NewsPronto

 
The Times


.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Trump’s aggressive actions against free speech speak a lot louder than his words defending it

  • Written by Daniel Hall, Professor of Justice and Community Studies & Political Science, Miami University
imageFree speech in the U.S. is being curtailed by the Trump administration. Malte Mueller, fStop/Getty Images

Harvard University took the extraordinary step of suing the Trump administration on April 21, 2025, claiming that the pressure campaign mounted on the school by the president and his Cabinet to force viewpoint diversity on campus violated the...

Read more: Trump’s aggressive actions against free speech speak a lot louder than his words defending it

More Articles ...

  1. Memes and conflict: Study shows surge of imagery and fakes can precede international and political violence
  2. Pope Francis’ death right after Easter sounds miraculous – but patients and caregivers often work together to delay dying
  3. US colleges and universities have billions stashed away in endowments − a higher ed finance expert explains what they are
  4. Gratitude comes with benefits − a social psychologist explains how to practice it when times are stressful
  5. Alaska, rich in petroleum, faces an energy shortage
  6. How do children learn to read? This literacy expert says ‘there are as many ways as there are students’
  7. The hidden history of Philadelphia’s window-box gardens and their role in urban reform
  8. Is China the new cool? How Beijing is using pop culture to win the soft power war
  9. From Doing Business to B-READY: World Bank’s new rankings represent a rebrand, not a revamp
  10. Justice Department lawyers work for justice and the Constitution – not the White House
  11. Trump is stripping protections from marine protected areas – why that’s a problem for fishing’s future, and for whales, corals and other ocean life
  12. US universities lose millions of dollars chasing patents, research shows
  13. From help to harm: How the government is quietly repurposing everyone’s data for surveillance
  14. Trump administration pauses new mine safety regulation − here’s how those rules benefit companies as well as workers
  15. Controlled burns reduce wildfire risk, but they require trained staff and funding − this could be a rough year
  16. Stripping federal protection for clean water harms just about everyone, especially already vulnerable communities
  17. I study local government and Hurricane Helene forced me from my home − here’s how rural towns and counties in North Carolina and beyond cooperate to rebuild
  18. A warning for Democrats from the Gilded Age and the 1896 election
  19. Habeas corpus: A thousand-year-old legal principle for defending rights that’s getting a workout under the Trump administration
  20. Reducing diversity, equity and inclusion to a catchphrase undermines its true purpose
  21. Perfect brownies baked at high altitude are possible thanks to Colorado’s home economics pioneer Inga Allison
  22. Some politicians who share harmful information are rewarded with more clicks, study finds
  23. Make Russia Medieval Again! How Putin is seeking to remold society, with a little help from Ivan the Terrible
  24. Francis, a pope of many firsts: 5 essential reads
  25. Lawful permanent residents like Mahmoud Khalil have a right to freedom of speech – but does that protect them from deportation?
  26. Federal laws don’t ban rollbacks of environmental protection, but they don’t make it easy
  27. Why don’t humans have hair all over their bodies? A biologist explains our lack of fur
  28. Endowments aren’t blank checks – but universities can rely on them more heavily in turbulent times
  29. Exposure to perceptible temperature rise increases concern about climate change, higher education adds to understanding
  30. What will happen at the funeral of Pope Francis
  31. How the next pope will be elected – what goes on at the conclave
  32. Scientists found a potential sign of life on a distant planet – an astronomer explains why many are still skeptical
  33. ‘I never issued a criminal contempt citation in 19 ½ years on the bench’ – a former federal judge looks at the ‘relentless bad behavior’ of the Trump administration in court
  34. As views on spanking shift worldwide, most US adults support it, and 19 states allow physical punishment in schools
  35. Crime is nonpartisan and the blame game on crime in cities is wrong – on both sides
  36. With federal funding in question, artists can navigate a perilous future by looking to the past
  37. Lawsuits seeking to address climate change have promise but face uncertain future
  38. All models are wrong − a computational modeling expert explains how engineers make them useful
  39. Trump’s attacks on central bank threaten its independence − and that isn’t good news for sound economic stewardship (or battling inflation)
  40. Claims of ‘anti-Christian bias’ sound to some voters like a message about race, not just religion
  41. How does your brain create new memories? Neuroscientists discover ‘rules’ for how neurons encode new information
  42. Patriots’ Day: How far-right groups hijack history and patriotic symbols to advance their cause, according to an expert on extremism
  43. International students infuse tens of millions of dollars into local economies across the US. What happens if they stay home?
  44. Popular AIs head-to-head: OpenAI beats DeepSeek on sentence-level reasoning
  45. Why people with autism struggle to get hired − and how businesses can help by changing how they look at job interviews
  46. Appliance efficiency standards save consumers billions, reduce pollution and fight climate change
  47. Why deregulating online platforms is actually bad for free speech
  48. Ethical leadership can boost well-being and performance in remote work environments
  49. Is a ‘friend-apist’ what we really want from therapy?
  50. Federal judge finds ‘probable cause’ to hold Trump administration in contempt – a legal scholar explains what this means