- while 16% agree with using VIOLENCE to stop a speech, after conservative judge was ambushed by Stanford Law students and dean More than three-quarters of Princeton students said it was sometimes acceptable to stop a campus speaker by shouting over them, a recent survey revealed.
Some 43 percent said it was acceptable to block other students from attending talks they disagreed with.
Even more disturbingly, 16 percent supported the use of violence to stop a controversial speaker, according to the alumni group Princetonians for Free Speech.
Responding to a separate question, 48 percent of the 250 students asked said a speech that uses discriminatory language or that a group finds offensive should not be allowed.
The debate over free speech in academic institutions has been heated in recent years - in March Stanford Law School made headlines after students berated Kyle Duncan, a federal appeals judge appointed by Trump, who had come to give a talk.