Conservative cancel culture lost its latest fight at Stanford, as a law student will now be allowed to graduate after posting a very funny satirical flyer linking a right-wing group to the Capital insurrection.
After writing ‘coup is a classical system of installing a government’ uni student almost blocked from graduation
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By Jaclyn Peiser
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A few weeks after the January 6 insurrection attempt staged at the US Capitol, Stanford Law student Nicholas Wallace mocked up a satirical flier aimed at the Federalist Society, an influential national organisation for conservative and libertarian lawyers.
The message mocked the group after some of its prominent members, including Republicans Senator Josh Hawley and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, backed efforts to overturn the election.
Stanford University has lifted a hold it had placed on a graduating law student’s diploma and dropped an investigation into a complaint stemming from a satirical flier the student created mocking the campus chapter of the Federalist Society, a national group of conservative and libertarian lawyers. According to the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, the student,
AUSTIN, TX The Heritage Foundation presented Dr. Robert Jackson with its 2021 Salvatori Prize for American Citizenship during the organization’s annual Resource Bank meeting this week in honor of his significant work to protect and advance American values through education by teaching and promoting the use of classical education in the classroom.
"Violent insurrection, also known as doing a coup, is a classical system of installing a government," the satirical flyer reads. The post Stanford Is Investigating a Law Student Who Mocked the Federalist Society first appeared on Law & Crime.