How Foreign Governments Police U.S. Speech
Sarah McLaughlin reveals how foreign governments pressure American universities through speech codes and satellite campuses, and examines the broader threat international authoritarianism poses to free expression.
Today's guest is Sarah McLaughlin, a senior scholar at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) and author of Authoritarians in the Academy: How the Internationalization of Higher Education and Borderless Censorship Threaten Free Speech.
She explains how governments in places like China and the United Arab Emirates restrict academic freedom and expression not just in their own countries but also at colleges and universities in America by exploiting speech codes and threatening to end lucrative satellite campus arrangements.
McLaughlin and Gillespie also talk about whether it was a good idea for American comedians to censor their material at Saudi Arabia's Riyadh Comedy Festival and what to make of President Donald Trump's repeated minimization of the murder of Washington Post contributor Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi operatives.
The Reason Interview with Nick Gillespie, goes deep with the artists, entrepreneurs, and scholars who are making the world a more libertarian—or at least a more interesting—place by championing free minds and free markets.
0:00—Introduction
1:14—Trump's response to Khashoggi's murder
7:26—The Riyadh Comedy Festival
11:29—Foreign influence on U.S. college campuses
23:55—The NBA and the Chinese government
28:39—Sensitivity exploitation
34:36—Changes to campus culture
39:46—Satellite campuses
43:50—Matthew Hedges and the UAE
50:03—McLaughlin's path to FIRE
51:55—Solutions to campus censorship
58:12—Climate of free speech under Trump
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- Producer: Paul Alexander
- Audio Mixer: Ian Keyser
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Changes to campus culture
I was told it would stay on campus,
Hey good job Nick! I’ll actually listen to this one later.
Still no interest in the EU fining Musk for refusing to censor X (formerly know Twitter. But you already knew that)?
How did this affect Mastodon?
Not libertarian enough, clearly.
Remember when we were called conspiracy theorists when we pointed this out five years ago?
To be honest, no. Over the past 5 years, accusations of conspiracy theorizing have just become background noise.
Sarah McLaughlin reveals how foreign governments pressure American universities through speech codes and satellite campuses, and examines the broader threat international authoritarianism poses to free expression
Excellent interview Ms. McLaughlin, I will remember you.