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At George Mason, Student Editors Decry School鈥檚 Speech Code

The editors of The Broadside, George Mason University鈥檚 student newspaper, have sharp words for their school鈥檚 unconstitutional speech code in an .

The Broadside editors write:

Mason is a public university; it has no business enforcing rules that restrict first amendment speech. Its only defense is that these policies, in some intangible way, enforce diversity. This is pure fallacy. When Mason students fear to say what they believe, the result is deadly to campus life and student thought. True diversity on campus can only stem from one thing, a diversity of thought. Mason must dissolve these unconstitutional policies and return first amendment rights to the student body.

We couldn鈥檛 agree more鈥攂ecause when it comes to speech codes, Mason students have plenty to protest.

For example, Mason鈥檚 Housing Policy includes the following provision:

The [Office of Housing and Residence Life] will not tolerate any form of bigotry, harassment, intimidation or threat, whether verbal, written, psychological, direct, or implied. This includes written statements and drawings/suggestions on message boards, voice messages, and electronic communications.

It should be readily apparent that this restriction is both ridiculously overbroad and hopelessly vague. It鈥檚 overbroad because in addition to outlawing unprotected speech like true threats, it has the potential to restrict a vast swath of speech protected by the First Amendment. For example, while bigoted speech may be socially unacceptable, Mason has no authority under the First Amendment to restrict it. Indeed, even if the school could legitimately ban bigoted speech, Mason鈥檚 policy is vague because it makes no attempt to define what speech the school considers 鈥渂igoted鈥 in the first place, leaving students to guess at what speech is and is not prohibited. Finally, the restrictions concerning 鈥減sychological, direct or implied鈥 speech render this particular code laughably unconstitutional: How can a public university actually purport to forbid, say, speech that 鈥渋mplied鈥 鈥渂igotry鈥? Obviously, it can鈥檛: granting university officials the power to deem student speech guilty of 鈥渋mplying bigotry鈥 is completely unconstitutional.

And we won鈥檛 even get into Mason鈥檚 prohibition of 鈥減ranks,鈥 which it defines as 鈥渁ny behavior or action that occurs for amusement,鈥 sternly warning that 鈥渙ftentimes what is amusement for one is physical, financial, or emotionally harmful to another鈥 and violators will be subject to discipline. So much for telling that political joke, huh?

Restrictive policies like these are the reason why George Mason University earns a red light on Spotlight, 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 database of school speech codes, and we at FIREare happy to see The Broadside give Mason鈥檚 code the negative attention it so richly deserves.

Incidentally, students at Mason and other universities looking to raise awareness of their school鈥檚 policies are encouraged to check out FIRE鈥檚 new Spotlight widgets. They鈥檙e easily added to MySpace pages or blogs and are a terrific way to highlight restrictions on free speech on your campus.

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