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Michigan State President Denies Disinvitation Attempt Against George Will

George Will, like too many other speakers, is no stranger to requests that he be disinvited from college campuses. In October, students at Scripps College in California successfully petitioned the college to rescind Will鈥檚 speaking invitation. Later that month, students and faculty at Miami University of Ohio attempted鈥攁nd failed鈥攖o have Will disinvited from a campus engagement. Fortunately, Michigan State University (MSU) is following Miami University鈥檚 lead in standing by its invitation to Will, who is scheduled to speak at the university鈥檚 December commencement ceremony.
On Tuesday, MSU President Lou Anna Simon that Will鈥檚 invitation to speak at commencement be rescinded because of his perceived lack of concern for victims of sexual assault. Simon reminded students that MSU invited Will because of his distinguished career and journalistic success鈥攏ot because the university necessarily shares the same ideas and values as Will. She issued a statement declaring, in part:
Having George Will speak at commencement does not mean I or Michigan State University agree with or endorse the statements he made in his June 6 column or any particular column he has written. It does not mean the university wishes to cause survivors of sexual assault distress. And it does not mean we are backing away from our commitment to continuously improving our response to sexual assault.
What it does mean is this: Great universities are committed to serving the public good by creating space for discourse and exchange of ideas, though that exchange may be uncomfortable and will sometimes challenge values and beliefs. There is no mandate to agree, only to serve society by allowing learning to take place. If universities do not hold onto this, we do not serve the greater good. Because next time it will be a different speaker and a different issue, and the dividing lines will not be the same.
Simon鈥檚 argument is an important one. To actually provide the services of an institution of higher education, colleges and universities must be able to invite speakers that upset, offend, and challenge, because students cannot learn if their ideas are never disputed. Simon added:
Because at MSU, we are not just a good public university. We are a 鈥減ublic good鈥 university. Choosing the former is easier. But it is in working through times of challenge and controversy that we ensure the latter prevails.
As 搁别补蝉辞苍鈥檚 Robby Soave , Simon鈥檚 understanding of the university鈥檚 role in defending freedom of expression 鈥渟ets her apart from some other university presidents who caved under pressure to disinvite controversial speakers.鈥
At Miami University, Will鈥檚 speech led to constructive dialogue between Will, students, and faculty, and the entire university community benefited because debate was allowed to flourish on campus. In the days and weeks leading up to Will鈥檚 address, MSU students and faculty will have a similar opportunity to have a constructive dialogue about Will's controversial arguments.
FIRE commends President Simon鈥檚 and debate and hopes that MSU鈥檚 entire campus embraces and echoes Simon鈥檚 open-mindedness.
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