• FiniteBanjo
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    7 months ago

    Well, technically, they do receive some government funding but the terms of the funds being allotted don’t include adherence to the first amendment. It’s not an entity controlled by state or federal government directly.

    • girlfreddy@lemmy.ca
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      7 months ago

      Then all gov’t funding should stop immediately.

      If a business doesn’t want to follow the Constitution, it gets zero tax dollars.

      Btw as a Canadian I’m amazed that private businesses have this option at all. It makes no logical sense.

      • Dran@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Businesses “follow the constitution” here. The nuance is that the first amendment (freedom of speech) explicitly only applies to consequences from government. As a private corporation, the people running Harvard have the right to their own speech, in this case: a policy denying graduation, without consequence from the government.

        I in no way endorse the speech that Harvard is expressing, but I do have the right to impose my own consequences on them for it (I.E not supporting things they do financially, disparaging them in an online forum like Lemmy, etc). The constitution prevents the US government from punishing Harvard for these actions in the same ways, unless a law has explicitly been broken.

      • FiniteBanjo
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        7 months ago

        Okay but if a dude spends his stimulus package on a down payment for a vehicle then does the Government get to tell him how to use it? Government funding doesn’t equal control in the USA, the terms of the funds were agreed upon long before it was received.