Yes I did, and yes it is. The technicality relating to free speech though, is that they haven't been silenced. Not funding a group does not equal silencing them. Silencing someone is an act, and the decision against funding a group is not an act that silences. An opinion or your voice is not dependent on money from the Student Union....
ETA: The legal team this group has could have revised the groups constitution for them easilly. That is what lawyers are good at...legalese is their native tongue.
It is when one group has funding and an opposing group does not - Either both receive funding or none do -
Cutting funding does in effect assist in restricting their ability to speak - publish freely -
They are also imposing their own beliefs by restricting the groups funding - How being Pro Abortion or Anti Abortion is Discrimination is something you should explain to me as I cannot grasp that concept.
CUSA is imposing their Political beliefs and forcing another Group to adapt to what they are morally opposed to. Now that is not only discrimination but harrassment of individuals and a group as they are being singled out. All they have to do is become Pro-Abortion -
On Monday, Carleton Lifeline, an anti-abortion group, was told by CUSA, the Carleton University Student Association, that it was in violation of CUSA’s anti-discrimination policy.
The letter noted that Carleton Lifeline believes in the “equal rights of the unborn and firmly believes that abortion is a moral and legal wrong,” wrote Khaldoon Buhnaq of CUSA.
Therefore, because of CUSA’s commitment to choice, Carleton Lifeline can no longer promote activities on campus or even lobby in any way that would go against a pro-choice position.