Table of Contents
Best of 'The Torch': Williams College Bars āUncomfortable Learningā Speaker from Campus, Declares āHate Speechā Too Uncomfortable
EDITORāS NOTE: This article is part of this weekās āBest of The Torchā retrospective, where we search the archives to bring you FIREstories worth a second look. This storyāwhich was followed by a rousing response from the president of Williams Collegeās āUncomfortable Learningā speaker series, Zach Woodāoriginally ran February 18, 2016.
Williams College a second speaker from its student-run āUncomfortable Learningā speaker series, a program specifically developed to campus. Unlike the , which came at the behest of the speaker seriesā student organizers, this order came directly from the college president.
Williams President Adam Falk to the university community this morning that he was canceling next Mondayās speech by writer John Derbyshire, whose views have previously .
Falk blamed āhate speechā for the disinvitation:
To the Williams Community,
Today I am taking the extraordinary step of canceling a speech by John Derbyshire, who was to have presented his views here on Monday night. The college didnāt invite Derbyshire, but I have made it clear to the students who did that the college will not provide a platform for him.
Free speech is a value I hold in extremely high regard. The college has a very long history of encouraging the expression of a range of viewpoints and giving voice to widely differing opinions. We have said we wouldnāt cancel speakers or prevent the expression of views except in the most extreme circumstances. In other words: Thereās a line somewhere, but in our history of hosting events and speeches of all kinds, we hadnāt yet found it.
Weāve found the line. Derbyshire, in my opinion, is on the other side of it. Many of his expressions clearly constitute hate speech, and we will not promote such speech on this campus or in our community.
We respectāand expectāour studentsā exploration of ideas, including ones that are very challenging, and we encourage individual choice and decision-making by students. But at times itās our role as educators and administrators to step in and make decisions that are in the best interest of students and our community. This is one of those times.
Sincerely,
Adam Falk
President
This isnāt the first time Uncomfortable Learning has rendered the Williams community, well, uncomfortable.
Williams when student protests prompted Uncomfortable Learning to rescind its invitation to self-described ācultural criticā Suzanne Venker. As FIREreported at the time, the college itself was not involved in Venkerās disinvitation.
The college as follows:
Uncomfortable Learning is a student-run, alumni-funded organization that aims to encourage students to understand and engage with often provocative and uncomfortable viewpoints that oppose perceived popular opinions at the College.
[...]
āThe goal of uncomfortable learning,ā said [a student organizer], āis to understand how someone who is just as sure as you are in their beliefs can think something completely different,ā but he added that the express purpose of the organization is not to convince people to change their beliefs.
Williams confirmed this morning that Uncomfortable Learning had indeed been the ones to invite Derbyshire:
have you decided to actually take a stance on the White Supremacist speaker UL is bringing to campus?
ā Veronica Hudson (@luther_swag)
While student organizers canceled Suzanne Venkerās October speech , this cancellation was by the president of Williams Collegeāthe same president who, just last October, to respecting studentsā rights to bring controversial speakers to campus:
When a controversial speaker ā whose views on feminism I object to profoundly, by the way ā was first invited and then uninvited to speak, we drew a torrent of public criticism for what was perceived widely as an unwillingness of our community to tolerate the expression of differing viewpoints.
Let me be absolutely clear: Williams has a long history of inviting controversial speakers to campus and no history of uninviting them, and this is a point of absolute principle. Ours is an institution of higher learning; such learning cannot occur without broad and enthusiastic exposure to a wide range of ideas and perspectives. And certainly the invitation of a speaker to campus isnāt in and of itself an endorsement ā by the College or by individuals who invite a speaker ā of that personās views. Whatever our own views may be, we should be active in bringing to campus speakers whose opinions are different from our own.
There is no reconciling Falkās October position with his current one, leaving students with unclear guidelines as to which speakers or subjects are out-of-bounds at Williams College. In fact, the only thing that is clear now is that President Falk has declared his administration to be the sole arbiter of what can and cannot be said at the college, the collegeās supposed commitment to free speech notwithstanding.
Although Williams is, as a private institution, free to craft its own rules, it has it is ācommitted to being a community in which all ranges of opinion and belief can be expressed and debatedā and that ā.ā Imposing restrictions on what topics may be discussed and who students may invite to discuss them is the polar opposite of āfree academic inquiryā; it is closer to indoctrination than education.
FIRE keeps a comprehensive database of disinvitation incidents on campuses around the country.
Itās worth noting that some of the most controversial speakers invited to speak at colleges and universities over the past century have sparked the adoption of policies that protect robust and open debate on campuses. The prime example is , which is regarded as the first free speech policy statement by a university to espouse a deep commitment to examining all viewpoints, no matter their popularity, as a path toward truth. That report was adopted only after students called for the disinvitation of controversial Nobel laureate William Shockley, whose views many contended were not only patently racist, but incontrovertibly false. The Woodward Report has been cited as an inspiration for the , which FIRE has endorsed, and which schools are increasingly adopting.
For the moment, it appears Williams has chosen a different pathāa path on which paternalistic administrators decide which ideas are too dangerous for college students to hear, even when students themselves have established a program specifically for the purpose of engaging with such ideas. It is now up to the students, faculty, alumni, and trustees of Williams to decide whether that is truly the kind of place they want their college to be, or whether they are going to push back against this act of censorship.
Recent Articles
FIREās award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.