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Speech Code of the Month: Lake Superior State University
FIRE announces its Speech Code of the Month for May 2015: Lake Superior State University (LSSU) in Michigan.
尝厂厂鲍鈥檚 , found in the Student Handbook, requires that all postings be approved by the university鈥檚 Campus Life Office and provides that 鈥淸p]ostings deemed offensive, sexist, vulgar, discriminatory or suggestive will not be approved.鈥 The potential sanctions for violating the policy include not only removal of one鈥檚 flyers, but also 鈥渄isciplinary sanctioning of the individual(s) involved.鈥
Under this policy, students face potential disciplinary action for advertising controversial events or opinions. One need only look through 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 case history to see how often people cry offense over posters intended to provoke political or social debate:
- California Polytechnic State University charged a student with 鈥渄isruption鈥 for posting a flyer advertising a College Republicans-sponsored speech by a social critic after students at the campus Multicultural Center complained that the poster was 鈥渙ffensive.鈥
- Binghamton University suspended a social work graduate student for posting flyers criticizing the department鈥檚 decision to hire the head of the Binghamton Housing Authority, an agency the student believed was responsible for social injustice.
- Colorado College found two students in violation of the school鈥檚 鈥渧iolence鈥 policy for posting a flyer satirizing a publication of the college鈥檚 Feminist and Gender Studies program.
- Gonzaga University disciplined its College Republicans chapter for posting a flyer containing the book title 鈥淲hy the Left Hates America鈥 in an advertisement for an upcoming speech by the book鈥檚 author.
- George Washington University suspended a Jewish student after he posted a small souvenir swastika purchased in India on his residence hall鈥檚 bulletin board.
- Marquette University ordered a graduate student to remove a quote by humorist Dave Barry from his office door on the grounds that the quote was 鈥減atently offensive.鈥 The quote read, 鈥淎s Americans we must always remember that we all have a common enemy, an enemy that is dangerous, powerful, and relentless. I refer, of course, to the federal government.鈥
Indeed, LSSU itself once took action against a faculty member for posting conservative political materials on his office door, despite the fact that other faculty members on the very same floor also had political postings on their doors.
If students can be punished for posting anything that someone on campus subjectively finds offensive, sexist, vulgar, or suggestive, they are likely to refrain from posting anything even remotely controversial, at the expense of free and open debate on 尝厂厂鲍鈥檚 campus. This viewpoint-discriminatory policy is very likely unconstitutional at a public university like LSSU and is completely inappropriate at any institution that claims to value free expression.
For these reasons, 尝厂厂鲍鈥檚 Posting Policy is our May 2015 Speech Code of the Month.
If you believe that your college鈥檚 or university鈥檚 policy should be a Speech Code of the Month, please email speechcodes@thefire.org with a link to the policy and a brief description of why you think attention should be drawn to this code. If you are a current college student or faculty member interested in free speech, join the FIREStudent Network, an organization of college faculty members and students dedicated to advancing individual liberties on their campuses.
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