Fighting campus speech-codes with FIRE

Speech-code.  Sounds like something from George Orwell's pen or a Stephen King tale, but it's not.  According to Adam Kissel, from the Foundation of Individual Rights in Education, two-thirds of college campuses enforce speech-codes, violating the First  Amendment rights of their students.  Thanks to FIRE, however, codes are being challenged, speech is alive, and awareness is being raised.  While two-thirds isn't good, this is down from a shameful nine-tenths, and each day, with FIRE's help, administrators are relenting.   

Kissel, at CPAC, explained how codes work.  They're all about "diversity," demanding it at the expense of expression.  If a student opposes Islam, say, or the homosexual lobby (prominent campus clubs), he can be hauled before a panel with expulsion authority.  The affect is to chill speech, of course, but on a larger scale, to destroy education's true purpose. 

If no one can be criticized because it may offend - if all it takes is "You annoy me!" to bring censure - this doesn't produce analytic thinkers but instead conformists desperate to "be liked."  In place of a wholesome learning forum, colleges become homogenized vacuums in which censorship trumps debate.    

That said, that this festers so quietly, without media scrutiny, is as alarming as the codes.  Where are the journalists?  The students themselves?  Apparently, it's more important to be "politically correct" than to be liberated to speak one's mind.  

Fortunately, FIRE knows that rights must be fought for.  And that the best defense against the oppression of speech is to use one's voice in liberal full-throat. 

 

Greg Halvorson is the founder of Soldiers Without Boots , and hosts Freedom Warrior Radio on Blog TalkRadio

 

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