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2014 third place Essay Contest winner
by Emily Snell for the 2014 Free Speech Essay Contest.
In a 1909 speech, 鈥淭he Meaning of a Liberal Education,鈥 future president Woodrow Wilson described 鈥渢he life of the present day鈥 as 鈥渋ncalculably complex鈥 and that 鈥渓earning is correspondingly complex.鈥 One hundred and five years later, life鈥檚 complexity has soared. With increasing globalization, all issues are interrelated and entangled. We have wars, health crises, humanitarian issues, environmental problems, immigration questions, trade disputes, and more. None of these has a simple solution.
To address these issues, we must be able to discuss them thoroughly, weigh pros and cons, and examine and evaluate different opinions and points of view. In short, we must think critically. Colleges and universities exist for that very purpose: to teach students to approach the world with these tools and find solutions where they exist. But attempts to abridge and restrict first amendment rights eliminate the opportunity to learn. Schools that censor free speech, especially that of students, prevent students from hearing all sides of an issue. In many cases, public, government-funded schools silence all opposition to an idea, endorsing it and forbidding any dissent. This flies in the face of the schools鈥 very reason for existence and of the law of our land. It is wholly incompatible with all we and the schools stand for. And it must stop.
It starts with censorship of student speech, abhorrent enough on its own. For example, in September 2014, Montclair State University in New Jersey fined a pro-Palestine student organization for distributing 鈥減olitical鈥 and 鈥渙ffensive鈥 pamphlets. In doing so, the public university not only trampled on the first amendment, which gives 鈥減ure鈥 political speech highest regard, but also shut down the potential of discussion. Attempting to stop the group from sending out pamphlets eliminated the opportunity for students to hear and consider both sides of the issue. Montclair effectively endorsed the opposite, pro-Israel camp, threatening its students with financial penalties if they dared to have and express other views.
Clearly, the political aspect was the key issue. But what about the complaint that the pamphlets were 鈥渙ffensive鈥? This imaginary right to never be offended or have your views challenged is what results from oppressive speech codes. On December 7th, University of Iowa president Sally Mason sent a letter to the campus community regarding a controversial statue portraying a Klansman. Incredibly, she supported censoring the art on the grounds that some students reported feeling 鈥渦nwelcomed鈥 and that some 鈥渇ear[ed] for their safety.鈥
Ms. Mason鈥檚 letter shows a basic misunderstanding of the purpose of a university. She contends that it must make every single student feel 鈥渨elcome鈥 and 鈥渞espected.鈥 But what about fostering intelligent discussion? What if, instead of removing the statue, the university took advantage of the controversy to foster actual debate over the issues it represented? The statue did precisely what art as speech is intended to鈥攎ake people think. The university, on the other hand, failed in its stated mission, which is, in part, 鈥渢o educate students for success.鈥 How are students to succeed in the real world when all their lives, they have been coddled and taught that if they didn鈥檛 like something, the best solution was to demand that it be taken away?
It gets worse. The removal of the statue was not censorship of student speech, but censorship of a visiting professor鈥檚 speech. This is yet another frightening result of anti-first amendment environments鈥攊t starts with students whose opinions are deemed non-politically correct, then spreads to professors, administrators, visiting speakers, and anyone else who dares voice an 鈥渙ffensive鈥 opinion.
What follows is no surprise. Hecklers鈥 vetoes run rampant. Speakers are interrupted, shouted down, or 鈥渦ninvited鈥 for fear that a student might be unhappy. Free speech is sacrificed for the sake of students not being troubled by other viewpoints. Professors are asked not to teach certain elements of the curriculum鈥攔ape law in the Harvard Law School, for example鈥攆or the sake of not disturbing students. Education and educational opportunities are thrown away and the Constitution ignored.
Thankfully, these battles are being won. A federal judge struck down an unconstitutional 鈥渇ree speech zone鈥 at the University of Cincinnati, finding it far beyond the acceptable time, place, and manner restrictions. This decision upholds students鈥 rights to interact with fellow students to discuss important issues. And at the University of Delaware, an invasive orientation program has been suspended, protecting the students鈥 privacy and freedom of conscience. But winning the battles is one thing, winning the war, another.
Few universities eliminate unconstitutional speech codes on their own initiative; in most cases, it takes court action to stop them. New speech codes are being put into place across the nation. And the idea that we have a right to not be offended or to not have our ideas challenged is spreading. It starts with censorship of student speech, but doesn鈥檛 stop there鈥攃ensoring others often follows. Speech codes are only the first domino in a long chain that leads to oppression and a world disturbingly similar to that of Big Brother.
Censorship isn鈥檛 just a problem because it threatens the integrity of institutes of higher education, or infringes student rights. It鈥檚 a problem because of what that means for the world. If colleges and universities continue to violate student rights, thus denying them an education in which they are forced to listen to other viewpoints, these students will never learn to think critically and be able to address today鈥檚 issues.
How are students at Harvard, for example, to develop informed opinions on immigration issues if controversial anti-immigration activists like Jim Gilchrist are banned from panel discussions, so they never hear about that position? How are students to develop critical thinking skills when the administration ensures that they鈥檒l never have to encounter anything that makes them feel uncomfortable or offends them? It鈥檚 simple: they can鈥檛.
By denying students their first amendment rights, schools are denying us a generation of leaders capable of true thought. That is why free speech is important at colleges and universities. For their sake鈥攁nd for ours.