Before his speech at the University of Florida in Gainesville on October 19, racist “alt-right” figurehead Spencer commented, “The fact is, if the police simply do their job, my speech and the whole event will go off wonderfully.”

The police did their job. On Thursday, the venue was secure, disputes were contained and law enforcement quickly resolved the one incident that could have resulted in death or serious injury. But for Spencer, the outcome wasn’t exactly wonderful.

Spencer and his cohorts demanded a platform in Gainesville — a tactic they’re using at colleges nationwide — by citing free speech, but they balked when attendees mounted a free speech protest of their own. The 700 tickets, distributed by Spencer’s National Policy Institute at the door at the last minute, went mostly to students and residents who opposed Spencer’s message. When Cameron Padgett, Spencer’s 29-year-old booking agent, took the stage to introduce the speakers, he was booed and heckled. The opening acts, Mike “Enoch” Peinovich and Elliott Kline aka Eli Mosley, kept their remarks short amid such resistance, sometimes yelling over the crowd as attendees drowned out their most offensive remarks.

When Spencer took the stage, the protest coalesced into a united front. Protesters stood, some with their fists in the air, chanting “F--- you, Spencer,” and its G-rated variant, “Go home Spencer!”

Spencer constantly refers to himself as a “dissident intellectual,” apparently hoping the label will stick. Since his early days in the spotlight, he’s tried to cultivate an image as a calm, reasoned — and even cultured — academic racist. A series of softball media interviews helped that effort along, treating him like a harmless curiosity instead of a virulent racist. But on the stage in Gainesville, faced with serious opposition, his thin façade crumbled.

He got flustered when he realized the crowd would not back down. Then he resorted to insults.

“Poor little babies!” he yelled. “Are you adults? Are you? You all look like immature preschoolers.”

“The whole world is watching this. They don’t hear anything you’re saying. All they hear is a bunch of shrieking and grunting morons.” At that, the crowd cheered and started up a chant “Let’s go, Gators!”



Richard Spencer became flustered when crowds chanted "it's your fault!" after the subject of Heather Heyer's death in Charlottesville arose.

Spencer mocked them, displaying a stunning lack of self-awareness.

“Ooh, sportsball! That’s a real great use of your time! That’s really just drinking in the opium of the masses pretty deeply there, guys. Nothing says committed leftist like supporting a football program.”

Spencer moved onto the Q&A portion, where instead of having the “conversation” he kept insisting on, he belittled the questioners. He called one audience member’s argument “kind of autistic,” and when another took a moment to gather his thoughts before speaking, Spencer sneered, “Can you articulate, please?”

One woman asked Spencer to take responsibility for the violence in Charlottesville. He flatly refused, and amid chants from the audience of “It’s your fault,” he called the circumstances of Heather Heyer’s death into question.

He said James Fields, the man who drove his car into a crowd of protesters, “is used as a scapegoat,” and that the incident “is a very ambiguous situation.”

Spencer wasn’t the only one who couldn’t cope with the unfriendly crowd. By the end, Padgett completely lost his head, screaming, “Y’all aren’t tolerant. Y’all aren’t anything! Y’all are full of shit! You all are acting like animals and the communist antifa that you are!”



The crowd at Richard Spencer's October 19 Gainesville speech.

The event shed light on what Spencer and other white nationalists really mean when they talk about free speech. They aren’t talking about the law or the Constitution, they’re talking about hijacking the system and using it to amplify their message. From a legal standpoint, the university gave Spencer everything they could reasonably be obligated to give. He got a venue, $500,000 in law enforcement protection, and even control of ticket distribution when he demanded it.

But he still wasn’t happy, as he shouted at the audience, “Public institutions need to protect me from people like you!”

Unfortunately for Spencer, nowhere in the legal precedent on free speech does it say that when you go somewhere you know you are unwelcome, you have to be shielded from encountering rudeness. Nowhere does it say that an audience is legally required to sit silently and absorb every talking point you deliver, no matter how repugnant. Gainesville residents have free speech rights, too. And on Thursday, they used them.

Early on in his appearance, as the pressure from the crowd mounted, Spencer underscored that with a telling gaffe: “Do not think that you are speaking truth to power,” he said. “You are speaking truth to Richard Spencer.”

Joe Raedle and Brian Blanco/Getty Images.