February 23, 2025

Idavox

The Media Outlet of One People's Project

Court Order Forces University to Host Dick Spencer, Students Force Fleeing Neo-Fascists Off Campus

Much love to antifa and students who came out to oppose Dick’s latest effort in posturing!

WASHINGTON POST

Self-proclaimed white nationalist Richard Spencer spoke at Auburn University in Alabama Tuesday night after a federal judge reversed the schoolโ€™s cancellation of the event on First Amendment grounds.

He was greeted by protests that authorities said remained peaceful. A brief scuffleย led to three arrests.

โ€œIโ€™m pretty happy with the way things have gone,โ€ Auburn police chief Paul Register told the Plainsman, the student newspaper. โ€œIt could have been a lot worse. I attribute the peaceful nature to the students.โ€

Auburn police spokesman Capt. Lorenza Dorsey told the Associated Press three people were arrested for disorderly conduct, though it remains unclear if they were protesters or attendees of Spencerโ€™s talk. A video releasedย by AL.com showed a man with spiked hair and a bloody face on the ground, his hands cuffed behind his back.

Hundreds gathered before his talk around Foy Hall, where Spencer appeared, according to AL.com.ย The video showed a portion of this crowd chanting, โ€œNo alt-right. No KKK. No racist USA.โ€ One protester carried a sign reading, โ€œFighting Fascism an American Tradition Since 1941.โ€

Spencer indeed cited race during his speech, saying, โ€œThe alt-right is about being a white person, being a European in the 21st century,โ€ and later adding, โ€œThereโ€™d be no history without us.โ€

Controversy surrounding Spencerโ€™s appearance stretched back for a week before Tuesdayโ€™s talk, though. Many attempted to bar Spencer from speaking at Auburn and had succeeded until a federal judge intervened.

Cameron Padgett, identified in court documents as an Atlanta-area resident, paid $700 to rent out the 400-seat Foy Auditoriumย at Auburn for Spencer to speak. When the talk was announced, many student groups voiced concerns that Spencer โ€” perhaps best known for shouting โ€œLetโ€™s party like itโ€™s 1933โ€ย at a conference of white nationalists in Washington โ€” might incite violence on campus.

Initially, Auburn released a statement that said, โ€œWe strongly deplore his views, which run counter to those of this institution. While his event isnโ€™t affiliated with the university, Auburn supports the constitutional right to free speech.โ€

On Friday, though, Auburn canceled the event, posting this brief statement: โ€œIn consultation with law enforcement, Auburn canceled the Richard Spencer event scheduled for Tuesday evening based on legitimate concerns and credible evidence that it will jeopardize the safety of students, faculty, staff and visitors.โ€

The mere promise of divisive speakers like Spencer has previously ignited violent riots. The University of California Berkeley canceled an appearance by Milo Yiannopoulos after protestersย caused $100,000 worth of damage to its campus and threw fireworks, rocks and Molotov cocktails at buildings and police. At least six were injured. The protest at Auburn were a contrast to what happened at Berkeley.

โ€œIโ€™m not going to allow that to happen,โ€ Spencer told the Plainsman, Auburnโ€™s student newspaper, after the cancellation announcement. โ€œAuburn is going to rue the day that they made this total bullsโ€” decision. I will not back down. I will be there. This is going to be so much bigger than they ever imagined.โ€

Police, meanwhile, told the student paper, โ€œBased on an assessment of possible civil unrest and criminal activity during a requested event, it is the opinion of the Auburn Police Division that allowing Mr. Richard Spencer to proceed with his appearance at Foy Hall on April 22 would pose a real threat to public safety.โ€

Padgett sued Auburn, which as a public institution must adhere to the First Amendmentโ€™s free speech guarantees. The lawsuit stated: โ€œVarious minorityย advocacy groups of Jews, Blacks and immigrants and left-wing/liberal groups demanded that no forum be afforded for the expression of views that contradict their own and which they find unhelpful for their identity group agendas and political agendas.โ€

Spencer previously advocated for an all-white country, statingย in 2013, โ€œWe need an ethno-state, so that our people can โ€˜come home again,โ€™ can live amongst family and feel safe and secure.โ€

On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge W. Keith Watkins in Montgomery, Ala., Tuesday barred Auburn from blocking Spencer, stating there was no evidence that he advocates violence.

โ€œDiscrimination on the basis of message content cannot be tolerated under the First Amendment,โ€ he wrote in the ruling.

โ€œThis is a moment to savor,โ€ Spencer said in a video shot outside the Montgomery courthouse and posted to Twitter after the ruling. โ€œWe just achieved a great victory. It was certainly a great victory for the alt-right, but itโ€™s a great victory for free speech, for identifiable movements around the world, really.โ€

Auburn released a third statement, urging any protesters to remain peaceful.

Auburn University supports the rights and privileges afforded by the First Amendment. However, when the tenets of free speech are overshadowed by threats to the safety of our students, faculty, and staff, we have a responsibility to protect our campus and the men and women who unite our academic community. The decision to cancel the Richard Spencer event last week was informed by leadership from all of the universityโ€™s shared governance groups and the Auburn Police Division, all of whom articulated legitimate concerns for the safety and security of our campus.

This afternoon, a federal judge ruled that Auburn must allow Spencer to speak in the Foy Auditorium tonight. It is now more important than ever that we respond in a way that is peaceful, respectful, and maintains civil discourse.


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