4.2.12 WC: 191694 government interference. That’s how the marketplace of ideas is supposed to operate in a democracy. The government must protect bad, wrong and offensive speakers from those who would react violently. Speech, not violence, is protected by the First Amendment. Moreover, if a violent reaction to speech is deemed to justify the censoring of that speech, then the threat to commit violence empowers “the victims” of provocative speech to serve as censors. This “violence veto” should not be encouraged by the law. Hard as it may be to arrest these “victims” rather than the provokers, the First Amendment requires that the government side with the “bad” speakers, rather than the “good” violence-threateners. In the end, the Nazis “won” the encounter in Skokie because good and decent people in that community decided to try to censor, rather than ridicule or respond to them. My experience with “clear and present danger” incitement also took place in a small community—the beautiful campus of Stanford University. Shortly after arriving at Stanford in the fall of 1970 for what I expected would be a year of scholarly research as a fellow of the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences, I was asked to represent a tenured English professor named Bruce Franklin, who was being fired for inciting students. He had spoken at an anti-war rally directed against the Stanford Computation Center, which was involved in war- related research. His speech including the following: “[W]hat we’re asking is for people to make that little tiny gesture to show that we’re willing to inconvenience ourselves a little bit and to begin to shut down the most obvious machinery of war, such as—and I think it is a good target—that Computation Center.” Following shouts of “Right on,” a group of listeners marched on the Computation Center and physically shut it down, causing some damage. Franklin did not join the demonstrators himself; he watched from a safe and discreet distance. The