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Hate Crime Hoaxes and How Colleges Handle Them
My latest article in The Daily Caller talks about this past spring’s rash of incidents of hateful expression at Oberlin College in Ohio—at least some of which turned out to be hoaxes committed by students who wanted to “troll” the campus. Such hoaxes have been a recurring problem on campuses. In my article, I explain that in addition to alarming campus community members, these incidents are often seized upon as an excuse to clamp down on protected speech.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.
West Texas A&M President cancels student charity drag show for second time
West Texas A&M President Wendler enforced his unconstitutional prior restraint by canceling a student-organized charity drag show for the second time.
Supreme Court considers when government ‘persuasion’ becomes unconstitutional coercion
In today’s oral argument for NRA v. Vullo, the Court grappled with government regulators using indirect pressure to silence protected speech.
Utah enacts FIRE’s model bill, protects due process rights on campus
Utah Gov. Spencer Cox signed House Bill 414 into law, providing robust due process protections for students involved in campus disciplinary proceedings.
NRA case shows the Supreme Court must stop informal censorship
The Supreme Court should provide a clear test to end informal censorship, where the government operates behind closed doors to influence speech.