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Folding under pressure, University of California San Diego suspends professor for protected comments
A viral showing a UCSD chemistry professor鈥檚 offhand comments in class, about Latino and Chicano custodial workers he thought were being too loud, have led to his suspension.
On Oct. 14, a UCSD student posted the showing professor Robert Ternansky shouting to custodial workers down a hallway: 鈥淪铆, s铆, se帽or. 脕ndale, 谩ndale! Arriba, arriba!鈥 then asking his class, 鈥淗ow do you say 鈥榪uiet鈥 in Mexican? C谩llate?鈥 After a quick discussion of Ternansky鈥檚 limited knowledge of Spanish, he referenced the workers again: 鈥淪omeone tell me if they start running in here with weapons.鈥
FIRE and faculty flooded the criticizing what Ternansky said, and calling for UCSD鈥檚 administration to act. Some demanded that USCS suspend Ternansky, while others insisted he be terminated.
Learning how to respond to unfavorable opinions is an important part of civil discourse and improves students鈥 ability to think critically.
Even though Ternansky issued an , by Oct. 18 UCSD had removed him from teaching his assigned courses for the remainder of the fall quarter.
In a announcing the effective suspension, Dean of UCSD鈥檚 Physical Sciences Division, Steven Boggs, told Inside Higher Ed that the incident was 鈥渁 painful reminder of how offhand comments and 鈥榡okes鈥 can expose biases and stereotypes which are antithetical to our ongoing efforts to create an inclusive and respectful environment for everyone.鈥 He added that Ternansky鈥檚 removal was necessary 鈥渢o ensure a 鈥榩roductive learning environment for all.鈥欌
There鈥檚 just one big problem: Ternansky鈥檚 suspension violates his First Amendment right to freedom of speech. As a public university, UCSD has an to comply with the First Amendment 鈥 whether it comes to institutional policies or the pursuit of disciplinary action. While people on and off UCSD鈥檚 campus were offended by Ternansky鈥檚 comments, the First Amendment doesn鈥檛 restrict speech just because some 鈥 or even many 鈥 take offense to it. In fact, the First Amendment exists precisely to protect this kind of controversial speech.
If UCSD can punish a faculty member if someone finds their protected speech subjectively offensive, faculty will reasonably begin to self-censor.
That is exactly what FIREexplained in its letter to UCSD on Oct. 28. Unless Ternansky鈥檚 comments fit one of the definitions for a category of unprotected speech, UCSD doesn鈥檛 have the authority to punish him for it. We also noted this principle doesn鈥檛 insulate Ternansky from criticism, as people on and off campus are free to use their own expressive rights to express their feelings about what they said. But UCSD, as a government entity, may not subject controversial speech to institutional punishment.
As we told UCSD, Ternansky鈥檚 suspension will have a ripple effect on other UCSD faculty members. If UCSD can punish a faculty member if someone finds their protected speech subjectively offensive, faculty will reasonably begin to self-censor. That鈥檚 a net loss for higher education, where students must learn, not just from pre-planned lectures and materials, but from engaging with the authentic opinions and experiences of others. Learning how to respond to unfavorable opinions is an important part of civil discourse and improves students鈥 ability to think critically. By suspending Ternansky, UCSD is depriving its students of this valuable lesson while violating a professor鈥檚 constitutional rights in the process.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members 鈥 no matter their views 鈥 at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, submit your case to FIREtoday. If you鈥檙e faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533).
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