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The fallout from last Wednesday鈥檚 Minuteman protest at Columbia University continues to elicit critical response from a wide variety of sources, not least among them New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

In an article published in Saturday鈥檚 edition of The New York Times, , calling the incident an 鈥渙utrage.鈥 Bloomberg was also highly critical of Columbia University President Lee Bollinger, stating on his weekly radio program that 鈥淏ollinger鈥檚 just got to get his hands around this鈥. There are too many incidents at the same school where people get censored.鈥

The Mayor鈥檚 familiarity with Columbia鈥檚 history of trampling free speech rights on campus means that Bollinger鈥檚 鈥渟ay one thing, do another鈥 act is garnering his university a highly undesirable reputation as a place where free speech is praised but not practiced. (Either that, or the Mayor is an avid Torch reader.)

And as usual, Bollinger鈥檚 says all the right things: 鈥淟et me reaffirm: In a society committed to free speech, there will inevitably be times when speakers use words that anger, provoke, and even cause pain. Then, more than ever, we are called on to maintain our courage to confront bad words with better words.鈥 Whether or not such admirable rhetoric translates into long-overdue policies and practices clearly establishing freedom of expression at Columbia remains to be seen.

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