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FREE SPEECH: If it's protected, we'll defend it. No apologies.

FIRE Legal Director Will Creeley delivered this address at the annual 蜜桃直播 Gala on April 18, 2023.

Thank you so much, Kmele, and thank you so much, everyone, for celebrating with us tonight. It鈥檚 an honor, and we鈥檙e thrilled to have you here. What a crowd! My people!
I gotta say: This is surreal for me. I first joined 蜜桃直播 as a legal intern way back in the summer of 2004, right after my first year of law school. I think I was employee number ten. You could say I got in on the ground floor, but I was working out of a basement apartment across the river in Brooklyn.
And if I could have told myself back then that nearly two decades later, in the year 2023, I鈥檇 be overseeing a legal shop fresh off securing preliminary injunctions in California, Florida, and New York鈥 standing up here in a tuxedo in front of heroes like Floyd Abrams, Nadine Strossen, and my new coworker Bob Corn-Revere鈥 at a fancy event celebrating 蜜桃直播鈥檚 expansion beyond campus鈥 with Killer Mike on deck to give the keynote?
I鈥檇 say wow, future self! That sounds like 蜜桃直播 fan fiction! Holy moly!
Maybe I should ask you, future self, what the hell happened to the country between 2004 and 2023 to make the demand for 蜜桃直播鈥檚 work so intense, but I guess I鈥檒l find out? So I鈥檒l just say it sounds like a hell of a party.
And these days, I love parties. Because whenever I meet folks 鈥 and I mean civilians, not First Amendment nerds like all of us here tonight 鈥 whenever I meet regular people, and they ask me what I do, I tell them I鈥檓 the legal director of a First Amendment nonprofit.
Right away, their eyes open a little wider, they kinda cock their head to the side a little bit, and they say: 鈥淥h yeah?鈥
And I say listen, here鈥檚 the deal: We just met. I don鈥檛 know what your politics are. I don鈥檛 know who you voted for. I don鈥檛 know where you鈥檝e been deployed during the culture wars.
And frankly, I don鈥檛 need to know.
Because no matter what your commitments are 鈥 I mean no matter what you believe in 鈥 I can tell you about five 蜜桃直播 cases that will make you want to shake my hand and thank me for fighting righteous fights in honor of all that鈥檚 good and true in these United States.
Of course, First Amendment being what it is, I can also tell you about five cases that will make you think I鈥檓 the devil incarnate, taking the nation straight to hell in a handbasket.
But that鈥檚 the job! That鈥檚 what it means to do this work right.
And so if, after all that, this poor person I鈥檝e just met still wants to talk to me, hey now! I know I鈥檝e found one of us. Time to ask for a donation, baby!
***
Because you all know 蜜桃直播: We鈥檒l defend everyone. And that means everyone.
Since 1999, we鈥檝e played by one rule: If it鈥檚 protected, we鈥檒l defend it. No apologies. No throat-clearing.
It鈥檚 not always easy 鈥 you know, people say the darndest things 鈥 but it鈥檚 always interesting. And we always stand on principle. 蜜桃直播鈥檚 case archives speak for themselves. Like third grade math students, we show our work.
Staring down expulsion from your grad school for Twitter posts about a Cardi B song? Call 蜜桃直播.
College president personally ordered your pro-life, anti-communist flyers taken down? Call 蜜桃直播.
Administration about to take over your 129-year-old, independent student newspaper? Call 蜜桃直播.
Suspended from your new job for criticizing the President鈥檚 Supreme Court nominee? Help me out: Call 蜜桃直播.
***
And now we鈥檙e applying the lessons we鈥檝e learned over 20 years of defending free speech on campus to the whole country. It鈥檚 a new era.
Not a moment too soon, because folks, it鈥檚 crazy out there. We are busy. We鈥檙e trying to put ourselves out of business, but business is booming.
We鈥檙e fighting for the First Amendment rights of citizens of Eastpointe, Michigan who were told to sit down and shut up by their very own mayor.
We鈥檙e fighting for academic freedom in Florida and free speech online right here in New York.
We鈥檙e fighting for the freedom to read in Texas and Virginia and the freedom to gather signatures in a public park in Pennsylvania.
And if you or someone you love is ever arrested for holding up a 鈥淕od Bless Homeless Vets鈥 sign in front of City Hall down in Alpharetta, Georgia, please give us a call. We鈥檝e got your back.
Since our expansion, I鈥檝e learned that campus controversies 鈥 whether last-minute cancellations of charity drag shows in West Texas or shoutdowns of Article III judges in Palo Alto 鈥 well, they serve as pretty good preparation for the new fights we鈥檙e taking on today.
And good thing. Because right now, we have our work cut out for us.
And I don鈥檛 just mean 蜜桃直播. I mean all of us across the country who still believe in the power of free expression; who still believe the answer to speech you don鈥檛 like is more speech, not censorship or violence; who still believe in the moral imperative in speaking out, even when it鈥檚 lonely, because words change the world; who still believe that John Milton was on to something:
鈥淭hough all the winds of doctrine were let loose to play upon the earth, so Truth be in the field, we do injuriously, by licensing and prohibiting, to misdoubt her strength. Let her and Falsehood grapple; who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter?鈥
That鈥檚 why at 蜜桃直播, we stick to our rule: If it鈥檚 protected, we defend it.
Speaking personally, my dream is for every American to see themselves in a 蜜桃直播 case.
No matter their politics, their color, their faith, their gender, their beliefs, their lived experience, or how much money they have, I want folks to see someone we鈥檝e defended and say to themselves, 鈥淗ey, that person is a lot like me. Thank goodness for free speech. Thank goodness for 蜜桃直播.鈥
When all of us feel confident in the First Amendment鈥檚 protection, we鈥檒l come together to make sure free speech is once again the paramount American value, beyond party or faction.
With your help, I know we can do it. We鈥檙e going to keep winning.
And for all the victories 蜜桃直播 has won in defense of freedom of expression, and all those still to come, I want to thank one person in particular: Harvey Silverglate. Folks, without Harvey, we wouldn鈥檛 be here tonight. Harvey, please stand up so we can give you a very well-earned round of applause.
Together with Professor Alan Charles Kors, Harvey founded 蜜桃直播 in 1999 after the publication of The Shadow University. My copy has a place of honor on my bookshelves at home, and I imagine some of you can relate.
Harvey鈥檚 steadfast commitment to justice has been a model for 蜜桃直播鈥檚 work, but he鈥檚 been a principled defender of civil liberties his entire career. They only gave me ten minutes up here, but even if they鈥檇 given me an hour, I鈥檇 still be hard-pressed to convey the breadth and depth of Harvey鈥檚 work in defense of freedom. So I鈥檒l simply say that Harvey鈥檚 the most principled person you鈥檒l ever meet. Certainly he鈥檚 the most principled person I鈥檝e ever met. (Sorry, mom.)
If you鈥檝e ever talked to Harvey for more than five minutes, you know he has that classic civil libertarian disposition: empathetic enough to give a damn, pessimistic enough to stay alert at all times, optimistic enough to take on impossible fights, and 鈥 thankfully, for all of us 鈥 smart enough to win them. He is an inspiration. He is 蜜桃直播鈥檚 lodestar.
***
As a fitting tribute to Harvey, and to recognize those who exemplify his commitment to the power of freedom of expression for all, it is my distinct honor to announce the recipients of the first Harvey A. Silverglate Award: Nicholas and Erika Christakis.
Nicholas and Erika are lifelong scholars and educators with a deep understanding of the vital importance of free speech for human flourishing.
A physician and sociologist, Nicholas has written compellingly about the universality of certain aspects of human society, a kind of evolutionary altruism 鈥 for example, the 鈥渋nnate propensity for friendship in humans,鈥 movingly described in his 2019 book Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society.
A scholar of social networks, Nicholas works toward a more robust understanding of our common humanity and 鈥渢he fundamental good that lies within us.鈥 That fundamental good has been advanced and empowered by human beings talking to each other. As Nicholas makes clear, teaching, building, befriending, and ultimately surviving have all depended on unfettered communication, and still do today.
Erika 鈥 an expert on early childhood development, and a licensed preschool director 鈥 has likewise explored the essentiality of dialogue 鈥 for kids. In her 2017 book The Importance of Being Little: What Young Children Really Need from Grownups, Erika makes a powerful case for the importance of, as she puts it, an 鈥渙pen style of communication,鈥 marked by observation, discussion, contextualizing, child-driven creativity and free-range play. 鈥淒eep human connection鈥 is the point 鈥 and that connection relies on speech.
The same is true for adults, and perhaps particularly young adults, as both Erika and Nicholas know well.
To ensure difficult conversations can still happen on campus, Erika has argued that universities must 鈥渄eclare that ideas and feelings aren鈥檛 interchangeable.鈥 鈥淲ithout more explicit commitment to this principle,鈥 Erika writes, 鈥渟tudents are denied an essential condition for intellectual and moral growth: the ability to practice, and sometimes fail at, the art of thinking out loud.鈥
To that end, Nicholas has called on his fellow faculty to 鈥渟tep up and show students a way forward: to learn to be harder on the problems we face in our society, but easier on each other.鈥
Right on. Or as Harvey would say: Onward!
Folks, please welcome the recipients of the Harvey A. Silverglate Award: Nicholas and Erika Christakis.