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Ward Churchill and Free Speech

n 9/11 were doing so in retaliation for injustices wrought by the American military-industrial complex, which he believes has attempted to create an Imperialistic order in Iraq and other nations around the world.

By offering this controversial perspective, Churchill maintained to Sean Hannity and Alan Colmes that he was offering his opinion that America's injustices to other nations and peoples helped forge the motives of the terrorists who attacked the U.S. on 9/11. College classrooms are designed to promote critical thought and offer students access to diverse views and opinions that lead them to consider different perspectives before forming their own informed perspectives. As Churchill told Hannity and Colmes, "Part of what was happening is that I'm trying to present what I would anticipate the analysis of someone who would engage in this sort of activity would be. Part of that goes to why they would do it. What are the motives? If you don't understand those, it's an inexplicable phenomenon" (Ward 3). In this sense, Churchill is merely offering his perspective on why the terrorists who acted that day believed they had a right to engage in such mayhem.

To prove his point that Americans are as guilty of atrocities toward other nations and peoples of a similar degree to 9/11, C

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Ward Churchill and Free Speech. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 00:29, May 05, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/2000359.html