果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

鈥業 Am All for Free Speech 鈥 But I Draw the Line at People Making Fun of Me!鈥

果冻传媒app官方

For those of you who didn鈥檛 get to see me on MSNBC this weekend, it was a fun time, and a chance to talk about the striking rise we have noticed in students getting into trouble for their speech on sites like MySpace.com or Facebook.com. As loyal Torch readers know, FIRErecently successfully aided a student at University of Central Florida (UCF) who was brought up on harassment charges for calling a student government candidate a 鈥渏erk and a fool.鈥 Meanwhile, at Syracuse University, students who created a Facebook group to make fun of a teaching assistant were expelled from the class and placed on 鈥渄isciplinary reprimand,鈥 and two students at Cowley College in Kansas were banned from participating in theater department activities after they complained about the theater department on a MySpace blog. These are just three of a sudden upswing in cases of student censorship for online speech at both the college and the high school level.

One of the things that I find so telling about these cases is that they aren鈥檛 really particularly ideological; they are raw instances of administrators, faculty or student officials saying, 鈥淚 believe in free speech and all, but I will not be mocked!鈥 Sure, they often excuse their censorship with reference to harassment, tolerance, or civility, but in essence many of these cases come from the simple fact nobody鈥攑articularly people in authority鈥攍ikes to be criticized. Fortunately, for the sake of meaningful dialogue, learning, and democratic society, no one has a right to be free from criticism. College administrators ought to remember that old classic we all learn as children: 鈥淪ticks and stones鈥.鈥

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share