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FIRECo-Founder on the Worrying Change in Campus Censorship Attempts

FIRE staff sometimes joke that we鈥檇 like to work ourselves out of a job by finally defeating college speech codes once and for all, rendering a large part of our work unnecessary. As in the New York Post this week, Harvey Silverglate hoped for just that when he and Alan Charles Kors co-founded FIRE15 years ago. But FIREis busier than ever, and recent trends are putting a worrying twist on the fight for free speech on campus.
At our founding, Silverglate had good reason to be optimistic. As FIREdetails in our Guide to Free Speech on Campus, the law governing free speech on public college campuses is well-settled and incredibly protective of a wide range of expression. Schaefer Riley relays Silverglate鈥檚 thinking back in the day:
鈥淪urely,鈥 he thought, 鈥渢hese speech codes and kangaroo courts are so antithetical to the nature of institutions of higher education 鈥 rational institutions 鈥 that there was no way this culture [of suppressing speech] could possibly survive more than a decade.鈥
Unfortunately, even in the face of clear legal and moral obligations to protect the 鈥溾 on campus, institutions of higher education have continued to maintain unconstitutional restrictions on expression and punish students and professors for protected speech.
FIRE is making measurable progress. But in some respects, the environment for unfettered debate on campus seems to be getting worse. Schaefer Riley notes the shift from administrator-led censorship attempts to student-led ones:
[T]he really worrisome part is this: The suppression of ideas that make people uncomfortable is no longer a top-down process.
Now it鈥檚 bottom up. The students are the ones registering the complaints and demanding punishment for the offenders.
Silverglate says that professors regularly tell him they are scared of saying the wrong thing about anything in class. And students who used to 鈥渞oll their eyes鈥 when they talked about the sensitivity training of freshman-orientation programs no longer do.
鈥淐ampuses have become asylums where you don鈥檛 want the patients to be aroused,鈥 he says. 鈥淭he students are being treated like psychiatric patients.鈥
The notion that school is a place where being made uncomfortable is unacceptable has now trickled down to the elementary and secondary level. FIREmatriculating to college are just expecting the same kind of constant coddling they have received for the 13 years prior.
For some recent examples of how these trends have played out, and for more thoughts from Silverglate, check out the rest of Schaefer Riley鈥檚 piece in the .
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