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How about "Calling for the genocide of Jews is disgusting and distasteful in the extreme, but it is absolutely protected speech under Brandenburg v. Ohio and does not in itself constitute prohibited bullying or harassment." That's what I would say if I was leading a public university and being grilled. The University of Pennsylvania guarantees students "The right to freedom of thought and expression", so I'd say something like "...but it is expression permitted under the University of Pennsylvania Code of Student Conduct." Harvard, however, has no such out.
"Yes or no, Mr/Ms President. That's what I asked: yes, or no?"
They won't listen to your explanation of "yes, but"; they want a gotcha.
You don't start your answer with "yes" or "no". If the questioner starts bullying tactics like that you don't have to play along.
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Harvard can't say that because all the other things that they do claim are bullying or harassment keep them from being able to say it honestly.
If they say that, the next question would be about whether Trump support, Islamophobia, etc. are prohibited bullying or harassment.
Yeah, Harvard can't, as I noted. Penn could. They'd be lying, but they at least have a student conduct code which clearly backs it up. Harvard doesn't, because they hedge around with stuff like "Moreover, it is the responsibility of all members of the academic community to maintain an atmosphere in which violations of rights are unlikely to occur" and "the rights of individuals to express their views within the bounds of reasoned dissent" (emphasis mine).
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