Eight weeks after a campaign of harassment and vandalism directed against the organizers of and participants in an event at the University of Wisconsin-Madison featuring conservative speaker and filmmaker Matt Walsh, the administration has yet to take disciplinary action against the culprits or even to express its disapproval of actions that clearly violated school policy, the head of the campus’s chapter of Young Americans for Freedom (YAF) has told The Epoch Times.
The harassment, intimidation, and vandalism included the removal of fliers promoting the event, the purported theft and partial eating of a Bible belonging to a student who attended the talk, and an incident afterward in which several people allegedly attempted to follow the organizers on their way home from the campus, said Harrison Wells, the chair of the YAF chapter at UW-Madison.
But the administration’s response, or lack thereof, stands in stark contrast to its efforts to make progressive and transgender students and activists feel safe and comfortable, he suggested.
Headed for Trouble
The student organization arranged for a screening of Walsh’s film “What Is a Woman?,” which takes up the issues of gender dysphoria, transsexualism, and the status of transgender people, along with a talk and Q&A featuring Walsh.“The whole backlash started two to three weeks in advance when we placed some posters in the women’s studies department at UW-M because we thought people would be interested in a documentary posing the question, ‘What is a woman?’ We did that on a Friday, and the following Monday, a teaching assistant came and tore our posters down,” Wells recalled.
The article affirms Wells’s contention that Leeper then proceeded to tear down the posters and, by her own estimate, removed at least forty. Leeper then filed a report of a bias incident with the Dean of Students Office, characterizing the placement of posters in the hall a “targeted act of hate speech,” and demanded that the administration withdraw the permission granted to YAF to hold the Walsh event in the campus facility known as the Great Hall.
Hooliganism
When the date of the event rolled around, leftists from the UW-Madison community turned out in force. By Wells’s estimate, 50 to 75 activists gathered outside the venue to scream and try to deny others access. A small group of counter-protestors turned out to support Walsh’s right to speak and have his film shown on the campus.“They also stole our camera and equipment [including] batteries, chargers, and microphones that cost more than $1,000,” Proell told The Daily Wire.
Despite the severity of the alleged harassment and its crossing the line from intimidation into theft, the administration’s response has been lackadaisical and not at all in keeping with its readiness to take action to protect what it sees as the comfort and security of ostensibly marginalized members of the campus community, Wells believes.
“When the vandalism happened, they did not release any statement, they did not condemn the vandals. I see a lot of bias on their part. On the following days, there wasn’t really much that happened,” he said.
But for all their brazenness, the events before and during the protest do not compare with an incident Wells claims to have experienced after the event, when protestors tried to follow him home.
“I was even followed by protestors. There was a group of four or five people who tried to follow our executive members home, and we hopped in a car and drove around the block a few times. We didn’t want them knowing where we live,” Wells said.
One of the people involved in the latter incident, Wells claims, was not an undergraduate but an adult male dressed in black who may have been a member of Antifa or another radical organization.
The Epoch Times has reached out to the UW-Madison administration for comment.