Video of James Madison Program Panel Discussion on “The Fight for Free Speech at Princeton and Beyond” During 2022 Princeton Reunions

May 20, 2022 1 min read

Open Video of James Madison Program Panel Discussion on “The Fight for Free Speech at Princeton and Beyond” During 2022 Princeton Reunions configuration options

Led by Professor Robert P. George, with Myles McKnight ’23, Rebekah Adams ’21, Solveig Gold ’17, and Stuart Taylor, Jr. ’70 as Panelists

Recorded in the Betts Auditorium of the Princeton University Architecture Building, May 20, 2022

Click here for link to video


Leave a comment


Also in Princeton Free Speech News & Commentary

As many universities take down their DEI websites, Princeton’s sites largely remain

February 20, 2025 1 min read

Lia Opperman
Daily Princetonian

Excerpt: As some universities scrub diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) websites to comply with the Trump administration’s executive orders targeting diversity efforts, Princeton’s websites have largely remained up.

Read More
Norman Finkelstein GS ’87 returns to talk at Princeton, discusses Israel and Gaza

February 19, 2025 1 min read

Luke Grippo 
Daily Princetonian 

Excerpt: Political scientist and activist Norman Finkelstein GS ’87 returned to campus on Tuesday to discuss the war in Gaza with history professor Max Weiss. Throughout the talk, Finkelstein addressed the United States’ history with the Middle East from the early 2000s, the United Nations’ complicated history with the Israel-Palestine conflict, and the war in Gaza.

Read More
Commentary: You (yes, you) are part of the classics conversation

February 19, 2025 1 min read

Lily Halbert-Alexander
Daily Princetonian

Excerpt: Amid a national decline in study of the humanities, prestigious universities are cutting their entire classics departments. As a discipline, classics may seem to fly under the radar — classics majors comprised less than one percent of Princeton’s graduating Class of 2024. But over the last few years, classics has been the subject of charged conversations tying closely back to Princeton. This has sparked fundamental questions about what to do when books known as great and inspirational are called out for inspiring dangerous political movements.

Read More