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Feds May Force U.S. Universities To Adopt Extreme Anti Sexual-Harassment Speech Codes
In response at the University of Montana, the U.S. Departments of Education and Justice re: defining and dealing with sexual harassment on college campuses.
In a letter to the University, the agency proposed new student speech codes, intended to be 鈥漚 blueprint for colleges and universities throughout the country.鈥 They include a bafflingly broad definition of sexual harassment that includes 鈥渁ny unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature,鈥 including speech (jokes, rumors, flirting, date requests)鈥攔egardless of whether an 鈥渙bjectively reasonable person鈥 would judge that conduct offensive.
What鈥檚 worse, adopting this entirely subjective standard for defining sexual harassment will be required for all private and public universities that receive federal funding (nearly all of them).
I went evening鈥攁long with Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, and The College Fix鈥檚 Nathan Hardan鈥攖o talk about the proposed blueprint. We all more or less agreed it鈥檚 absurd; an impediment to free inquiry on college campuses if not a downright violation of free speech rights; and a distraction from real and serious public safety issues (like high rates of rape and sexual assault) on campus that also seriously confounds and trivializes the issue of consent.
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