by Olivier Acuña Barba •Published: April 15, 2025•17:32•3 minutes read
Trump said he defends freedom of expression, but he really | Photo: White House Press Office
President Trump has signed an executive order “restores freedom of speech,” but many have questioned the authenticity and said his actions were not the case.
The Trump administration has carried out actions that are nothing more than a blatant attack on the US Constitution. The first revision, Advocate for free speech or freedom of the press. Last Friday, the White House sent five pages. letter It asks Harvard University to follow a series of requests, including restricting student protests, a right protected under the First Amendment.
“A government in power should not determine what private universities can teach, whom they can recognize and hire, which areas of learning and research can be pursued,” University President Alan Gerber wrote that he would demand government requests.
“While some of the demands outlined by the government are aimed at fighting anti-Semitism, the majority represent direct government regulations of Harvard’s ‘intellectual conditions’,” Gerber added.
His statement continued to the US Department of Education statement “We have announced the freeze to Harvard University with a $2.2 billion grant and a multi-year contract value of $60 million.”
“An unquestionable violation of First Amendment rights.”
Harvard professor Andrew Crespo told CNN that the Trump administration’s demands were “a clear and unquestionable violation of the First Amendment.”
Crespo and other Harvard professors remained LawLast week, he opposed Trump’s threat to award $9 billion federal contracts and grants to Ivy League Schools as part of a crackdown on what the government says is anti-Semitic on university campuses.
“The actions challenge the Trump administration’s illegal and unprecedented misuse of federal funds and civil rights enforcement agencies, and undermine academic and speech freedom on university campuses,” the lawsuit reads.
A document filed in court on April 11 said “President Trump explicitly campaigned on the promise that by using federal powers to administer universities, he would undermine freedom of speech and academic freedom.”
Former President Obama xPost A statement in support of Harvard’s decision to reject Trump’s request.
“Harvard sets an example for other institutions of higher education, rejecting hamhand attempts illegally to curb academic freedom, and taking concrete steps to ensure that all Harvard students can benefit from an environment of intellectual research, rigorous discussion and mutual respect.
Trump’s attacks are a threat to all of us
The Guardian manipulation warns Donald that “Trump’s attack on freedom of speech is a threat to all of us.”
“He removed longtime news outlets from the Pentagon, restricted access to the prestigious Associated Press news events, seized control of the White House pool pool from news organizations, and closed outlets broadcasting American Voice and Radio Free Asia across our region,” Zoe Daniel added.
“It’s an indisputable war on information and evidence. It’s a retaliation for Trump’s objective reporting over the past decade and a naked attempt to replace it with slavish psychofancy from a supportive outlet.”
It says Trump couldn’t come at a bad moment when attacks on press freedom. They say fake news that affects public opinion with lies and propaganda has become an important tool used by oppressive regimes around the world.
Reporter Without Borders (RSF) has recently been released Comprehensive list Of many Trump administrations, the attack on press freedom has been called “an onslaught intended to undermine Americans’ initial right to revise.”
“Trump’s second term as president was a tumultuous whirlwind for journalism,” the NGO said. “The newly elected president, his administration, and his political allies have carried out a series of attacks on freedom of the press, which amounts to a monumental attack on freedom of information.”
AP also sues Trump’s government
On March 27, Washington-based Associated Press, perhaps the most well-known global news agency, complained to a federal judge about the ban on Trump from covering White House news.
“The Trump administration’s ban is a fundamental attack on freedom of speech and should be overturned,” the AP said. I said.
“Think bigger for those who think President Trump’s Associated Press lawsuit against the White House is about the names of the waters,” Associated Press executive editor Julie Pace wrote in the Wall Street Journal’s OP-ED on Wednesday. “It’s really about whether the government has control over what you say.”
Trump has been away for five days since taking office for three months. But he’s already transforming the world into heels, making it easier to agree with the manipulation of Donald Earl Collins’ Al Jazeera, a professor lecturer at the American University in Washington, DC, and predicts what the second Trump terminology will look like.
“The next four years will be marked by forced pregnancy, mass expulsion, meaningless public health decisions, persecution by preventable war, oppression, retaliation and unnecessary death,” Collins said. I wrote it.