I really like this trend (if it is indeed a trend):
The Kansas State Legislature overrode Governor Laura Kelly’s veto of a bill named in honor of assassinated political commentator Charlie Kirk that strengthens free speech protections on college campuses.
House Bill 2333 received two-thirds support in both chambers this month, overruling the governor’s objection.
Part of the bill, known as the Kansas Intellectual Rights and Knowledge Act or KIRK Act, protects “expressive activities.” It deems outdoor areas “public forums for the campus community.”
“Any individual who wishes to engage in non-commercial expressive activity on campus shall be permitted to do so freely, so long as the individual’s conduct is lawful and does not materially and substantially disrupt the functioning of the postsecondary educational institution,” the act states.
Here’s the reason for the veto:
Gov. Kelly argued the bill was unnecessary as free speech is already protected.
Yeah, just like the right to own guns is “already” protected by the Second Amendment — except where it isn’t, in states like California, New York, Illinois and other Blue shitholes.
I hate the fact that we need additional laws to underline the freedoms already supposedly guaranteed by the Constitution (like this KIRK law and the USSC’s Gruen decision); but these are the times we live in, sadly.
And it’s safe to say that it should be so unlikely that the KIRK law should be necessary on, of all places, college campuses — except that it’s in these very institutions where free speech is most threatened, whether at the hands of radical Left students’ “counter-protests” or at the hands of radical Left college administrations.
Let’s have more KIRK laws, then, and more veto overrides of this nature.
“Gov. Kelly argued the bill was unnecessary as free speech is already protected.”
Yeah, sure, as in all those university campuses where the are minuscule *spit*Free Speech Zones*spit*, and getting on a soapbox anywhere else to talk conservative values is prosecuted as *spit*hate speech*spit*, a bullshit bit of law if there ever was one. If I’m ever on a jury that is deciding on hate crime or hate speech, campus administrators and other racist do-gooders will have to prove to me they can read minds to make that legitimate.