Table of Contents
Article Highlights Partisanship of Campus Speech Codes
Former FIRE president David French has an article on speech codes on National Review Online today. He explains the “mental agility” of the 1960s free speech activists who have become the architects of today’s campus speech codes. David writes:
Those who formerly glorified dissent clamp down on campus with a mind-numbing level of intellectual conformity. Scientific inquiry is welcome, unless it results in tough questions about possible innate gender differences. Open debate is the hallmark of the academy, unless of course that debate intrudes into areas where policy should be settled and morality decided (like when dealing with race, class, gender, war, peace, and sexuality).
FIRE exists to counteract this suppression of dissent and to “defend and sustain individual rights on America’s increasingly repressive and partisan colleges and universities.” From College Republicans holding affirmative action bake sales to PETA groups tabling the campus quad, we will protect everyone’s freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom of conscience, and due process rights no matter where they land on the political spectrum.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.
Amy Wax is academic freedom's canary in the coal mine
Penn's chilling decision to punish the controversial professor calls tenure protections at private universities into question
Free speech organizations urge University of Maryland to lift unconstitutional ‘Expressive Event’ ban
FIRE filed an amicus brief in support of University of Maryland Students for Justice in Palestine challenging the ban on all student-led expressive events scheduled for Oct. 7.
Let your free speech-failing alma mater know: ‘I put my money where my mouth is.’
When you donate to FIRE in lieu of your alma mater, we’ll let campus leadership know it's their speech climate that cost them.
VICTORY: San Antonio agrees to stop hiding comments on government-run animal shelter’s Facebook page
After public condemnation from FIRE, the City of San Antonio won’t hide or delete comments on its Animal Care Services Facebook page — even those that criticize the shelter’s euthanasia policy.