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...could dispute Kilson's assertion on several grounds. However, I wish specifically to address his claim that "[t]he most visible extra-democratic outcomes of hate-speech are found in national statistics on crimes based on race, national origin, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation." Hate speech is not the same as crimes based on hate. I will not deny that there is some relation between the two. But I would hope that by this point in his career Professor Kilson could tell the difference between a causation and a correlation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Kilson's Statements Do Not Form an Argument | 11/19/1993 | See Source »

...gourmet coffee is a wine for the nineties. There is the snobbery about country of origin, the niggling distinctions about process of preparation, and the gratuitous use of descriptive yet totally inaccurate adjectives to distinguish flavor. The coffee illuminati can sip their Kenya AA or $30-per-pound Jamaican Blue Mountain while they debate the comparative merit of washed and dry-milled beans with an air of enlightened self-satisfaction...

Author: By Benjamin J. Heller, | Title: Square Cafes: The Bitter Reality | 11/13/1993 | See Source »

...most visible extra-democratic outcomes of hate-speech are found in national statistics on crimes based on race, national origin, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation. There were 4,402 such crimes recorded in 1991 and 5,138 recorded in 199--a nearly 17 percent increase...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mansfield's `Free Speech' is Hate Speech | 11/12/1993 | See Source »

Section II of the Penn code, the passage challenged by the students, forbids any "verbal or symbolic behavior" that "insults or demeans [a] person on the basis of his or her race, color, ethnicity, or national origin...

Author: By Olivia F. Gentile, | Title: Free Speech, Codes Collide | 11/11/1993 | See Source »

Nair sees herself in the very clash of identities that her films represent. But rather than affect a Third World cosmopolitanism, she grounds herself in the particulars of exile, never abandoning her sense of origin. "If you don't know where you come from," she insists, "then you're just knocking about the world, you know." She grew up in Orissa, a region in eastern India. After a brief stint at Delhi University, she came to Harvard, where she discovered "this foolish confidence that you can do anything." She also discovered her interest in film. Arriving in Cambridge, she intended...

Author: By Ajitha Reddy, | Title: MIRA NAIR | 11/11/1993 | See Source »

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