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Pace Not a Bastion of Free Expression for Christian Group
On Monday, the New York Post published an contrasting two university presidents鈥 attitudes toward free speech鈥擫ee Bollinger of Columbia and David Caputo of Pace University.
Bollinger, as Torch readers doubtless know, despite being a constitutional lawyer by trade, has repeatedly ignored the free speech rights of his students, only belatedly standing up for those rights on occasion.
The Post article distinguishes Bollinger鈥檚 鈥渁cquiescence in letting speech be muzzled鈥 from Caputo鈥檚 willingness to come forth and apologize after expression was squelched on his campus. After reports came out that Pace administrators intimidated the Jewish group Hillel into not showing the controversial film 鈥淥bsession: Radical Islam鈥檚 War Against the West,鈥 Caputo said, according to the Post, 鈥淚 want both to assure [Hillel鈥檚 members] that no such coercion or intimidation was intended and to apologize for any action that may have unfortunately led to that belief.鈥 Hillel鈥檚 screening of 鈥淥bsession鈥 has been rescheduled and will take place this semester.
While this apology is a start, we should not smile too approvingly upon the state of free expression at Pace. Let it not be forgotten that FIREhas an ongoing case at Pace Law School, where the Christian Law FIREAssociation (CLSA) was denied recognition in November because the Student Bar Association (SBA) thought that the group wouldn鈥檛 be welcoming enough to non-Christians. Similarly, the SBA denied recognition to the Muslim Law FIREAssociation, though students from that group did not accept 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 offer of help.
After FIREwrote to Pace Law School Dean Stephen Friedman and issued a press release, Pace decided to recognize the CLSA. The condition of recognition, however, was that university counsel would make revisions to the constitution, presumably to the explicit statements about the organization鈥檚 Christian mission. Three months after FIREgot involved, the legal counsel still has not released those revisions.
We鈥檙e left wondering, what changes do the lawyers have? Will they make the group downplay its Christian mission? Forcing revisions upon a group鈥檚 constitution is no small matter and could involve serious changes to the religious character of the group and infringements upon group members鈥 expression. FIREsent a second letter to Pace today to urge administrators to make public the legal counsel鈥檚 changes to the constitution. Until those changes are made explicit, we will not know if the CLSA is allowed to function as it sees fit, and recognition is therefore not yet fully complete.
While the Post is right that Bollinger has a long way to go before free speech will be adequately respected on the Columbia campus, we should be wary of too hastily extolling the free speech virtues of Pace.
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