Recently, I received a letter from two law students at Gonzaga University School of Law who accused the college of violating the rights of their first Christian pro-life group.
At Indian River Community College, administrators instituted an illogical policy requiring that faculty advisors be present at every student organization meeting or event.
Professor Ward Churchill is the author of an article that compares the civilians who died in the World Trade Center attacks to an infamous Nazi bureaucrat.
Perhaps it is just that FIRE is becoming better known and we are receiving more cases, but it seems to me that the climate for free speech is actually getting worse on campus.
A federal court in North Carolina will hear oral arguments in a case which challenges the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s decision to derecognize a Christian fraternity for limiting membership to Christian males.
And let's not forget about our recent case at the University of New Hampshire, where a student was expelled from the dorm for joking that freshman girls could lose weight by taking the stairs.
A Florida community college says it will no longer bar a Christian student group from showing the film The Passion of the Christ and is dropping its unwritten ban on R-rated movies.
I hope your administration has learned that falsely accusing your opponents of “lies and distortions” can have devastating effects in the court of public opinion.
After making numerous outrageous comments about the victims of the September 11 attacks, Professor Churchill resigned from his position as the Chair of the University of Colorado at Boulder’s Department of Ethnic Studies.