¹ū¶³“«Ć½app¹Ł·½

Table of Contents

Todayā€™s ā€˜Campus Alertā€™: Stifling Speech

Check out todayā€™s Campus Alert in the New York Post, where we highlight similarities between Singaporeā€™s overly zealous regulation of public life and the tactics often used by American universities trying to stifle student speech.

As Samantha pointed out in a recent blog, to speak freely in Singapore, citizens must use a ā€œSpeakersā€™ Cornerā€ā€”a small, designated area where available times and topics are limited.

Similarly, many American public universities keep ā€œfree speech zonesā€ where studentsā€™ speech is limited to a designated area for a certain time and often pending administrative approval.

As Campus Alert points out:

For example, speech at McNeese State in Louisiana is governed by the schoolā€™s ā€œPublic Forum Regulations Policy,ā€ which limits student speech to two ā€œPublic Demonstration Zones.ā€ In these two ā€œzones"ā€”and only in these zonesā€”McNeese students ā€œmay speak on campus one time per weekā€ for just two hours.

Student groups have it worse: instead of once a week, they can only demonstrate once per semester. Whatā€™s more, all students seeking to use the zones must submit an ā€œapplication,ā€ to be approved ā€œat least 72 hours in advance.ā€ Finally, McNeese limits student speech in the zones to Monday through Friday, dawn to dusk. Sound familiar?

FIRE has fought free speech zones at schools across the country, and weā€™ll continue to do so. Just as we said in Campus Alert, ā€œFree-speech zones at public universities are an embarrassment. After all, this is the United Statesā€”not ³§¾±²Ō²µ²¹±č“Ē°ł±š.ā€

Recent Articles

FIREā€™s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Share