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Remember What鈥檚 Really at Stake at Johns Hopkins
In the midst of all of the discussion about free speech at Johns Hopkins, it is important to remember what is really at stake here: a young man鈥檚 future.
Justin Park, an 18-year-old Korean-American junior majoring in economics, entered Johns Hopkins at the age of 15 after skipping several grades in school. He has no previous disciplinary record. Until recently, he was the social chair of the Sigma Chi fraternity, and in that capacity he posted invitations to Sigma Chi鈥檚 Halloween party on the popular college website Facebook.com. Like many college Halloween parties across the country, Sigma Chi鈥檚 party had a theme. This year the theme was 鈥淗alloween in the Hood鈥; previous party themes included a 鈥淲hite Trash Trailer Bash鈥 and a 鈥淐atholic Schoolgirl Party.鈥 The invitations were nothing more than Justin鈥檚 attempt at the type of over-the-top humor popularized by television shows such as 鈥淪outh Park鈥 and 鈥淐happelle鈥檚 Show鈥濃擩ustin told FIREthat the invitations were 鈥渟o ridiculous that I thought nobody could take such a thing seriously.鈥
Unfortunately, the university took the invitations very seriously. For his joke gone awry, Justin now faces a yearlong suspension (during which time he cannot even set foot on campus), 300 hours of community service, and mandatory diversity training. Justin鈥檚 promising academic career is in serious jeopardy. As FIREwrote in its most recent letter to Hopkins President William Brody:
The university鈥檚 actions here threaten to ruin a promising student鈥檚 career and to cement Hopkins鈥 reputation as the school where an insensitive joke can mean the end of all of a student鈥檚 hard work. This is not fair, this is not right, and this is not the way we deal with speech that offends us in a free society.
So please remember that there is a real person at the center of all this: Justin Park, a hard-working and bright young man whose future is hanging in the balance.
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