreenlight rating, for example. The development department and the administrators become very quick to respond to our inquiries at that point. So, you can have donors pull money in one respect, or you could have the federal government pull its federal funding, which is what happened at Harvard and Columbia. In enters President Trump and the Trump administration. It sees the problems that you鈥檝e articulated and says, 鈥淥kay, now we鈥檙e gonna get involved.鈥

Now, I suspect you, I, and many others listening to this podcast say, 鈥淲hat鈥檚 wrong with that?鈥 A lot of these things we think would be good practices if Harvard were to adopt them voluntarily. Why is it a problem then if the federal government gives these universities in the case of Harvard billions of dollars and puts some string on those dollars?

Heather Mac Donald: Well, first of all, let me put my pro Trump administration hat on a little bit longer and say proleptically in response to what I鈥檓 about to say. The Trump defenders will say, 鈥淏ut the left has already been doing this. They鈥檝e already been conditioning the federal grants on threats.鈥 You had the 2011 Dear Colleague letter from the Obama administration, something that FIREknows inside and out.

Nico Perrino: Yes.

Heather Mac Donald: Demanding that schools junk any kind of due process protections for males accused of so-called sexual assaults or rape or lose federal funding. Very sweeping rule. You had another requirement in 2016, another Dear Colleague letter, claiming that Title IX required that biological males be given access to female sports teams. Private spaces traditionally honoring female modesty, locker rooms, bathrooms, etcetera, again or face federal funding loss. So, this cudgel of threatening federal funding on grounds that are highly politicized is something that the left has already been doing.

That having been said, my reaction to everything that Trump is doing, and I agree almost across the board with his substantive aims whether it鈥檚 with regards to the universities, whether it鈥檚 regards to immigration, is what would we feel if the democratic administrations were doing this exact same thing in favor of their values? Everything we鈥檙e doing sets a precedent. Again, I acknowledge the precedent has already been set. That having been said, it can always get worse, and the ends simply do not justify the means.

Now, the Trump supporters, I know many of them, these are tough guys. I鈥檝e learned to my dismay that I鈥檓 more of a girl than I ever thought, because it turns out I don鈥檛 really have the stomach for the type of all-out war that many of Trump鈥檚 backers and his aides are saying we鈥檝e gotta wage. Which is, 鈥淲e鈥檝e got power now. This is an existential war. We have to crush them and nuances of legal procedure and whatnot, those are less important than seizing the moment.鈥 That鈥檚 their view and I understand that. I鈥檓 still very nervous about the government using power because even though I鈥檓 not deeply libertarian, I do think that the hope of a neutral arbiter of a government that is restrained by rules that are content free that are politics free is one of the biggest yearnings of humanity, at least in the west. If we see our government start to put its hands on the scale too much and demand things that it may not have the right to demand, that makes me very nervous.

And I鈥檓 also not a big fan of academic freedom as currently defined. I don鈥檛 see why universities should be the one institution that should have no oversight. I completely understand why funders or founders should be able to say, 鈥淚 want a university that privileges this sort of outlook,鈥 whether it鈥檚 right or left. I don鈥檛 see why a Jane Stanford creates a Stanford and then has to be completely hands off, and this was the founding moment of academic freedom.

There was a young economist at Stanford University, and this was a university created in the name of Leeland Stanford, a great railroad baron and magnate of the industrializing west. Jane created this fantastic university in his name. I was just up there. I think it鈥檚 the most beautiful campus on Earth.

Nico Perrino: Oh, it is. It鈥檚 gorgeous. Far too many scooters though. I almost got killed when I was on campus.

Heather Mac Donald: That鈥檚 true! They鈥檙e lazy students. They should be back on their bikes, but Live Oak Forest is unbelievable. Anyway, there was a young economist there named Edward Ross who was a populist. He was for the Silver Standard. He was against Robert Barron, and Jane Stanford is saying well鈥t鈥檚 sort of against capitalism but she could live with it. Then in 1900 he gave an anti-Asian speech. He called for the expulsion of Japanese workers, which was the populous position then. Stanford said not, 鈥淗e鈥檚 a racist; I want him out,鈥 but 鈥淗e鈥檚 engaging in political speech.鈥 So, he quit. Some other people quit and that led to the foundation of the American Association of University Professors.

I would vote with Jane Stanford at that point. That being said, now that we鈥檝e got this concept of academic freedom, it exists. I think it鈥檚 too strong. I think it should be obeyed. Again, to give the next Biden/Harris Ocasio-Cortez administration a further precedent for saying, 鈥淚 will crush you if you do not make the next iteration of critical race theory the dominant philosophy here,鈥 I think is a big mistake.

Nico Perrino: One of the reasons we support academic freedom at 果冻传媒app官方, and there might be as you say a disagreement on this, is that we see it as essential to the mission of the college or university. To the extent that mission is the preservation, dissemination, and creation of knowledge. When you have someone coming up over top and saying, 鈥淣o, this is the party line and you must walk it,鈥 then that compromises the truth-seeking mission of the university. I鈥檒l just add, you mentioned the process here a number of times that the Trump administration has gone through. Statutorily, in order to revoke federal funding under Title VI which prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, and national origin, they have to advise the applicant of their failure to comply with the law. In this case, they have to advise Harvard of its failure to comply with the law. Then they need to seek resolution through voluntary means. Only after that would they pursue an investigation, findings on the records, and then present an opportunity for a hearing.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah.

Nico Perrino: A larger issue I have with all of this is not just the compromise of this principle of academic freedom 鈥 which the Supreme Court in the 1950s I believe articulated as an institution's ability to hire who it wants, admit who it wants, teach what it wants, and decide how it wants to teach what it wants to teach 鈥 but Trump when he鈥檚 tweeting about all this stuff or truthing about all this stuff is mixing not only the Title VI complaints related to antisemitism, he鈥檚 also mixing them with complaints about who the university hires. He鈥檚 criticizing Harvard for hiring almost all 鈥渨oke radical left idiots and birdbrains, leftist dopes鈥. He says the university teaches hate and stupidity. Now, none of this is part of the Title VI process, but it seems to be a big motivating factor.

Heather Mac Donald: Yes, yeah.

Nico Perrino: But that鈥檚 not what this process is for.

Heather Mac Donald: I agree completely, Nico. Again 鈥

Nico Perrino: Now they鈥檙e going after 鈥 I didn鈥檛 even mention that he鈥檚 going after their tax-exempt status too, which opens up a whole bunch of can of worms. Conservatives themselves have been worried about the weaponization of the IRS鈥檚 investigatory and auditing processes going all the way back to Lois Lerner under the Obama administration. As we learned, what鈥檚 good for the goose is good for the gander, so it sets that precedent that you鈥檙e so worried about. What鈥檚 gonna happen under an AOC administration, for example?

Heather Mac Donald: Again, I can鈥檛 stress enough. I agree completely with the substantive analysis. I think what鈥檚 particularly sickening at this moment is to hear the president of Harvard or Columbia or Princeton going around saying that we鈥檙e this beacon of academic freedom and free inquiry and Trump is destroying our freedom of speech here. That is just appalling, because they are not. But the irony of this moment is that the Trump administration has managed to turn the bloated, overfed, self-righteous, self-preening Harvard into a virtuous David combating the evil Goliath of the Trump administration. Harvad does not deserve the public sympathy.

Nico Perrino: The problem is, the American system is premised on this idea of checks and balances. Congress is the law-making institution. It put in place Title VI. It allocated these funds for distribution to colleges and universities, and it tied strings to these funds that the Executive Branch, if it wants to take them away, is still bound by.

Heather Mac Donald: Right.

Nico Perrino: To the extent Congress wants to enforce its rights. It鈥檚 really hard to do that in the courts. We鈥檝e seen with the TikTok situation for example. It passed a law saying the President can certify that a deal is in the works and get 90 days before TikTok actually gets banned. Trump has now put in two 75-day pauses that are not allowed by statute. I disagree with the TikTok ban in principle. But even still, there is a law that says something, and the Executive Branch isn鈥檛 abiding by it. But I wanna turn now, because I don鈥檛 wanna spend all of our time on Harvard, to the deportations or the attempted deportations that you had referenced before.

I wanna read a statement from Marco Rubio in his conversation with Mike Benz who鈥檚 a conservative commentator, works in particular on online censorship issues. Rubio said, 鈥淥ur number one priority is Americans. We don鈥檛 want to see an American who happens to be living in London or happens to be living in Europe post something online about American politics or any politics, and all of a sudden, they鈥檙e facing ramifications over there.鈥 This is exactly and to my mind what the Trump administration and Secretary Rubio are doing here in the United States.

They鈥檙e going after people who post on politics. It might be things that you find bigoted, or offensive, or hateful, and you might not want these people in your country, but what moral leg do we have to stand on in condemning the Europeans? For example, you have JD Vance going over to Europe in the Munich Security Conference criticizing their censorship, or Marco Rubio here criticizing the censorship of Americans living abroad, when we do the same thing at home. How do you look at that? It seems like you don鈥檛 believe that immigrants necessarily have First Amendment rights.

Heather Mac Donald: No, I don鈥檛. As I say, I really do think that rights are artificial. They鈥檙e granted by governments and people don鈥檛 walk around the world having the same panoply of rights that the founders created out of a very long process of Anglo jurisprudence.

Nico Perrino: So, it sounds like you disagree then with the premise of the Declaration of Independence that certain rights are inalienable and that governments are constituted among men to secure those rights. It sounds like you believe in the rights, but not where they come from necessarily.

Heather Mac Donald: Right, right. I don鈥檛 鈥 if they were inalienable and God-given it shouldn鈥檛 take a millennia, millennia, and millennia to develop them. We should have realized they were there from the start. There鈥檚 many other civilizations that don鈥檛 have the notion of rights. It鈥檚 a very specific concept that requires sophisticated thinking about the individual, about limited government, that arose in a very particular time and place in world history. So, again, I鈥檓 torn between the 鈥 but nevertheless, if we have laws now that are governing how we can treat immigrants, I think they have to be obeyed scrupulously. Now, again, when we saw these campus protests after October 7th that were heavily populated by foreign students out there braying for death to Israel and celebrating intifada and celebrating the martyrs to the revolution, one is nauseated. Who are these people? Why are we bringing them in?

I frankly 鈥 now I was unaware of Rubio defending the rights of Americans abroad for free speech. I don鈥檛 know what situation that鈥檚 referring to. I certainly agree with him in criticizing the way Germany is treating one of its own internal political parties, the Alternative for Deutschland, and the general animosity of the European elites towards descent. But I don鈥檛 know about Americans abroad. I would say this, if I were studying in Germany, I think I would think twice before engaging in mass protest against German policy. I鈥檓 a guest there and I should be grateful for the opportunity to study there, not feel like I can turn around and bite the hand that鈥檚 feeding me. So 鈥

Nico Perrino: Does that go for the equivalent of the United State鈥檚 green card, for example? Do you think that a guest with a green card, a lawful permanent resident, is different in that respect from a student visa holder?

Heather Mac Donald: I don鈥檛 know. I鈥檓 not an expert on immigration law. Obviously being a green card holder is one step along. But 鈥

Nico Perrino: Informatively, even if the law says one thing, what do you think should happen?

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah. No. I鈥檓 going completely based on gut instinct.

Nico Perrino: Yeah.

Heather Mac Donald: You鈥檙e still not a US citizen. And what the difference is between being a US citizen and being a green card holder, what degree of loyalty is required to become a US citizen, you have not expressed and have not decided that you want to adopt American identity. So, my instinct would be it, but again I鈥檓 not educated on these distinctions. My instinct would be unless you are a US citizen, I would be reluctant to confer on you the full panoply of rights. Now, that being said, the arrest of these two students, the woman Ozturk is pretty 鈥

Nico Perrino: She was just released on Friday, by the way, because the administration didn鈥檛 present any evidence that suggested she was a national security threat beyond what鈥檚 in the public domain about that op-ed. That鈥檚 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 approach to this. If these students, these green card holders, these visa holders are alleged to have engaged in criminal activity, they can be deported after receiving the due process that they鈥檙e owed. We sent a letter after Mahmoud Khalil was detained just asking the administration for its factual and legal basis for deporting him. What they came up with was a flyer that Karoline Leavitt said was propaganda.

Well, propaganda is speech. An op-ed is speech. Now, you might not believe that they have the right to speak freely in the United States. I would argue that if you are the land of the free and the home of the brave I think we should be secure enough to allow people to speak freely in this country, but folks might have different opinions on that.

Heather Mac Donald: Absolutely.

Nico Perrino: Sooner before later. But I do worry about a situation where you could have an AOC come into office and say because former IDF soldiers that are living in this country who support the IDF and support the war in Gaza might be adverse to American foreign policy, we can deport them. Or we can deport Douglas Murray. Or we deport Jordan Peterson. Or we can鈥f you look in historically, we can deport Christopher Hitchens who wrote a book about the Clintons called No One Left to Lie To while he was here on a green card. So, I do worry about the boot being on the other foot.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah. Well, nice table turning. No. That鈥檚 not sarcastic. I guess how I would respond to that, like am I gonna be hypocritical and say in this one instance I鈥檓 gonna adopt one side and not worry about the table turning? I guess, again, I鈥檓 gonna evade your application of neutral principles and say just generally I do support an almost complete power over border control and the decision to allow people 鈥 I don鈥檛 believe anybody has a right to enter this country and we can be as arbitrary at the border as we want. I don鈥檛 think we need to give reasons for excluding people at the border. Now, things do obviously get more complicated once somebody is in what process is needed.

In this case, I would say that it looks like regardless of the speech issues that the behavior of the DHS officials secreting away Ozturk, it does look very, very bad and an abuse of power to try and forum shop. Of course, again, the left forum shops all the time.

Nico Perrino: Sure.

Heather Mac Donald: But to hustle her down to Louisiana in the hope of a more sympathetic court down there and it looks a little Stozi like. That may be an overstatement, but it is worrisome. But my understanding is that it鈥檚 still not fully decided 鈥

Nico Perrino: No, it鈥檚 not.

Heather Mac Donald: 鈥 to the extent to which the government can exclude somebody on the basis of speech. I would also say, this is another very hot button topic that we haven鈥檛 really addressed per se but the whole issue of what counts as antisemitism on university campuses here. She wrote an op-ed calling for the 鈥

Nico Perrino: Divestment, I believe.

Heather Mac Donald 鈥 Trump鈥檚 administration to acknowledge what she called 鈥渢he genocide going on in the Palestinian territories in Gaza鈥. The Trump administration says, 鈥淲ell, that鈥檚 against our foreign policy interests and it also makes Jewish students on campus feel unsafe.鈥 The whole issue of what counts as antisemitism, what counts as a threat to Israel is something that, again, I鈥檓 a little separate from on the received wisdom among conservative circles and the Trump administration. But again, this looks heavy handed to the extreme, and the government keeps claiming that she鈥檚 got support for Hamas. I don鈥檛 know if that鈥檚 some secret evidence or if it鈥檚 based just on the op-ed. To say that that op-ed means support for Hamas, you can get there. You can make the reasoning, but it takes some steps.

I would also say, just to revert briefly back to the Harvard letter.

Nico Perrino: Sure.

Heather Mac Donald: That the Trump administration said wanting to revoke funding, that another problem is void for vagueness. The question is who determines the meaning of these phrases? No legal language as you know is self-interpreting. So, you wanna be very precise and very clear, but of course in the academic context the extent that the government really spells out what it means by viewpoint diversity, I don鈥檛 know what the hell that means.

Nico Perrino: Yeah. There鈥檚 so much vagueness in what it means to be adverse to American foreign policy.

Heather Mac Donald: Right.

Nico Perrino: Also, what it means to be antisemitic. Historically, FIREhas argued for what we call the Davis standard. It鈥檚 not what we call it. There was a Supreme Court case in 1999 where it tries to ensure that when these federally funded educational institutions or programs are going after speech that it鈥檚 not actually speech they鈥檙e going after. It鈥檚 conduct that鈥檚 so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive 鈥 excuse me 鈥 that it effectively denies the student a right to an education. Now, in some of the requirements that the Trump administration is trying to make of these colleges and universities, they鈥檙e trying to get more specific about what antisemitism is by forcing them to adopt what鈥檚 called the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance Association. It鈥檚 less vague but it鈥檚 more speech chilling.

Heather Mac Donald: Right, right.

Nico Perrino: For example, this IHRA definition says that it could be antisemitic to deny the Jewish people the right to self-determination by claiming that the existence of the State of Israel is a racist endeavor. Or applying double standards by requiring a behavior not expected or demanded of any other democratic institution. Or holding Jews accountable for the actions of Israel, which is kind of confusing when you look at some of these examples, because criticism of Israel is itself seen to be antisemitic. So, it鈥檚 the definition that itself is mixing Jewishness with the State of Israel, regardless of whether you think that鈥檚 appropriate or not. So, there is some censorial-ness on all sides here. I think we would be well served to stick to consistent definitions of prohibited conduct. In the case of the educational context, it鈥檚 that severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive standard.

Heather Mac Donald: Absolutely! Again, it gets very complicated by the foreign element, but I would say generally 鈥 taking it out of any kind of international context, you and I both totally agree that suppressing ideas that you find unacceptable is not gonna make those ideas go away. You might believe that there should be no criticism of Israel allowed in the culture and that makes things better for American Jews and for Israelis living in Israel, but by suppressing them you鈥檙e only gonna strengthen them. You鈥檙e giving them more cache. The best way is to get them out in the open sunshine, debate them openly. If you resort instead to censorship, it does indicate a sense of powerlessness. You don鈥檛 have confidence in your own views.

Just to get back to the J.S. Millian epistemological humility, he stressed constantly you cannot be confident in your own beliefs unless they have been tested in the marketplace of ideas. That鈥檚 a very hard standard to live by because we are solipsists and we think the world revolves around the way we see things. It鈥檚 hard to get outside of your own point of view, but you need to test your ideas constantly. The idea that you鈥檙e gonna accomplish anything by ruling certain ideas off limits, which is what goes on again.

The problem is the universities are doing this already! So, for them to turn around and play self-righteous truth seekers against Trump is completely disgusting and laughable. So, it鈥檚 a hard thing to ask Trump to take the high road when he鈥檚 fighting against an ideology that is itself truly totalitarian. But that鈥檚 what needs to be done.

Nico Perrino: With the time remaining, there are a couple of subjects I wanna get to that take us off campus, the Law Firm Executive Orders. There have been however many Law Firm Executive Orders denying certain targeted law firms the right to have security clearances, to access certain federal buildings. Whether that includes federal courts, I don鈥檛 know. It seemed to be implied by the order.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah, yeah.

Nico Perrino: Preventing them from getting government contracts or preventing government contractors who are not themselves from working with these law firms. It seems like President Trump is going after his political enemies, firms that hired Robert Mueller for example, or someone who worked on his team, or who might represent causes that he didn鈥檛 like, or given money to causes that he didn鈥檛 like. A couple of firms didn鈥檛 settle with the Trump administration. Firms like Perkins Coie for example, filed lawsuits and to the extent a judge has heard any of these cases on a TRO basis, the judges have sided with the law firms enjoining these Executive Orders.

Now, I was participating in a panel about the Trump administration and its free speech record last week at the Comedy Cellar in New York City. I was with one of your colleagues Charles Lehman from City Journal. He said he didn鈥檛 want to defend these Executive Orders. He thought they were wrong. Is that your sense too and is it the sense of the conservative movement more broadly that these Executive Orders are wrong?

Heather Mac Donald: Again, let me say the Trump analysis of Big Law is absolutely correct. It is completely biased in its pro bono practice towards left wing causes. We saw the case of Paul Clement having to leave his firm because he wanted to have a client at the NRA and I think one other pariah cause and 鈥

Nico Perrino: I believe he鈥檚 representing one of these firms now. I know last 鈥

Heather Mac Donald: Exactly.

Nico Perrino: Yeah.

Heather Mac Donald: Right. But they are absolutely ideological monocultures, and they are certainly from the bar on down completely devoted to racial preferences. Now, you could say that鈥檚 sort of their right, but it鈥檚 looking like that鈥檚 gonna be viewed as quite illegal. So, the Trump analysis is right but his methods I find perhaps the most troubling of all. I just cannot begin to think of what the legitimate reason is for this clear retaliation against one鈥檚 political enemies. Now, the kneejerk response is to invoke John Adams defending the British in the Boston Massacre and the law firms wanna slot themselves into that role.

Well, it鈥檚 not exactly a clear precedent because it鈥檚 not as if these law firms in their political activity are defending the underdogs. They鈥檙e not. They鈥檙e engaged in the most elite championed forms of activity. So, they鈥檙e hardly putting their reputations at risk by litigating for free against the New York Police Department or against reasonable welfare reform or reasonable border controls. So, they鈥檙e hardly virtuous defenders of the underdog. Nevertheless, Trump is right but these bans on a lawyer鈥檚 ability to choose his client and give that client full legal representation is essential to the rule of law.

Conservatives have been appalled by the effort to disbar John Eastman for advancing what is at the very least, I guess, a creative interpretation of the Constitution with regards to the Vice President鈥檚 ability to not certify stated electors. Again, this is a field that I鈥檓 not at all an expert in. But I would say a lawyer has the right to be wrong. Even if there鈥檚 some universal consensus that Eastman was wrong, and I don鈥檛 think that consensus is ever really reached in the law because people have many, many out there interpretations some of which end up being precedent setting and become the received wisdom after a while 鈥

Nico Perrino: And those precedents themselves often get overturned.

Heather Mac Donald: Of course! Of course!

Nico Perrino: Even at the Supreme Court.

Heather Mac Donald: Again, this is the whole idea of the marketplace of ideas. The legal courtroom is the marketplace of ideas par excellence. This is why the Obama due process evisceration on campus saying that male students accused of campus rape don鈥檛 get to cross examine their accuser is just appalling. So, lawyers get to do what lawyers do, which is to take their causes. If they were 鈥 yes. I mean, I guess this Perkins Coie and Marc Elias I think was there and then he went on to form his own law firm. They may have been complete democratic operatives and using all their power to try and discredit Trump as much as they can. That鈥檚 their right.

For the government to come in and say, 鈥淲e are punishing the entirety of the firm.鈥 Yes, the ban on entering government property when I realized that included courthouses, I thought are you kidding me! Now, it鈥檚 never been clarified, but if that says that no lawyer from that firm can ever enter a federal courthouse, that鈥檚 basically ending their entire practice to the extent it鈥檚 at all federal. So, this is a very, very big abuse of power, as far as I鈥檓 concerned.

If the issue is are you employing racial preferences in your hiring of first-year associates in your promotion to partners, the answer is yes. They all are. They are screwing White and Asian male lawyers unquestionably. The government may have power to do that, to take them to court for those specific practices, but these orders and bans are far too sweeping and are simply getting at the heart of the adversarial process as far as I鈥檓 concerned.

Nico Perrino: What do you think about Trump鈥檚 targeting of the media? He鈥檚 done this in a couple of different respects. For example, he banned the Associated Press from White House pool events because it wouldn鈥檛 adopt within its very popular editorial standards Gulf of America. It鈥檚 said because the Gulf is not a part of the United States. It鈥檚 an international body of water. It can鈥檛 just adopt the United States鈥 definition or name for that gulf. Whereas it did recognize the change of the name from Denali to Mount McKinley, for example. The Associated Press sued the Trump administration and a Trump-appointed judge, in fact, said that if the government opens its doors to some journalists, be it the Oval Office, the East Room, or elsewhere, cannot then shut those doors to other journalists because of their viewpoints.

Trump has also sued a number of media outlets. Some of these outlets have settled since he came into office. Meta he settled with for $25 million. That lawsuit dealt with his deplatforming after the January 6th events. X he sued for the same reason. He settled with them for $10 million after he came into office. He settled with ABC over its coverage of his civil trial there in New York dealing with sexual abuse. George Stephanopoulos called it rape. It wasn鈥檛 rape under the New York City statute. Now, he鈥檚 threatening Comcast and MSNBC. Sixty Minutes he鈥檚 suing for $20 billion in Texas under the Deceptive Trade Practices Consume Protection Act arguing that their editing of the Kamala Harris interview prior to the election was a deceptive trade practice.

The New York Times in reporting on that lawsuit said that 鈥渓egal experts have called the suit baseless and an easy victory for CBS鈥. Trump tweeted out that he thought this might be tortuous interference, and that they鈥檙e investigating that claim by the New York Times. Then he also asked his FCC or said to his FCC commissioner Brendan Carr, who he praised in the tweet, that he hopes the FCC will 鈥渋mpose the maximum fines and punishment on Paramount鈥 the parent company of 60 Minutes for their unlawful and illegal behavior. Brendan Carr was recently pictured at government meetings wearing a gold lapel pin with Trump鈥檚 face on it. Of course, CBS Paramount is seeking a merger with Sky Dance that the FCC needs to approve.

So, there鈥檚 a lot going on with Trump and the media. He鈥檚 always been a critic of the media, and I imagine that there are many listeners who agree with many of those criticisms of the media. But what is your general sense of everything going on with the lawsuits, with his treatment of the Associated Press? Do you see this as an overreach in the way that you鈥檝e seen some of these other actions as an overreach as well?

Heather Mac Donald: I鈥檓 more agnostic on this. I admit I haven鈥檛 been following it as closely. We鈥檙e obviously at the core of the First Amendment here with press freedom. I鈥檓 not an expert on the intersection between what is in fact actionable libel or definition. You obviously have public figures that don鈥檛 have a whole lot of claim in private torte, as I understand, to object to false characterizations. So, the George Stephanopoulos if he falsely said that Trump had been convicted of rape, that 鈥

Nico Perrino: I think that one's actually a stronger case. Now 鈥

Heather Mac Donald: That鈥檚 a stronger case. I was thinking 鈥

Nico Perrino: 鈥 First Amendment advocates might disagree with me on this.

Heather Mac Donald: Right.

Nico Perrino: But there is some evidence that George Stephanopoulos鈥 producer prior to the airing said, 鈥淏e careful. He was found liable for sexual abuse not rape.鈥

Heather Mac Donald: Right.

Nico Perrino: Yet, Geroge Stephanopoulos goes on the air and says rape. So, that鈥檚 a closer case in a way that I don鈥檛 necessarily see the Kamala Harris or the X or the Meta lawsuits as being a closer case. But reasonable minds can disagree.

Heather Mac Donald: Again, let鈥檚 be honest. These media companies are biased. Fox is too. We all have our political agendas. I don鈥檛 believe in the truth. I鈥檓 enough of a product of my education and deconstruction and poststructuralism that even though I live as if there is truth and when I鈥檓 writing about something I鈥檓 convinced that I have the truth about whether the police are racist or not. But if I step back, I have to recognize the ubiquity of interpretation.

Nico Perrino: This is why I love you, Heather, because you don鈥檛 believe in natural rights. You don鈥檛 believe in the truth. Yet, you鈥檙e a conservative! That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 fun.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah, it鈥檚 true. I guess I鈥檓 really inconsistent. Maybe I should rethink this whole thing. But for the Harris editing, you know, it could well be that the media outlet part of it subconsciously was definitely on the side of Harris and trying to tip the election and editing it to make her sound like she was actually coherent for once. But should that be illegal? The press in its past, at the time of the founding, was ruthlessly political. They were party organs. The standards of accuracy were much lower than they were now. Of course, there was much less freedom of speech. There was censorship right and left at the state levels. I don鈥檛 know which way that cuts for this.

But in any case, I would say that I鈥檓 gonna be honest; we all edit things. When I鈥檓 quoting somebody from the other side, I try to be fair but there are definitely things that you wanna foreground and put in the background, and I plead guilty to that. I think everybody 鈥

Nico Perrino: Well, 60 Minutes probably sat with her for who knows, 30 minutes an hour, and it has 13-minute segments with b-roll cut in. Fox news does this with Donald Trump I鈥檓 assuming too. People who don鈥檛 work in the news media don鈥檛 quite understand the amount of editing that goes into a tight four-minute segment, or in the case of 60 Minutes, a 13-minute segment. I鈥檝e got the transcript here. Maybe we can cut it in for our listeners with what was the original raw footage and what was actually displayed on the full segment. There was something separate that was displayed during a promotional video. I didn鈥檛 think it was that different. One was a little bit more rambly, but not a $20 billion lawsuit worth of ramble. I don鈥檛 know.

Heather Mac Donald: I see. So, you鈥檙e saying it was just the time constraints as opposed to any kind of political agenda. That could be.

Nico Perrino: Or you never know, but I didn鈥檛 think it was so much better what they ended airing versus the raw footage. It was Bill Whitaker asking one question and they used the first sentence in either the promo or the segment and then they used the second sentence in the opposite order. So, it was the answer to the same question and more or less said the same thing in both answers. She just kind of repeats herself.

Heather Mac Donald: But is your position then that if they were deliberately editing it to make her look better that that would be problematic or not?

Nico Perrino: No. No, no, no. I would say even if they were deliberately editing it to make her look better that it would still be First Amendment protected activity in the same way that putting out an advertisement that deliberately makes a candidate look better or anything else, is protected activity. Maybe you have an argument for election interference if there鈥檚 some statute that says doing that is wrongful, but that鈥檚 not even what Trump鈥檚 suing under. He鈥檚 suing under a deceptive trade practices act. So, in that case, misleading editing I guess would be a deceptive trade practice? I thought we were getting out of the business of misinformation. I thought we were getting out of the business of policing wrongthink, but here it鈥檚 very much okay. This is misinformation. We鈥檙e just calling it deceptive trade practices now.

Heather Mac Donald: Right. As far as excluding the AP from press conferences, it鈥檚 always zero sum. So, if he鈥檚 deliberately adding people from the conservative nonmainstream media like reporters for News Max, unless he鈥檚 got an endlessly expanding press room, it鈥檚 zero sum just the way that racial preferences are zero sum. You know, we always hear from the advocates that, 鈥淥h, it only helps Blacks. It doesn鈥檛 hurt anybody else.鈥 That鈥檚 BS! Every person you鈥檙e taking in with lower academic skills you鈥檙e keeping out somebody who did qualify on a color-blind meritocratic basis. So, here if he鈥檚 bringing in News Max it鈥檚 a game of musical chairs. Somebody鈥檚 got to go. In an extreme 鈥

Nico Perrino: It鈥檚 just the brazenness with which he said he鈥檚 getting rid of the Associated Press. It鈥檚 very clearly discriminating based on viewpoint. He鈥檚 tweeting about it. Karoline Leavitt is saying it from the podium.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah.

Nico Perrino: He probably could have gotten away with this were he not so brazen in the viewpoint discrimination. Actually, you could maybe make that argument for so much else here that he鈥檚 done, whether it鈥檚 Harvard or the law firms. But he鈥檚 just signaling the exact reason that he鈥檚 doing it and then it鈥檚 raising First Amendment questions. I wanna end this by asking you as a whole the Trump administration鈥檚 approach to free speech. He said he鈥檚 bringing back free speech in America. I鈥檝e talked to some conservatives who are kind of hush hush behind the scenes saying, 鈥淵eah, he鈥檚 going too far on Harvard. He鈥檚 going too far with the law firms. He's going too far with his lawsuits against the media or his exclusion of the Associated Press.鈥 But they don鈥檛 wanna speak out publicly about it.

The reason is they don鈥檛 wanna lose access because they work on multiple issues, not just free speech. Trump has shown himself to go after his political enemies. He鈥檚 a knife fighter, as you were kind of alluding to earlier. What is it you鈥檙e hearing within the conservative community? Is there a concern with some of his approaches to free speech or are people happy with what they鈥檙e seeing?

Heather Mac Donald: Well, I think there鈥檚 generally always the view that the left is gonna make these arguments so why should we? The left has been doing the bad things for so long, why should we go after one of our own? This is our only hope. I鈥檓 not speaking here only for the intelligentsia but also when I get rebuked by readers or whatever for criticizing Trump, the feeling is why are you wasting your time going after him. You should be going after the left. But of course, we鈥檝e been going after the left for a long time and I do think that we need neutral principles and should be above the fray in setting an example.

So, I鈥檝e asked people for their substantive opinion about various issues like the law firms and from very thoughtful and precisely thinking people, it鈥檚 usually an afterthought. 鈥淲ell, yes, I agree that there鈥檚 a problem here.鈥 But I think people feel like, again, it鈥檚 the urgency sense that this is our one opportunity. We鈥檝e gotta go forward full speed ahead and not put the brakes on. I understand that perspective and I guess I can respect it. It鈥檚 really a question of how worried are you about the retribution on the other side and setting the precedent? Do you think it鈥檒l matter?

Again, the people that are gonna defend Trump will say he could be as exquisitely respectful of the most arcane nuances of the code of federal regulations and of precedent, and it鈥檚 not gonna matter because they鈥檙e still gonna crush us. So, why don鈥檛 we just do what we can now and change the culture. I get that, but I still think, again, that the greatest achievement of civilization, and it鈥檚 a western achievement, is the idea of neutral principles and due process and the hope for a government that follows the law and does not exceed its power when its got it in the hope that the other side will obey the same norms of constitutional governance.

Nico Perrino: Yeah. Otherwise, all you have is raw political power.

Heather Mac Donald: Exactly. That鈥檚 terrifying. It鈥檚 absolutely terrifying.

Nico Perrino: That鈥檚 what makes the United States historically different is that we stand on these principles. We鈥檙e the first nation in the world that was premised on an idea as opposed to some sort of heredity or arbitrary geographic boundary. Checks and balances is one of those ideas. Free speech is one of those ideas. Due process is one of those ideas. These principles, these free speech principles that we鈥檝e been advocating for for so long when they were under attack by the political left on campus, we believed in them as principles. One of the best ways to defend principles, as we鈥檝e learned from the American experiment, is through process.

Now, we might get accused of being boring proceduralists. Or as Sarah Isgur, the host of the popular Advisory Opinions podcast likes to say, she鈥檚 a process girl living in an outcomes world. I think we can get to some good outcomes through the proper process. Otherwise, if you can鈥檛 then as we said all you have is raw political power and that鈥檚 a very dangerous state of being.

Heather Mac Donald: Yes but let me just 鈥 I know we鈥檙e closing off here, Nico, but let me just add one caveat. What if the goals that I share with the Trump administration, I鈥檓 not gonna speak for you, are not achievable through following the process? It鈥檚 not necessarily because the process is skewed to achieve one result, but what if it turns out that if we obey every last little dotting the I and crossing the T that they wait us out and you can鈥檛 get there? The argument in the immigration area is, 鈥淲e have 20 million illegals to deport. If we give every darn one of them a full due process hearing鈥︹ which is not maybe what鈥檚 required by the law. I guess it鈥檚 semi expedited but still you get to go to the appellate court, so it鈥檚 a while. What if you can鈥檛 get there?

So, maybe if we do follow the law, the universities are just gonna wait us out. You and I are assuming, Nico, that you can obey the procedures and reach your substantive ends. That鈥檚 the sort of Pollyannaish view and we鈥檒l hope that鈥檚 the case, but if it鈥檚 not then I don鈥檛 know. I don鈥檛 have a solution, in other words.

Nico Perrino: Well, part of it might just be a problem with the Constitution. Because right now we鈥檙e in a situation where in order to just get to these outcomes you totally ignore Congress. You just issue Executive Orders.

Heather Mac Donald: Right.

Nico Perrino: You just ignore the courts. To the extent Congress is in Trump鈥檚 pocket so to speak, they鈥檙e not gonna enforce their TikTok law. They鈥檙e not gonna enforce the rules governing Title VI. So, he just gets to do whatever he wants. I don鈥檛 know. I believe that the separation of powers, the delineation between judiciary, the legislative branch and the executive branch was one of the best ways to limit the raw abuses of political power, but maybe we鈥檙e at a place right now where you can鈥檛 or people don鈥檛 have the willingness to appeal to political majorities in order to build a coalition to accomplish what you want to accomplish. But that鈥檚 the premise of the Constitution. If that鈥檚 gone out the window and we no longer do that in the era where C-SPAN is turning every Congressional hearing into theatre, then I don鈥檛 know what we鈥檙e left with other than Trump is in office; Trump gets to do what he wants, I guess.

Heather Mac Donald: Yeah. Have you heard of the term Red Ceasar?

Nico Perrino: No, I have not.

Heather Mac Donald: Well, I heard it and then I didn鈥檛 know what it meant. Then all of the sudden it dawned on me what it meant, which is a term I think maybe Curtis Yarvin has used it, maybe Mike Anton. I don鈥檛 know. The idea is red meaning republican MAGA a Caesar. That we need somebody who is a strong man in favor of republican values. So, it鈥檚 the time now for the strong executive authoritarian power. That is the argument.

Nico Perrino: But then so much hinges on who is in power and then what鈥檚 鈥

Heather Mac Donald: Exactly! That鈥檚 the thing. As 鈥

Nico Perrino: Then you get the Caligula and then what鈥檚 the difference between having a hereditary monarchy?

Heather Mac Donald: Absolutely! That鈥檚 what I said. I ask myself every time, everything. What would we feel if it was the other side doing this? You have to ask that question.

Nico Perrino: We might soon well see.

Heather Mac Donald: Yep. That鈥檚 right.

Nico Perrino: Heather Mac Donald, thanks for coming on the show. Heather Mac Donald is the Thomas W. Smith Fellow at the Manhattan Institute. I am Nico Perrino, and this podcast is recorded and edited by a rotating roster of my FIREcolleagues, including Sam Li, Aaron Reese, and Christ Maltby. This podcast is produced by Sam Li. To learn more about So To Speak, you can subscribe to our YouTube channel or Substack page, both of which feature video versions of this conversation. You can follow us on X by searching for the handle @FreeSpeechTalk. Feedback can be sent to sotospeak@thefire.org. Again, that鈥檚 sotospeak@thefire.org. We take reviews. If you like this show, please leave us a review on Apple podcast or Spotify. They help us attract new listeners to the show. Until next time, thanks again for listening.

 

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