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More Commentary on āNew York Timesā Piece
On Wednesday, Greg expressed his disappointment with Joseph Bergerās column in The New York Times, which discussed and painted a picture of the status of free speech on campus using a much sunnier color palette than we would have chosen. Apparently, we werenāt the only ones bothered by Bergerās conclusions.
Bergerās article singled out a 2005 incident at Vassar College in which a student publication was denied funding for one year and prevented from publishing after printing an opinion piece criticizing what the anonymous author perceived as tension on campus based on race and sexual orientation.
Ultimately, Berger decided the crisis at Vassar wasnāt as terrible as free speech advocates would label it, and wrote:
Still, Vassar deserves credit because, as students explained, the dispute was not focused on whether The Imperialist could argue that a center exclusively for minority students fragmented the community; it was over whether the language used to express the idea was offensive.
The wider society, after all, has not resolved the issue of abusive language. Limits are evident in hate crime laws, the firing of Don Imus and this weekās Supreme Court ruling against a high school student who displayed a āBong Hits 4 Jesusā banner.
ās on The Volokh Conspiracy took issue with āthe utter confusion by the reporterā¦about the central point of the articleāthe distinction between controversial ideas on one hand and abusive or derogatory language on the other.ā
Zywicki further explored this idea, writing:
Accept for the sake of argument that the treatment of the newspaper should turn on whether the problem here was the āoffensive languageā that could be subject to punishment (āghettosā and āzoological preserveā) rather than the controversial ideas that should not (the college should not encourage students to separate themselves by race). The distinction seems somewhat tenuous to me in the first place, but especially so here as the precise words in question were being used for a rhetorical point and not with an intention to insult or harass fellow students. But letās set that aside and accept the premise that offensive language can be punished (as opposed to offensive ideas) and that in fact the language used here was reasonably offensive. In fact, it does appear that there were that were omitted from the Times article and for which the newspaper actually apologized, so I am not intending to defend the content of the publication here.
If this distinction between language and ideas is the premise, however, then Bergerās argument quickly descends into confusion.
In a later critique of Bergerās commentary on the Imus case and this weekās Supreme Court Morse v. Frederick decision, Zywicki commented:
Again we see Bergerās confusion. The objection to Imus was actually his use of derogatory language and which was used simply to insult and ridicule. But the āBong Hits 4 Jesusā case was premised on the idea that the message was inappropriate for school, not that the language was offensive.
Again, this whole discussion is predicated on taking as given Bergerās distinction between abusive language on one hand and āoffensiveā ideas on the other. But if that is a distinction that is supposed to have analytical force, it is important to understand what exactly it means.
Even though the Times article set out to analyze āIndoctrinate Uā and determine whether āthe film offer[s] a fair picture of campus life in 2007, or isā¦just a pastiche of notorious events,ā filmmaker Evan Maloney objected to Bergerās use of Vassar as a shining example of the preservation of studentsā rights.
On the Vassar incident, Maloney :
The paper was de-funded and shut down for a year after publishing a piece criticizing the schoolās funding of special āsocial centersā for minority and gay students. But because the paper was eventually allowed to start publishing againāthe following yearāthe Vassar case is presented as one in which ā[u]ltimately, free speech was respected.ā
Sorry, but shutting down a paper for a year is not a benign event, and it is certainly not one in which we can say āfree speech was respected.ā If Homeland Security shut down the Times for a year after exposing ways that we track terrorist financing, Iām sure theyād understand my position on this.
It is unfortunate that Times readers may have walked away from the column lacking a full understanding of the ongoing struggle for free speech on campus. Some may possibly even believe, as Berger seems to, that the fight for freedom isnāt that badāa belief that could be quickly dispelled with just a glimpse at FIREās case archive.
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