William Cooper: ‘Shut up’ doesn’t light the way

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There is an understandable urge among many Americans to cast aside America’s essential principles in a frenetic effort to oppose Donald Trump. And there’s a logic to this approach: He does it, so why shouldn’t we?

Yet doing so would be a big mistake.

For starters, it often backfires. Take the essential principle of respecting the rule of law. Overreaching anti-Trump impeachment efforts, special counsel investigations and criminal cases all boomeranged into Republican rallying cries and helped Trump retake the presidency.

It’s not always true in politics that the harder you fight the more successful you will be. Exercising judgment matters, too.

A far better approach is to double down on the essential principles of American democracy. They work. In fact, America’s founders specifically engineered them to be effective tools against the threat of politicians with autocratic impulses.

Among these essential principles: the right to free speech. History reveals that free speech is vital to human freedom. Tyrants don’t just concentrate power; they eliminate dissent and monopolize ideas. Violence within and between nations increases when governments stifle communication. And restricting the marketplace of ideas decreases innovations that promote human flourishing.

All too often in the Trump era, however, Americans have sought to suppress speech they didn’t like. Hostility to divergent views has infected many American institutions, from corporations and nonprofits to the media and government agencies. The tactics can get extreme: attacking speakers on social media; running people from their jobs; denying tenure to professors; shouting down speakers with the wrong views; threatening administrators with the wrong rules; boycotting companies affiliated with the wrong people.

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More and more Americans are casting aside age-old principles valuing free speech in favor of short-sighted, knee-jerk prohibitions on speakers they don’t like.

This is wrong. The way to counteract speech you don’t like is to explain why it’s wrong. Silencing speech and canceling speakers is deeply counterproductive for three reasons.

First, the censors don’t have more wisdom than the censored. They often have less. Censorship can just as easily muzzle important truths as it can silence subversive lies. History is filled with minority views that eventually became gospel (every person should be equal under the law) and popular ideas that eventually became abominations (certain races are inferior to others).

Second, accuracy matters. Silencing speech is often motivated by the desire to preserve cherished narratives that are empirically incorrect. Bad ideas love nothing more than a marketplace hostile to new ones. This is especially dangerous in a representative democracy like America, where the views of constituents inform and even dictate the official acts of their elected representatives.

Speaking accurately should be encouraged, even if it upsets people. This doesn’t mean speakers should over-emphasize hard truths and controversial ideas. Nor should speakers exaggerate them, fail to show decency when expressing them or assert them at the wrong time, in the wrong place or in the wrong manner. But if speakers navigate all that and merely state objective facts, pose empirically valid questions or offer reasoned conclusions then they should come under no scorn. There needs to be space in the public square for people to speak accurately. Even if it sometimes hurts to hear.

Finally, silencing speech is a slippery slope. What starts at the university can eventually go mainstream. And what goes mainstream can eventually infect the highest echelons of government. Once this happens, a straight line to tyranny emerges. President Harry Truman put it plainly in 1950: “Once a government is committed to the principle of silencing the voice of opposition, it has only one way to go, and that is down the path of increasingly repressive measures, until it becomes a source of terror to all its citizens and creates a country where everyone lives in fear.”

Free speech is indeed essential to a functioning society. We must fight to preserve it by respecting and promoting it ourselves. Even when the speaker says things we don’t want to hear. And even, indeed especially, when Donald Trump is president.

William Cooper is the author of “How America Works … and Why it Doesn’t.” He wrote this for The Fulcrum, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news platform covering efforts to fix our governing systems.

The toughest critic for Vikings running back Aaron Jones? His mom Vurgess.

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Nobody is harder on veteran running back Aaron Jones than himself. Except maybe his mom Vurgess.

A snapshot of that came last month as the Vikings celebrated a 30-27 overtime win over the Chicago Bears.

There was a particular exchange that featured Jones seeking out offensive coordinator Wes Phillips after the game to apologize for a fumble at the goal line. As much as he appreciated the accountability from Jones in the immediate aftermath, Phillips didn’t feel the need to rehash it at the time.

The conversation happened within earshot of Vurgess, however, and she wasn’t feeling quite as forgiving.

“She was like, ‘He’s going to hear about it from me,’ ” Phillips said with a laugh. “That’s how she is. She’s great. She will tell him like it is.”

It was a similar story last weekend after the Vikings escaped with a 23-22 win over the Arizona Cardinals. Though he wound up catching a touchdown in the final minutes that proved to be the difference, Jones had another costly fumble earlier in the game that resulted in him getting benched for a prolonged stretch.

Not that Vurgess had any issue with the decision. She was actually in favor of some sort of punishment for Jones considering he has now fumbled in back-to-back-to-back games for the first time in his career.

“I was like, ‘I’ve got to learn from it,’” Jones said. “She was like, ‘You didn’t learn last week?’ ”

The fact that his mom is simultaneously his biggest fan and his biggest critic is something Jones has grown to appreciate.

He remembers his dad Alvin always being the person to hold him accountable before he passed away a few years ago due to complications from COVID-19.

“It’s what I need,” Jones said. “She has kind of taken the role without me asking her.”

As he reflected on his performance from last weekend, Jones said he was appreciative that head coach Kevin O’Connell called his number in the biggest moment of the game. Not that O’Connell even thought twice about sticking with him.

“He has been a huge part of our team,” O’Connell said. “He had a couple of tough plays there, and then when we had to have it he made the play.”

Do the Vikings plan to use Jones against the Atlanta Falcons on Sunday afternoon at U.S. Bank Stadium?

“We have full confidence in him,” Phillips said. “It’s not going to affect the way we operate moving forward.”

That doesn’t mean there have been some added points of emphasis from Jones this week in practice as he tries to fix the fumbling issue. Though it’s been back to basics more than anything else, he has even tried some unorthodox methods to help himself prepare.

“I’ve been holding my kids like a football,” Jones said with a laugh. “Just getting some practice until my arms get tired.”

It also helps that he can lean on his mom whenever he needs it.

“It’s those conversations with my mom that give me clarity,” Jones said. “I’m thankful to have her.”

Briefly

On the injury report, the Vikings listed tight end Josh Oliver (wrist/ankle), kicker Will Reichard (quad) and long snapper Andrew DePaola (hand) as full participants in practice. That’s a step in the right direction as far as them being available for the Vikings this weekend.

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Burglars believed to be targeting Asian households in Rochester

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ROCHESTER, Minn. — Rochester police are investigating a series of home break-ins that appear to be targeting Asian community members living in the city.

There were five burglaries from Nov. 13 to Dec. 3 where victims, all Asian, returned to their homes at the end of the day to find that their houses were ransacked, according to a news release from the Rochester Police Department. RPD said cash, jewelry, passports and other valuables were taken from the homes.

Most cases involved forced entry through a window or door, the release said.

Rochester police provided the following dates and addresses of the burglaries: Nov. 13 on the 2700 block of Kenosha Lane Northwest, Nov. 28 on the 3600 block of Nottingham Drive Northwest, Dec. 2 on the 2700 block of Boulder Ridge Drive Northwest, Dec. 3 on 4300 block of Fern Avenue Southeast and Dec. 3 on the 1400 block of 48th Street Northwest.

Detectives are reviewing the evidence in the cases and are working to identify the suspects, police said.

RPD encourages people who have any information or who have seen anything suspicious relating to the break-ins to call Rochester police’s non-emergency number, 507-328-6800.

“Tips can be shared anonymously through Crime Stoppers, 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or rochesterolmstedcrimestoppers.org .,” police said. “Please pay attention to activity in your neighborhood and call 911 if you observe anything suspicious.”

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Gophers add Alabama running back Trey Berry to 2025 class

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The Gophers signed running back Trey Berry to its 2025 recruiting class on Wednesday night.

The 5-foot-11, 205-pound product from Montgomery, Ala., fills the spot tailback Shane Marshall left when he flipped to Georgia Tech on Wednesday morning.

Berry had offers from Northwestern, Boston College, Syracuse, Liberty and others. His addition to next year’s class gives Minnesota a total of 21 signed players.

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