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FIREparticipates in Rep. Greg Murphy鈥檚 campus free speech roundtable

Yesterday, FIRESenior Legislative Counsel Tyler Coward and Alumni Relations Officer Connor Murnane participated in a campus free speech roundtable discussion hosted by Rep. Greg Murphy.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to defend the communist as much as the socialist or anyone else, but it has to be free speech,鈥 Murphy said of the purpose of the event. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what this country is about. [Free speech is] not unilateral.鈥
Also participating were Reps. Elise Stefanik and Kat Cammack, as well as members of the newly-formed (AFSA), and a representative from (YAF). Attendees discussed threats to campus free speech and means of pushing back against threats of censorship, with a focus on how alumni might be part of the solution.
鈥淐ollege campuses . . . should be a place where students are able to express themselves without fear, and should be a place where kids learn how to think, not what to think,鈥 Cammack said in her opening remarks. She is a founding member of the recently launched
Stefanik asked about chilling effects limiting speech on college campuses, noting the number of students she鈥檚 spoken to who say they 鈥渃annot share their viewpoints鈥 鈥 despite the purpose of a university being to 鈥渇oster that intellectual debate, not silence viewpoints.鈥
FIRE鈥檚 data confirms that Stefanik鈥檚 concerns are meritorious. Tyler directed participants to 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 , which found that more than 80% of students self-censor at least some of the time and more than 20% self-censor often.
During the discussion, Stefanik asked Connor whether there are institutions doing a good job of inculcating cultures of free speech. Luckily, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 also provide key insight here. Connor identified Claremont McKenna College and the University of Chicago in the rankings as institutions ahead of the curve with respect to protecting free speech and academic freedom. He also noted that schools that openly defend and explain the importance of free speech performed better in these rankings. Purdue University, for example, has all first-year students participate in a free speech orientation program. Notably, and surely not coincidentally, Purdue ranked sixth-best among more than 150 schools nationwide.
Much of the conversation focussed on how alumni can help defend free speech on campus. On this point, Connor argued that alumni, as well as the AFSA and its five independent alumni groups, have the power to make a difference:
Whether it鈥檚 donating their dollars to a speaker series or individual programs, [alumni] have this influence and they can leverage it. It鈥檚 great to see the Alumni Free Speech Alliance and these five alumni groups step forward to lead the charge. Groups like FIREcan provide great resources to equip them with what they need, but it鈥檚 that personal and intimate connection with their alma mater that is truly going to effect change for all those students on those campuses.
Edward Yingling, co-founder of the alumni group, said that 鈥渁lumni across the country are deeply concerned about the future of their alma maters,鈥 adding, 鈥渨hat they lacked was a mechanism to organize. With our alliance they saw the mechanism.鈥
We look forward to further engagement with legislators who support this vision for higher education in America, regardless of their political affiliation.
Roundtable attendees also discussed the challenge of protecting students from being bullied for expressing their beliefs. Tyler acknowledged the importance of this issue but warned against adopting an overly aggressive stance against bullying and harassment, pointing out that over-broad harassment codes are a common source of campus censorship. Fortunately, in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education, the U.S. Supreme Court set the line for determining whether conduct constitutes unprotected harassment.
Elaborating on the Court鈥檚 definition of student-on-student harassment, Tyler explained:
Conduct has to be unwelcome, so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, that it effectively denies the victim鈥檚 access to their education. That is a high threshold 鈥 but appropriately so 鈥 because we want to protect this exchange of ideas on college campuses to the fullest extent that we can.
Murphy, a Republican, concluded by reminding attendees that campus free speech 鈥渋s not just a conservative cause. This is for everybody.鈥 FIREcould not agree more.
We look forward to further engagement with legislators who support this vision for higher education in America, regardless of their political affiliation.
You can watch the roundtable in full , on Murphy鈥檚 YouTube channel.

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