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āLas Vegas Review-Journalā Tells UNLV to Commit to Free Speech
Yesterday, the lamenting that students are returning to college campuses where free speech too often falls victim to speech codes.
As the editorial notes, opposition to the First Amendment is all too common on campus. Using FIREās recent case at the University of Oregon as an example, where a student was hit with five conduct charges for a four-word joke (āI hit it firstā), the Review-Journal points out that many universities enforce broad harassment policies against their students in an attempt to create an environment of tolerance.
FIRE rightly and specifically noted that the Supreme Court defines peer harassment in the educational setting as conduct āso severe, pervasive, and objectively offensiveā as to effectively deprive the target of educational opportunities or benefits. āI hit it firstā doesnāt rise to anywhere near that level.
The Review-Journal states that the problem runs deeper than speech codes themselves:
But itās worse than that. College administrators are well aware their policies are unconstitutional. But they know most students are terribly unaware of their rights. So college officials preserve their speech codes and use them as hammers to shame and āre-educateā students who offend their fragile sensibilities. Itās about power.
The editorial calls on the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) to hire a president who is willing to change the schoolās unconstitutional speech codes and make UNLV a āgreen lightā institution:
Nevadaās Board of Regents should take note of both of these cases as it continues the search for UNLVās next president. UNLV has a red-light rating with ¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½. The schoolās next leader must be as committed to free speech as Florida President Bernie Machen, someone who believes university administrators have no business policing protected expression on campus.
FIRE worked with the University of Florida to eliminate its unconstitutional speech codes and shares the ø鱚±¹¾±±š·É-“³“Ē³Ü°ł²Ō²¹±ōās hopes that UNLVās next president will be willing to work with FIREto do the same!
Our thanks to the Review-Journal for its continuing (and excellent) attention to free speech issues in higher education. You can read the full editorial .
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