果冻传媒app官方

Table of Contents

Texas A&M: Our secret list of naughty words you can鈥檛 say on our Facebook page doesn鈥檛 offend the First Amendment

Last December, noticed that posts and comments on Texas A&M University鈥檚 Facebook page that were critical of the university for would quickly disappear. With a bit of experimentation, PETA surmised that the university had set up a blacklist of particular words that would, if included in a comment or post, automatically be hidden from the university鈥檚 Facebook page.

In May, with the help of the capable folks at the , PETA against the university, alleging that the restrictions ran afoul of the First Amendment. Days after the lawsuit was filed, another federal court that President Donald Trump鈥檚 blocking of critics on Twitter unlawfully denied them access to a public forum.

To confirm its suspicions, PETA issued a public records to the university, requesting copies of its Facebook and Twitter settings. In subsequent court filings, PETA shared the results of that request, that Texas A&M had blocked, among others, the words 鈥渁buse,鈥 鈥渁busers,鈥 鈥渓ab,鈥 鈥渕d,鈥 and 鈥減eta.鈥

Texas A&M is now asking the federal court to dismiss the lawsuit, that its secret blacklist doesn鈥檛 offend the First Amendment at all.

First, the university asserts that its status as a university allows administrators to censor these posts, citing the Supreme Court鈥檚 observation in Widmar v. Vincent that universities鈥 鈥渕ission is education,鈥 thus allowing universities to make reasonable regulations to further that mission. But the Widmar Court also explained that while a 鈥渦niversity legitimately may regard some subjects as more relevant to its educational mission than others,鈥 it can鈥檛 engage in viewpoint discrimination. Moreover, it鈥檚 difficult to see what a university鈥檚 educational mission has to do with its Facebook page. If a university is fulfilling its educational mission through its Facebook page, students should ask for a refund.

Second, Texas A&M argues that it was right and good to censor these posts because they 鈥渄isrupted鈥 the intended purpose of the Facebook page, which was 鈥渢o share information about [Texas A&M鈥檚] programs and services with the University community.鈥 But posting a comment on a thread doesn鈥檛 interfere with the university鈥檚 ability to post, or for its intended audience to read those posts.

Third, the university says this doesn鈥檛 amount to viewpoint discrimination, because someone could hypothetically post: 鈥淭AMU must end inhumane muscular dystrophy research on dogs鈥; they just can鈥檛 use words like 鈥淧ETA鈥 or 鈥渁buse鈥 or 鈥渁busers.鈥 This assumes, however, that posters know what鈥檚 on the secret list of banned words, and that the university wouldn鈥檛 simply add those words to the blacklist once its critics found out they weren鈥檛 prohibited yet. More importantly, banning words used to criticize particular research is de facto viewpoint discrimination: the university isn鈥檛 blocking words that praise the program.

Maybe your own university has a secret list of forbidden words you can鈥檛 use on its Facebook page. If it鈥檚 a public institution, you might be able to use a state public records law to ask your university for a copy of their blacklist. The Student Press Law Center provides a , and PETA鈥檚 provides some useful language. If you get something interesting back, I鈥檇 be interested to hear about it.

Recent Articles

FIRE鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share