Hmm...I read the PDF of the survey, and I don't recall anything about Trump in there. Odd how he gets focused on in absolutely every discussion, as though he will be in charge of government forever.
Anyway, I agree with the others who have noted that nobody is for absolutely unfettered free speech. The problem is, of course, that we can't agree when or where the line should be drawn. StrayKat's reply (#54, p. 3) has been the most honest in this regard. I don't trust any of you to make this determination, and you shouldn't trust me, either.
I will say, to add something new to the conversation rather than just agreeing with someone else, that there is an inherent danger in crafting our laws to the sensitivity of the most sensitive cohort in any given opinion poll. It's an imperfect analogy, but if you have a young child and you wrap them up in bubble wrap before dropping them off outside to play, they'll probably be 'safer' than if you hadn't done that, but they'll also be unable to move. Then, when a bully sees that they are all wrapped up like that, there's nothing to stop them from pushing the kid over, popping all the bubble wrap, and beating the kid up for being such a 'sissy' or whatever. I am afraid that this is the kind of cumulative effect of these 'protections' from free speech can have: providing a bit of temporary 'safety' (say, when you're a youth on an elite college campus in the USA), but as a trade-off leaving you in a much more vulnerable position when you are confronted by a bully who does not care that they'll get in trouble, because they only want to hurt you, and you are an easy target, standing out there, wrapped up in (ideological) bubble wrap.
For all the fear of the rise of Nazis if we don't embrace this or that, it seems like a good idea to everyone that what stopped the Nazis the first time around wasn't the passing of hate crime legislation, or the government curtailment of free speech (though that certainly did happen, as always happens during war time), but the mobilization of large armies from around the world to militarily confront the Axis powers and their allies. That's why it's important to not become mush in the first place. Do you want to be so busy being sensitive and caring that the first time within your own living memory that you meet an immovable object that doesn't bother with any of that, it absolutely destroys you? I don't.
So unless you're willing to say that you will actually take up arms against people because the things that they say make you feel sad, then you're only doing so much intellectual navel-gazing, no matter what political side or age cohort you belong to. And if you are willing to say that, then frankly you're a danger to the people around you and should be institutionalized until such time as you grow up and learn to deal with the existence of viewpoints that you don't like (if that ever happens).