dnewton3
Staff member
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/11/10/mis...s/?intcmp=hpbt3
(video is safe for work)
Here is a perfect example of the ignorance and arrogance of academic youth. They can even be heard chanting "Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Reporters have got to go!" Really? Ironic, is it not, that they would use recordings sent out via social media to broadcast their efforts to oust the University president, but then deny 1st Amendment rights for others trying to record the event.
These students want to have their "privacy", albeit they are in a very public place. They claim they have "rights" to not be photographed at their discretion. They want to push the reporter out of the way and displace him from the scene.
OTOH - how many times do we see today's youth shove a cell-phone camera in a cop's face, taunting and screaming at them? How many times do we see youthful people trying to shove their way into some scene, to record the (real or imagined) wrong doing?
SCOTUS law has clearly defined the right of all public persons being able to record anything in a public place. And while these students would scream and shout for their "right" to record an officer, they want to resist (by force, pushing and shoving and grabbing the reporter) any attempt of someone else to record them.
Webster's new definition of Hypocrisy: see Student Demonstrator
(video is safe for work)
Here is a perfect example of the ignorance and arrogance of academic youth. They can even be heard chanting "Hey Hey, Ho Ho, Reporters have got to go!" Really? Ironic, is it not, that they would use recordings sent out via social media to broadcast their efforts to oust the University president, but then deny 1st Amendment rights for others trying to record the event.
These students want to have their "privacy", albeit they are in a very public place. They claim they have "rights" to not be photographed at their discretion. They want to push the reporter out of the way and displace him from the scene.
OTOH - how many times do we see today's youth shove a cell-phone camera in a cop's face, taunting and screaming at them? How many times do we see youthful people trying to shove their way into some scene, to record the (real or imagined) wrong doing?
SCOTUS law has clearly defined the right of all public persons being able to record anything in a public place. And while these students would scream and shout for their "right" to record an officer, they want to resist (by force, pushing and shoving and grabbing the reporter) any attempt of someone else to record them.
Webster's new definition of Hypocrisy: see Student Demonstrator
Last edited: