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Powerful Words from Georgetown FIREto Administrators on Free Speech
FIRE is no stranger to the free speech problems at Georgetown University鈥攁nd neither is Georgetown鈥檚 student newspaper, The Hoya. In its final editorial submission for the school year, titled 鈥,鈥 The Hoya鈥檚 editorial staff reviewed many of the changes on Georgetown鈥檚 campus鈥攏ot all of them positive. One of them, of course, is the university鈥檚 treatment of free speech. The editorial board notes that Georgetown officials use the institution鈥檚 broad and vague speech codes to suppress speech that they don鈥檛 like:
When H*yas for Choice tabled in Healy Circle, they were escorted away by GUPD. When Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) and Associate Justice Sonia Sotomayor were separately invited to speak in Gaston Hall, university administrators screened student questions. When then-Georgetown University Student Association executives Nate Tisa (SFS 鈥14) and Adam Ramadan (SFS 鈥14) used their authority as student body leaders to send a campus-wide email, the Division of Student Affairs edited that email鈥檚 content.
Indeed, FIREhas covered the poor treatment of H*yas for Choice before. The group must put an asterisk in its name to 鈥渁void affiliation鈥 with Georgetown (as though the asterisk actually accomplishes that). The other actions of the school speak clearly for themselves as similarly restrictive: screening student questions at events, editing student emails鈥攁ll blatant acts of censorship that fly in the face of Georgetown鈥檚 policy commitments to free expression.
The Hoya鈥檚 section on free speech ends with a strong call for administrators to make a decision on this important issue:
While administrators have reason both to keep and to liberalize the university鈥檚 free speech policy, staying on the fence about free speech is no longer a viable option. Olson promised earlier this year to clarify the free speech policy before the last day of classes, and with two days of classes to go, students have yet to hear from him. As students have demonstrated at January鈥檚 forum and in widespread demand for speech reform, the Hilltop deserves to have access to a clarified policy that allows student groups and students to function and freely speak without the possibility of unknown consequences.
[Emphasis added.]
FIRE commends The Hoya for demanding that the Georgetown administration stick to the promises it makes to its students about their expressive rights on campus. Torch readers should check out . Perhaps over the summer, Georgetown officials will contact 果冻传媒app官方 and ask how they might make their institution a place where their students feel truly free to express themselves.
One can only hope.
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