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Campus Activism

Students protest hate speech against LGBT community

Nick Haas and the members of Pride Union waited on the steps at the corner of Waverly Avenue and University Place on Friday for Jim Deferio. But Deferio never showed up.

“He was here yesterday, and so yesterday when he told us he’d be back again today, we decided that we would organize a counter protest,” said Haas, outreach coordinator for Pride Union and a sophomore forestry engineering major.
From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., about 20 students stood on the corner holding up signs promoting love and acceptance of the LGBT community despite Deferio not being there as he said he would. Some students said they were disappointed Deferio didn’t provide them with a view to counter, but the group overall felt their message was something that needed to be promoted.
“He said he was going to be here, and we said ‘So are we,’” said Rae Rozman, Pride Union’s historian and a junior psychology major. “I think it’s always easier to protest when you have someone to counter protest, but it’s important what we’re trying to do whether or not he is here.”
Deferio often stands on the same corner, holding up signs that protest homosexuality. He has also held up signs that discriminate against other groups such as Muslims, Haas said. Deferio had been protesting Thursday and told members of Pride Union that he would be back on Friday. So Pride Union held a counter protest to show students there is another message about homosexuality on the SU campus.
“The response from the SU community, and not just the queer community, is that there is another message out there,” said John Crandall, the president of Pride Union. “You can be a part of our community. You are beautiful. There is nothing about who you are that’s sinful.”
The protestors responded with cheers when cars and even Syracuse University Ambulances honked their horns in support. Some of the students took turns wearing a rainbow flag cape as they held their signs. One of the signs read “Silence = death.” Others said “Equality is a right under law” and “Homosexuality is fierce.”
The intersection is public property, so Deferio technically has a right to be there, Haas said. But the group was protesting not against Deferio’s right to free speech, but rather to the message he promotes, Haas said.
“Even though this is a public place and he technically has the right to free speech – and I support free speech – people have to walk through here to get to the health center, people have to walk through here to get to the School of Education, to Marshall Street, to Whitman,” he said. “He’s spreading horrible messages, and people don’t like it. They’re uncomfortable with it. They’re upset about it.”
But Jeff Cappella, a graduate student, said he didn’t agree with the logic behind the group’s protest. He said he felt the group was attempting to limit Deferio’s free speech by championing their own.
“You cannot sit there and criticize someone exercising their freedom of speech, and then when somebody points out the logical inconsistencies regarding the motivation why you’re involved in this behavior, say ‘Well, that’s my freedom of speech,’” Cappella said.
But Crandall, agreeing with Haas, said even if Deferio had shown up, the counter-protest was not an attempt to limit his freedom of speech.
“We don’t want him arrested. We don’t want him kicked off the property,” he said. “We just don’t want students to have to see that every day and think that’s the only opinion about who they are.”
Members of Pride Union spoke with the Department of Public Safety the night before to alert them of the protest. DPS was supportive of the protest and said they would not step in unless any illegal or violent actions took place, Crandall said. Some members of Pride Union wore purple tape on their backs so DPS could identify them as organizers of the protest if anything got out of hand.
AJ Ellis, a senior business major and member of Pride Union, said the overarching idea of the protest was to show that SU is a place where people can feel safe and comfortable with whom they are. That idea was still accomplished even though Deferio didn’t show up, he said.
“Maybe it would have been (more effective),” Ellis said of the prospect of Deferio showing up. “It definitely would have brought more conflict. But, I don’t know, is conflict a good thing?”





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