Table of Contents
Disinvitation Season Continues at Azusa Pacific University and Elsewhere
Azusa Pacific University (APU) in California has 鈥減ostponed鈥 a scheduled talk by Charles Murray, fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and co-author of (among other works) , citing The university on campus for a 鈥渢houghtful and meaningful dialogue鈥 in the 2014鈥2015 academic year.
If this sounds familiar, it鈥檚 because it is familiar: Earlier this month, Brandeis University reversed its decision to award an honorary degree to women鈥檚 rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali, similarly citing 鈥渃ertain of her past statements that are inconsistent with Brandeis University鈥檚 core values.鈥 also concluded by claiming that Hirsi Ali would be 鈥渨elcome to join us on campus in the future to engage in a dialogue about these important issues.鈥
So, this appears to be the script:
1. University invites controversial figure to campus.
2. Controversial figure generates controversy.
3. University disinvites controversial figure, citing previous ignorance of his/her controversial views.
4. University claims controversial figure is welcome on campus at unspecified future date.
The worst part of this, to me, is these universities鈥 total cowardice in dealing with any sort of pushback on controversial speakers. Do they really think we will believe that they were previously unaware of Ayaan Hirsi Ali鈥檚 views on Islam or Charles Murray鈥檚 writings on race and intelligence? Do they take us for fools?
And over at Minding the Campus, APU鈥檚 claim that the cancellation was due in part to the 鈥渓ateness of the semester鈥 also strains credibility:
Your point that the April 23rd speech would have been late in the school year is absolutely accurate. But most people tend to believe you knew all along that late April is closely followed by early May, when Azusans are traditionally released from the occasional but dreaded school pressure of having to read and listen to people they don鈥檛 already agree with. As Dr. Murray pointed out, the speech had been planned for months, with the April-May proximity fully understood by seasoned calendar readers, one of whom should surely be on your staff.
In response to the debacle, Charles Murray posted on the American Enterprise Institute鈥檚 website. In it, he urged students:
Explore for yourself the 鈥渇ull range鈥 of my scholarship and find out what it is that I鈥檝e written or said that would hurt your faculty or students of color. It鈥檚 not hard. In fact, you can do it without moving from your chair if you鈥檙e in front of your computer.
You don鈥檛 have to buy my books. Instead, go to my web page at AEI. There you will find the full texts of dozens of articles I鈥檝e written for the last quarter-century. Browse through them. Will you find anything that is controversial? That people disagree with? Yes, because (hang on to your hats) scholarship usually means writing about things on which people disagree.
摆鈥
Azusa Pacific鈥檚 administration wants to protect you from earnest and nerdy old guys who have opinions that some of your faculty do not share. Ask if this is why you鈥檙e getting a college education.
Sadly, APU and Brandeis are not the only institutions to have chosen censorship over free speech and debate in this 鈥渄isinvitation season.鈥 Just last week, that Pasadena City College (PCC) in California had decided not to invite Oscar winner and LGBT activist Dustin Lance Black to speak at commencement because of explicit photographs of Black that surfaced on the Internet. Following a similar script to the one I mentioned, that procedural errors were actually to blame for the decision, despite the fact that the college鈥檚 board chair that 鈥淲e just don鈥檛 want to give PCC a bad name.鈥
And elsewhere, students and faculty鈥攚ho have quickly caught on to the fact that universities can be successfully pressured into disinviting controversial speakers鈥攁re calling for more disinvitations. FIREat Suffolk University in Boston have launched a , head of the Anti-Defamation League, as its law school commencement speaker. And faculty and students at Rutgers University-New Brunswick have been vocal in their as the university鈥檚 commencement speaker.
So far, both of these universities are standing behind their choices, and we hope they continue to do so. Universities should defend the importance of open dialogue and debate even when faced with those鈥攊ndeed, particularly when faced with those鈥攚ho say, , 鈥淲hy bother winning the debate when it鈥檚 easier to close it down?鈥
We also hope that other universities will choose to follow the lead of institutions like Rutgers and Suffolk (so far) rather than APU, Brandeis, or PCC. The more that universities give in to calls for censorship, the more emboldened the would-be censors become, giving birth to a vicious cycle that totally eviscerates the notion of a university as a marketplace of ideas.
Image via
Recent Articles
FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.