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Real World vs. Ideal World
My recent posts regarding the differences between the free speech of department chairs and the free speech of professors have generated considerable lively discussion鈥攂oth inside 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 offices and outside (for a thoughtful response to my latest post on Shortell, see from Sherman Dorn). The details of Shortell鈥檚 case bring up an interesting question: should a 鈥渇ree speech鈥 organization ever publicly state that otherwise constitutionally protected speech can be restricted according to a person鈥檚 position in public life? Shouldn鈥檛 we be free speech 鈥減urists?鈥
The answer to that question depends on the answer to another, different, question: 鈥淗ow effective do we want to be in the real world?鈥 As we focus on free speech at 果冻传媒app官方, it is easy to forget that university officials face a labyrinth of legal responsibilities, some of which appear (at first glance) to be in conflict. I have attended conferences during which administrators鈥攁fter hearing from us and then later from 鈥渉arassment鈥 specialists鈥攚ill throw up their hands and say, 鈥淚 really don鈥檛 know what to do.鈥 With myriad interest groups shouting in their ears, administrators can sometimes be excused if they do not understand all the nuances of the relevant law (of course, some administrators have no interest in understanding nuance, but that鈥檚 a subject of a different post).
In such an environment, FIREhas made a conscious decision to be a realist in the battle for free speech. In other words, our argument is not: 鈥渦nless you allow completely unfettered expression in all areas of campus, we are coming after you.鈥 Instead, we believe that the Supreme Court has鈥攆or the most part鈥攁ppropriately defined the breadth and boundaries of the First Amendment, and we will hold universities to those well-defined standards. With private universities, we hold them to their own clear promises.
In the area of harassment and discrimination law, there exist quite a few gray areas. At times, it is a close question whether a particular form of speech is truly protected by the First Amendment or is a form of harassment that can be punished by applicable law. The real challenge to free speech on campus is not in those gray areas. If university administrators confined themselves to erring on the side of prohibiting 鈥渉arassment鈥 in the ambiguous cases, there would be no need for 果冻传媒app官方, and there would be no sense of a national crisis in the marketplace of ideas on campus. The true problem is that administrators have gone well beyond ambiguity and now systematically prohibit clearly protected expression. A 鈥渞ed light鈥 speech code on 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 speechcodes.org database is not a code that arguably restricts constitutionally protected expression (an ambiguous code earns a yellow). It is one that clearly restricts protected speech under well-known and governing legal precedent. In short, there is a reason that FIREhas never lost a speech codes litigation case.
It is my belief that FIREwill diminish its credibility with administrators if we argue that they should protect speech which we鈥攁s in the Shortell case鈥know could be used to lawfully impose substantial legal liability on the institution. (To be clear, we would never affirmatively call for Shortell鈥檚 termination as department chair; my posts simply explored the limits of his academic freedom argument). It is not fair to the administrators in question, and it would cause them to justifiably reject our counsel. If you browse our case archive, you will not see cases in which FIREdefended as free speech even arguable 鈥渉arassment鈥 as that term has been legally defined. In some of our due process cases, there may (or may not) have been some underlying student or professor misconduct, but there was a clear denial of fundamental due process rights.
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