Milo Yiannopoulous’ speech at UC-Berkeley canceled as protest turns violent

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A group of protesters is throwing smoke bombs and flares to UC Berkeley’s student union building where polarizing Breitbart News editor Milo Yiannopoulos is scheduled to speak Wednesday evening. (Feb. 1)
AP

Increasingly violent protests at the University of California – Berkeley prompted officials to cancel a speech by conservative writer and activist Milo Yiannopoulous Wednesday night.

More than 1,500 people gathered in front of UC Berkeley’s Sproul Hall to protest Yiannopoulous, a self-proclaimed « troll » and editor for the right-wing Breitbart News website who was banned from Twitter for a targeted campaign against Saturday Night Live actress Leslie Jones. Protesters held signs that read « Hate Speech Is Not Free Speech” and pledging to shut down the event.

What began as a peaceful demonstration devolved as the night wore on. Protesters threw smoke bombs, knocked down barriers, set fires and started fights in the south campus area, police said.

Police announced a campus lockdown and ordered the crowd to disperse.

Yiannopoulos posted on Facebook that he had been evacuated from the campus after “violent left-wing protesters” threatened his safety.

In a subsequent Facebook Live video, he said he was safe. He had planned to discuss cultural appropriation — the use of elements of one cultures by members of another — in his speech before the event was canceled.

« It’s not a subject you would imagine would prompt the kind of violent riots you’re seeing now seeing on every major broadcast network in United States, and it’s not something I expected to happen tonight, » he said.

He called the protests a sign that progressives have become so « antithetical » to free speech since President Trump’s election that universities couldn’t even host speakers with divergent opinions.

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