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The university’s student newspaper, the Justice, described one of the paintings thusly: “A slender outline of the state of Israel, colored with the green, white, black and red of the Palestinian flag and encircled by a twine of rope and barbed wire, sits in the forefront of a scattered collage of images: a key, an ominous grey wall, a pool of red.”

Still, it came as a shock when Brandeis officials shut down the exhibit four days into a two-week run at the university’s Goldfarb Library, citing complaints about the exhibit’s one-sidedness.

“This is outrageous. This is an educational institution that is supposed to promote debate and dialogue,” said Halperin, who happens to be a veteran of the Israeli Army. “Let’s talk about what it is: 12-year-olds from a Palestinian refugee camp. Obviously it’s not going to be about flowers and balloons.”

Brandeis is historically a Jewish institution, and no doubt some sensibilities were deeply offended. The university’s president, Jehuda Reinharz, has generally won plaudits for reaching out to the Arab world in a variety of ways — including bringing Prince El Hassan bin Talal of Jordan to Brandeis as the commencement speaker this spring. Nevertheless, for a university to censor art of any kind is outrageous.

Even more outrageous, Reinharz continues to defend his actions, saying at commencement, “At Brandeis, we believe that art can educate, inspire, and spur healthy and constructive debate, and can best serve those purposes in a university context if it is accompanied by thoughtful contextualization.” Art can and should also provoke, disturb, and offend — but not, apparently, at Brandeis.

Tim Cahill
Buying critics’ silence with golden gag orders

Imagine a prominent elected official buying the silence of former employees who might criticize him — and using taxpayer money to do it. It sounds surreal, but you don’t have to imagine it. That’s because, last October, the Boston Globe caught state treasurer Tim Cahill engaging in precisely that practice. At Cahill’s behest, six former employees and one candidate for a job signed confidentiality and severance agreements specifying that they “shall not disparage the state treasurer’s office.” The payments, all told, appear to have cost well north of $100,000.

This particular Muzzle is a close call, since no one’s free-speech rights were violated. But if the First Amendment stands for anything, it stands for the right — indeed, the obligation — of the press to subject our elected officials to close, tough scrutiny. Cahill’s golden gag orders undermined that.

The story took some unusual twists. One former employee who’d signed a confidentiality agreement, Jeffrey Stearns, left a brand-new position as assistant vice-chancellor at UMass Boston after it was alleged that pornography had been found on his computer at the treasurer’s office. UMass officials said the confidentiality agreement may have been among the reasons Stearns’s problems had not come up when he was hired. (It remains unclear why a porn incident at Stearns’s previous job, even if proven, was considered such a big deal at UMass.) It was also learned that lucrative, secrecy-ensuring severance agreements are not unique to Cahill’s office: the Boston Redevelopment Authority was found to have engaged in the same practice, buying the silence of two former lawyers for an estimated $250,000.

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Related: The 10th Annual Muzzle Awards, Financial fallout, Living la vida Republican, More more >
  Topics: Media -- Dont Quote Me , Mitt Romney, U.S. Government, First Amendment Rights,  More more >
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Comments
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
Thanks for including the MBTA in this list of Free Speech Abusers. While taking photos of the "T" no doubt makes some paranoid citizens nervous, and while the flap over the MBTA Photo Permit may strike some as an unimportant issue, I think it is important to stand up for artistic and documentary photographers' right to photograph in a public place like the MBTA system. Serious photographers should not have to go through a CORI criminal background check to get a permit, while tourists are unhindered by "T" employees when taking family snapshots. I applaud the ACLU for challenging the secret MBTA photo policy. I think Daniel Grabauskas needs rebuking, for insulting us and for being naive enough to think this inconsistent and unwritten policy increases security of the "T" and its passengers.
By Steven Keirstead on 06/30/2006 at 3:56:53
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
Let's have an honorable mention for the Phoenix itself which allowed itself to be cowed by extremists and scared away from publishing the Mohammed cartoons. There's no censorship like that which comes with death threats. How did that not make the list, Mr. Kennedy?
By Pablo on 07/03/2006 at 12:01:29
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
The state police want the video taken down because it shows them searching my home without a warrant. More disturing than that is the nature of the arrest. They charged me with "Threats to commit a crime" (a misdemeanor)all because I was speaking out against John Conte and the Westboro District court system on my website www.bonuskill.com. The video not only captures them violating my Constitutional rights, it also makes them look like heavy handed fools attempting to intimidate an innocent blogger and his family. Please watch and listen to the video, go to: http://www.conte2006.com Thanks..............Paul Pechonis
By bonuskill on 07/04/2006 at 12:28:01
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
Having an opinion is one thing but not seeing that there can be to sides to every argument is ignorance. I am sure it easier to blame someone, namely GW, for you bad lot in life then it is to taker personal responsibility. So on the day the United States launches a shuttle as celebrates their heritage of libery and independence, a real tyrannt is threatening world safety and attempting to launch a nuclear program. Luckily, their nuclear program is only aimed at neo conservative and country club republicans.
By Freedom on 07/05/2006 at 1:26:44
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
Man I hate liberals. I will never understand your priorities. My life comes first, end of story. So go ahead, GW, listen in on international phone calls, monitor international banking transactions, do whatever it takes to keep me and the people I care about safe. I'm not doing anything illegal and I'm certainly not aiding terrorists, so having the government keep an eye on my actions doesn't scare me a bit. The government is not stopping me from making my own decisions or living the life I choose to lead. If it ever should, I'd be the first to take a firm stand against my own government, regardless of who's in office. But until that day comes, keep doing what you're doing and watching over my top priority.
By Sanity on 07/05/2006 at 9:47:44
The Ninth Annual Muzzle Awards
pechonis... youidiot! your 15 minutes of fame happed YEARS ago. you think you're scary -- oooh bonuskill oooh -- you fool. get over yourself. you are nothing but angry little man -- maybe your mommy gave you a complex or your daddy kicked-the-bucket too young or your brother was a bigger idiot than you and OD'd or your sister is a wh__re or your kids rejected your sexual lunges (or not!) whatever... we're not scared - were just LAUGHING.
By youidiot on 05/10/2007 at 2:31:55

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