It would be foolish to suggest that the people who overran the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 in an attempt to prevent a duly elected Congress from certifying the victory of the duly elected next president were merely exercising their constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech. But as school board members across the country are subjected to death threats and physical intimidation from the promoters of lies and noxious causes, we’re being asked to believe that the disturbances are a free speech exercise.
The apology was nothing but red meat to Republicans who predictably slobbered as they pounced upon it.
That’s why it was disappointing that the board of directors of the National School Boards Association apologized for a Sept. 29 letter its president and interim executive director sent the White House describing violent and threatening behavior at school board meetings across the country as “the equivalent to a form of domestic terrorism and hate crimes.”
The apology was nothing but red meat to Republicans who predictably slobbered as they pounced upon it. Attorney General Merrick Garland had responded to the group’s letter with a memo urging the FBI to assist local school boards with threat assessment. When the group apologized, Rep. Jim Jordan, who represents Ohio’s 4th Congressional District, demanded that Garland withdraw that memo.
“Because the NSBA letter was the basis for your memorandum and given that your memorandum has been and will continue to be read as threatening parents and chilling their protected First Amendment rights,” he wrote to Garland, “the only responsible course of action is for you to fully and unequivocally withdraw your memorandum immediately.”
Sen. Josh Hawley of Missouri, who when he’s not giving a thumbs-up at an insurrectionist pre-party is calling for some Democrat or some Democrat’s appointee to resign, stayed true to form: “Merrick Garland mobilized the FBI to intimidate parents without legal basis and, we now know, premised on misinformation he didn’t bother to verify,” Hawley tweeted. “It was a dangerous abuse of authority that has badly compromised the Justice Dept’s integrity and Garland’s. He should resign.”
Merrick Garland mobilized the FBI to intimidate parents without legal basis and, we now know, premised on misinformation he didn’t bother to verify. It was a dangerous abuse of authority that has badly compromised the Justice Dept’s integrity and Garland’s. He should resign. https://t.co/MXKN5j0L5g
— Josh Hawley (@HawleyMO) October 23, 2021
Testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday, Garland rebuffed the suggestion that he walk back his memo, to say nothing of Hawley’s absurd demand.
“The purpose of this memorandum is to get our law enforcement to assess the extent of the problem. And if there is no problem, if states and local law enforcement are capable of handling the problem, then there is no need for our involvement,” Garland said, according to The Wall Street Journal. “This memo does not say to begin prosecuting anybody. It says to make assessments. That’s what we do in the Justice Department. It has nothing to do with politics.”
It’s not a surprise that lawmakers who have spent eight months minimizing an all-out assault on the Capitol would try to convince us that what we’ve been seeing unfold at school board meetings (and on school campuses generally) is nothing but the exercise of free speech.
Yes, the school board association’s most recent correspondence said its directors “regret and apologize for the letter” and that “there was no justification for some of the language included in that letter,” but those directors do not deny that school board meetings — and school campuses more broadly — have become frightening.
Because how could they?








