Judge abused at Stanford Law School say protesters told him they hoped his daughters would be RAPED

A conservative judge who was heckled at Stanford Law School claimed protesting students yelled that they expected their daughters to be raped before the dean of equity ambushed him in “a staged public embarrassment.”

The student chapter of the Federalist Society has asked Fifth Circuit Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, 51, a Donald Trump appointee, to give a speech at the famed law school last week about the circuit Court of Appeals.

However, when he arrived at the school, he was greeted by around 100 students who yelled obscenities at him, including one protester who told him: “We hope your daughters will be raped.”

The judge also saw signs on campus saying ‘you should be SHAME’, and others claiming he had committed ‘crimes against women, gays, blacks and ‘trans people,’ he wrote in a Wall Street Journal opinion article.

“Stanford Law School’s website touts its ‘collegial culture’ in which ‘collaboration and the open exchange of ideas are essential to life and learning,” he said. ‘This didn’t feel ‘collegiate’.’

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The student chapter of the Federalist Society has asked Fifth Circuit Judge Stuart Kyle Duncan, 51, a Donald Trump appointee, to give a speech at the famed law school last week about the circuit Court of Appeals.

He was warned before his arrival that there might be protesters and that the school had to allow it, but he assured him that they were “in the know”. They told him that if there was any disruption, the school would take care of it, but Duncan said that didn’t happen.

Students stormed the classroom with signs reading ‘FED SUCK’ and ‘Trans Lives Matter’ to interrupt him about his US v Varner court decision, where a ‘federal prisoner serving time for attempted receipt of pornography infantile… requested our court order that he be called by feminine pronouns.’

As my opinion explained, federal courts cannot control what pronouns people use. The Stanford protesters saw it differently: my opinion had “denied the existence of a trans woman.”

Despite the abuse, the president of the Federalist Society still tried to introduce Duncan so he could give his speech, but the students interrupted ‘every three words’.

‘”The Federalist Society (You Suck!) is pleased to welcome Judge Kyle Duncan (You’re not welcome here, we hate you!). He was appointed by President Trump to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (Embarrassing!) “And so on,” he wrote over the introduction.

He tried to persevere, but finally stopped and asked the students to stop swearing. But they went ahead, so he finally asked for an administrator to step in.

However, when he arrived at the school, he was met by around 100 students yelling obscenities at him, including one protester who told him:

However, when she arrived at the school, she was met by around 100 students yelling obscenities at her, including one protester who told her: “We hope your daughters will be raped.”

He eventually asked for an administrator when the booing didn't stop and Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tirien Steinbach walked in.  She asked to speak before the group, which she confused Duncan, who said

He eventually asked for an administrator when the booing didn't stop and Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tirien Steinbach walked in.  She asked to speak before the group, which she confused Duncan, who said

He eventually asked for an administrator when the booing didn’t stop and Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tirien Steinbach walked in. She asked to speak before the group, which she confused Duncan, who said “something felt off.”

Associate Dean for Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Tirien Steinbach chimed in, but instead of calming down the students, she “insisted that she wanted to talk to all of us,” Duncan said.

“Something felt off,” he wrote. ‘The students started yelling and I reluctantly gave in. So Ms. Steinbach opened a sheet of paper, pulled out a sheaf of printouts, and delivered a six-minute speech addressing the question, “Is the juice worth squeezing?”

Video footage from the event shows the altercation between the associate dean and the judge.

‘Can I tell you something, okay?’ Steinbach asked the students before turning to Duncan. ‘Alright?’

Duncan reiterated that he was being “interrupted” and asked for an administrator, prompting students to yell that it was her. Steinbach’s head can be seen nodding aggressively, but the screams of the students made it so that she couldn’t hear what she was saying.

“I’d like to help,” he told Duncan.

‘Which way?’ she replied. As the students yelled that her ‘racism was being shown’ and to ‘respect black women’, the judge finally conceded and said, ‘I guess I have to let her.’

She then picked up the lectern and said, “I had to write something because I feel so uncomfortable up here,” before launching her six-minute speech.

Steinbach took the lectern and then delivered a six-minute prepared speech, calling his work

Steinbach took the lectern and then delivered a six-minute prepared speech, calling his work “abhorrent.” Stanford leaders would later apologize to Duncan for the students and for Steinbach’s “failure” to follow campus policy.

In his speech, Duncan claimed he called his work “abhorrent” and said it had “caused harm” because it “literally denies the humanity of people.” She also claimed that her presence on her campus put her in a difficult situation because it was her job “to create a space of belonging for all people.”

“She assured me that I was ‘absolutely welcome in this space’ because ‘I and a lot of people in this administration absolutely believe in free speech,'” he claimed to have told her.

‘I didn’t feel welcome, who would?’

After reopening the flat, one student asked the others to tone it down so he could ask questions. Duncan resumed with the prepared material of him, but the students began “hurling insults, including vile sexual innuendos.”

Two US Marshals then escorted Duncan off campus.

Law school dean Jenny Martinez and Stanford president Marc Tessier-Lavinge have since “formally apologized and confirmed that the protesters and administrators had violated Stanford policy” days later.

‘I am grateful and I accepted. However, the matter has not subsided,” she wrote.

Duncan claimed that students are still protesting by wearing masks and forming a human corridor, all in protest of Martinez “apologizing to me.”

Students held signs reading 'trans lives matter' (pictured) and 'FED SUCK'

Students held signs reading ‘trans lives matter’ (pictured) and ‘FED SUCK’

Duncan was criticized in the media for calling protesters “terrible idiots” and “thugs”, but states in his op-ed that “sometimes anger is the appropriate response to vicious behaviour”.

He also criticized the elite law school for failing to teach future lawyers the “basics of legal discourse: that one must meet reason with reason, not power.” That the law protects the speaker from the crowd, not the crowd from the speaker.

“Worst of all, Ms. Steinbach’s comments made it clear that she is proud that Stanford students are being taught what the law should look like.”

Martinez and Tessier-Lavinge conceded that the staff “should have enforced the university’s policies” and “failed” to do so. They said Steinbach “intervened in an inappropriate manner that is not aligned with the university’s commitment to free speech.”

“We are taking steps to ensure that something like this does not happen again. Free speech is a fundamental principle for law school, the university, and a democratic society, and we can and must do better to make sure it continues even in polarized times,’ she apologized. letter concluded.