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Free Speech: Not Just a ā€˜Diversionā€™ from Campus Protests

The protests that have taken hold of college campuses across the country this fall have drawn tremendous attention from the media and the public, both because the topic of race is the driving force behind the protests and because some protesters have been hostile to freedom of the press and have made demands that would limit freedom of speech on campus. (Weā€™ve discussed this in some of our previous posts.)

Defending the rights of students to engage in protected expression is a central part of ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s core mission. To that end, FIREhas worked tirelessly to ensure that student speech, including campus protests, remains viable on college campuses across the country. It is ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s deeply held belief that society is better off when institutions of higher education are bastions of free speech, open dialogue, debate, and disagreement. Our work has included successfully suing institutions that restricted expressive activities by quarantining student expression with tiny, misleadingly labeled ā€œfree speech zones,ā€ and supporting legislation to explicitly bar that practice. ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s board and staff hold views that span the political spectrum, and we take great pains to avoid institutionally commenting on the merits of protected speech, unless the speech is directly tied to the topic of student and faculty rights or academic freedom.

So while FIREis happy to see so many students using their freedom of expression to ensure their voices are heard, we are compelled to address aspects of the protests that are antithetical to the exercise of free speech rights by those with different views on controversial topics. Commentary from ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ and others about the illiberal nature of some protestersā€™ demands has in turn drawn critics like Jelani Cobb, who argue that worries about free speech are a purposeful ā€œā€ from the protestorsā€™ main message about race on campus.

FIRE makes no apologies for our zealous advocacy on behalf of our core issuesā€”free speech, freedom of conscience, due process, etc. Indeed, thatā€™s our job. For many observers, it has been the protestersā€™ actions, not their specific demands, that have raised concerns about freedom of speech and freedom of the press. The demands that Erika and Nicholas Christakis resign from their ā€œhouse masterā€ positions at Yale over an email about Halloween costumes; the forcible exclusion of student reporters from a public area at Mizzou, and a professorā€™s demand for "muscle" to exclude one of them; and the frankly bizarre requirement that reporters covering the protesters at Smith ā€œparticipate and articulate their solidarity with black students and students of colorā€ if they wish to cover them are three of the most prominent examples. But for those who remain unconvinced that free speech is a real issue in these protests, any doubt can be dispelled by looking at many of the demands of the students themselves.

As several commenters have noted, including UCLA law professor (quoting University of Missouri law professor ), protesters are likely to find themselves frustrated by asking for changes that universities may not lawfully makeā€”for instance, the establishment of explicit racial quotas. Demands for racially exclusive positions would also violate the law if met. (As do racial tests for campus classes, which FIREhas taken on before.) And FIREwill discuss demands that, if met, would pose threats to academic freedom, freedom of conscience, and the enforcement of orthodoxy in commentary to come.

The focus of this article, though, and the demands that are of the most immediate concern to ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½, are demands for new speech codes that would lead to increased speech policing or that would chill expression on campus. The demands highlighted below are not the sum total of all that might be problematic along these lines, but contain some of the worst offenders. Generally, if there is any way to reasonably interpret a demand in a manner that would not infringe on studentsā€™ or faculty membersā€™ expressive rights, it wonā€™t be highlighted. (For the readerā€™s ease of reference, nearly all of the protestersā€™ demands are available at a website, .)

At , protesters have demanded that administrators force the conservative Dartmouth Review student newspaper to ā€œgive up the ā€˜Dartmouthā€™ part of their name if they refuse to abide by the requests to stop using the term ā€˜Indianā€™ in their paper.ā€ Protesters have also called for administrators to ā€œ[c]reate a policy with serious consequences against hate speech/crimes (e.g. Greek house expelled for racist parties),ā€ as well as to ā€œ[c]reate a policy banning the Indian mascot (e.g., turn away people from sporting events who are wearing Indian head shirts).ā€ They would also like to ā€œ[b]an the use of ā€˜illegal aliensā€™, [sic] ā€˜illegal immigrantsā€™, ā€˜wetbackā€™, and any racially charged term on Dartmouth-sanctioned programming materials and locations.ā€ Dartmouth cannot agree to these demands consistent with its statement that ā€œ[f]reedom of expression and dissent is protected by College regulations.ā€

protesters demand that ā€œ[p]rofessors, staff members, and non-academic employeesā€ be put ā€œin danger of losing their jobs, and non-tenure track faculty will lose tenure status if they perpetuate hate speech that threatens the safety of students of color. They will also be liable if the discriminatory attitudes behind the speech could potentially harm the academic achievements of students of color.ā€ Yet unlike true threats, most hateful speech is protected by the First Amendment and there is, in any case, no agreed-upon definition of what constitutes ā€œhate speech.ā€ As for the latter part, FIREis particularly concerned about anything that seeks to police attitudes or values. In a pluralistic society, and especially on a campus that are supposed to welcome diverse points of view, policing ā€œattitudesā€ or internal states of mind threatens the right to private conscience and requires the unfair and impossible task of .

protesters ā€œdemand that the Bias Response Team send a personalized response (that includes action steps to take for self-care and details on how to properly sanction the offender to the reporter by the University administration) within one week of [a] Bias Incident Report receipt.ā€ For reference, includes ā€œunintentionalā€ acts or behaviors, as well as ā€œgestures.ā€ These would now evidently be subject to ā€œsanction.ā€ The protesters also demand ā€œrepercussions or sanctions for racist actions performed by professors.ā€ To that end, they demand that faculty evaluations include the questions, ā€œHas this professor made any microaggressions towards you on account of your race, ethnicity, gender, sexual orientation, language, and/or other identity?ā€ and ā€œDo you think that this professor fits into the vision of Emory University being a community of care for individuals of all racial, gender, ability, and class identities?ā€ If Emory were to fulfill these demands, it would commit itself to virtually bottomless pit of speech policing.

Emory protesters also want the anonymous social media app Yik Yak geofenced from Emoryā€™s campus so that no student will be able to use it there, as do protesters at the , who demand that Yik Yak ā€œbe banned from the USD area,ā€ because ā€œit provides a platform for hate speech inflected with racism, sexism, homophobia, transphobia, and, especially recently, [I]slamophobia, amongst several other bigotries.ā€ They are joined by protesters at , who in nearly identical words demand that Yik Yak be banned not just from their campus, but from the entire town of Clinton, New York.

protesters demand ā€œimpactful repercussions,ā€ including ā€œdiversity training,ā€ for anyone who makes ā€œBlack students uncomfortable or unsafe for racial reasons.ā€

Similarly, protesters at Georgiaā€™s demand the ā€œadoption of strong repercussions and sanctions immediately added to policy for offenders of racist actions and racial bias on campus.ā€ Once again, this not only includes speech policing but a kind of mind reading and awareness of someone's internal psychological state. How precisely someone could prove that they are not, in their heart of hearts, biased starts to look more like the problem of how to prove oneself innocent, or, to use a historical allusion, how to prove oneself ā€œnot a witch.ā€ If such a policy were enacted, it would be challenged in court and declared unconstitutional.

At , protesters demand that administrators announce a ā€œcommitment to differentiating ā€˜hate speechā€™ from ā€˜freedom of speech.ā€™ā€ Again, such a ā€œdifferentiationā€ is impossible to agree upon, because so-called ā€œhate speechā€ has no legal meaning in the United States. In any case, it would be unconstitutional for Missouri State to make that distinction in any way that carries disciplinary force.

Similarly, protesters from the demand that ā€œthe student code of conduct be revised to hold students accountable to hate crimes, hate speech, and sexual assault and a detailed reporting structure be developed for students to report such incidents.ā€ While hate crimes and sexual assault are criminal acts already prohibited by both law and university policy, attempts to punish ā€œhate speechā€ would be no more lawful in Wyoming than they are in Missouri or anywhere else in the United States.

Student protesters at in Massachusetts ā€œwould like to see repercussions for racist actions performed by professors and administrators or staff.ā€ This does not appear to be confined to unlawful racial discrimination, though, as the protesters specify that ā€œ[o]ur micro and macro-aggressions should be taken seriously and met with the highest level of urgency and care.ā€ As ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s Greg Lukianoff , the policing of microaggressions, given that they are by definition often unconscious, subtle, and sometimes only exist in the eye of the beholder, would in reality lead to something reminiscent of a dystopian novel. While studying microaggressions may be an interesting academic endeavor, trying to police them would be disastrous for free speech and candor on campus.

Meanwhile, protesters at in Texas demand that ā€œ[s]tatements regarding racially insensitive conduct, including, but not limited to, theme parties and anonymous posts, need to be expanded and incorporated into the Student Code of Conduct and social event registration processes.ā€ They further demand that SMU update its guidelines on proper party themes and demand that any student organization that fails to adhere to the guidelines ā€œbe subject to loss of social privileges and university recognition.ā€

Protesters at the would appear to have similar concerns, demanding a UCLA discrimination policy that would change the fact that ā€œProfessor Sander broke no policy, the Kanye Western party broke no policy.ā€ The Kanye Western party was a Kanye West/Kim Kardashian-themed party at which women who dressed up as ā€œgold diggersā€ from Westā€™s famous song were . ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™ objection to Professor Richard Sander, on the other hand, appears to be based on his that affirmative action policies harm black students and to speak publicly to that effect. Both forms of expression would evidently be unacceptable under the protestersā€™ preferred regime, despite being protected by the First Amendment.

protesters demand that there be ā€œNo Hate Groups on Campus. Ever.ā€ They argue, ā€œFreedom of speech should not be used as a justification for rampant hateful language or opinions that further marginalizes historically oppressed communities.ā€ The protesters do not specify who will be in charge of determining what opinions are too hateful to be tolerated. However, they demand that ā€œadministration, students and staff (including campus police)ā€ be held accountable for ā€œracist statements, policies, actions and attacksā€ as part of ā€œthe removal of policies, groups, symbols and icons glorifying white supremacy.ā€ Similarly, the aforementioned protestors at in New York also call for a ban on all ā€œhate groups.ā€ They, too, state that ā€œfreedom of speech should not and cannot be used for justification for rampant hateful language or opinions that further marginalizes historically oppressed communities.ā€

Many more of these demands could have been highlighted, and given ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½ā€™s experience, it seems likely that a large number of the demands that do not technically necessitate violating student rights would nevertheless end up doing so if actually implemented. Colleges and universities are, after all, notoriously cavalier about respecting the First Amendment or even their own promises of freedom of speech and conscience.

But readers should be cautioned about heaping too large a portion of blame onto the students making the demands. FIREis very aware that students are not constitutional lawyersā€”a common lament around our office, especially in the frequent cases in which schools use absurdly false arguments that their actions didnā€™t violate a given studentā€™s rights. Far from being lawyers, a recent survey suggested that many students are not clear on the basics of the First Amendment, let alone the philosophical underpinnings of its guarantees of free expression and freedom of conscience, and how the Supreme Court has applied those guarantees. The only cure for this is education, but evidence that either Kā€“12 schools or colleges are managing to consistently teach students First Amendment principles is sorely lacking. Put simply, many students may not even know when their demands would violate the lawā€”or simply exchange one form of repression for another.

But does this mean free speech concerns are a distraction? Hardly. The fact that so many students are demanding speech policingā€”even if itā€™s unintentionalā€”is cause for enormous concern. Demands for action that would contravene freedom of speech, along with other constitutional principles, are widespread. They are not outliers. They are, if not central to protestersā€™ demands, an important part of many of them.

It does not have to be this way. In his last speech, the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., talked about the importance of free speech, of freedom of the press, and of living up to oneā€™s promises. Talking about a court-issued injunction that was blocking a planned march and rally in Memphis, he said:

Now about injunctions. We have an injunction and weā€™re going into court tomorrow morning to fight this illegal, unconstitutional injunction. All we say to America is to be true to what you said on paper. If I lived in China or even Russia, or any totalitarian country, maybe I could understand some of these illegal injunctions. Maybe I could understand the denial of certain basic First Amendment privileges, because they havenā€™t committed themselves to that over there. But somewhere I read of the freedom of assembly. Somewhere I read of the freedom of speech. Somewhere I read of the freedom of press. Somewhere I read that the greatness of America is the right to protest for right. And so just as I say we arenā€™t going to let any dogs or water hoses turn us around, we arenā€™t going to let any injunction turn us around.

Todayā€™s protesters, too, are shielded by the First Amendment whenever they share opinions that might offend others, when they march in protest, and, yes, when they make demands of the authorities. As author and gay rights activist , ā€œFree speech is not only minoritiesā€™ best friend. In some ways itā€™s our only reliable friend. If we can't speak in a majority culture, if we lose our voice, it is so easy to oppress us.ā€ Demands for justice should not, and do not need to, include demands that would compromise these rights.

FIRE stands ready to work with any student or group of students to ensure that the demands they makeā€”on whatever subjectā€”respect Americansā€™ most fundamental rights. You can contact us at fire@thefire.org.

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