-Caveat Lector-

Via Peter Murray:
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Court Deals Blow to Mandatory College Fees

Phyllis Schlafly

The decision in Southworth v. Grebe, handed down recently by the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 7th  Circuit, didn't make it onto national
television, but it can have a profound effect on American culture   and
politics. The court held that it is a violation of the First Amendment
rights of freedom of speech and   association for a state university to
use "students' mandatory activity fees to fund organizations which
engage in political or ideological activities, advocacy, or speech."

For many years, it has been the common practice of universities and
colleges to require all students to  pay student activity fees every
term. The fees are mandatory; students who refuse to pay cannot receive
their grades or graduate.

The money is then turned over to student organizations that spend it
pretty much as they please. Much  of this money is given to liberal,
leftwing, feminist, gay, socialist, or radical student groups, which in
turn  bring leftwing speakers to campus, lobby for leftwing legislation,
and engage in leftwing demonstrations  and activities.

These student fees often involve hundreds of thousands of dollars. At
the University of Wisconsin, for  example, the student fee of $165.75
per semester added up to $974,200 in the 1995-96 school year.

Enjoying tight control over this tremendous pot of money, the leftwing
students (with the patronage of leftwing professors) are able to finance
the radical movement and pay $25,000 honoraria to leftwing  speakers.
Only rarely is a token conservative invited.

Scott Southworth, a student at the University of Wisconsin, determined
to do something to remedy this  abuse. First, he had to confront the
roadblocks the university put in his way: secrecy and layers of
laundering by committees dispensing "allocable and nonallocable" funds.

After finding a lawyer to file suit (Jordan Lorence of Fairfax, VA), a
foundation to provide financial backup (Alliance Defense Fund of
Scottsdale, AZ), and several other students to join as plaintiffs, they
set out to gather the evidence. The evidence filed with the complaint on
April 2, 1996 was plentiful and persuasive, and the facts were not in
dispute.

The court's decision cited 18 student organizations that had been funded
by University of Wisconsin  student fees, including WISPIRG (which
lobbied Congress and distributed environmentalist voter guides); the
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual Campus Center (which distributed sexually
explicit materials); the  Campus Women's Center (which lobbied for
abortion rights and against any regulations); the UW Greens (which
distributed campaign materials for the Green Party USA and Ralph Nader's
presidential candidacy, and organized a march against the Governor's
budget); and the Madison AIDS Support Network.

Other student groups cited by the court included the International
Socialist Society (which advocated the overthrow of the government and
disrupted a church meeting); the Ten Percent Society (which lobbied for
same-sex marriages); the Progressive Student Network (which lobbied
against the GOP Contract with America); Amnesty International (which
lobbied for abolition of the death penalty); the United States Student
Association (which lobbies for a mix of leftwing causes); the Militant
Student Union; and Students of National Organization for Women.

While the Supreme Court has never directly confronted the issue of
student fees, the Court of Appeals  was able to base its decision on
several Supreme Court decisions that pointed in the right direction.
Abood v. Detroit Board of Education (1977) and Keller v. State Bar of
California (1990) had ruled that unions and bar associations,
respectively, may not constitutionally compel their members to fund
advocacy that is nongermane to the purposes of the organization
requiring payment of the fee.

Rosenberger v. Rector (1995) had held that a university may not deny
access because of ideology to the pool of money created by student fees;
additionally, five justices noted that some students might object to the
funding of political and ideological organizations. And, the Supreme
Court had denied certiorari in Smith v. Regents of the University of
California (1993), letting stand a decision of the California  Supreme
Court that students may not be "forced to support causes they strongly
oppose."

At the oral argument on the Southworth case on June 4, 1997, the
University of Wisconsin stoutly insisted that its educational mission
requires compelling the fees of all students. When the judge asked if a
black student would have to contribute to a Ku Klux Klan organization,
or a Jewish student to a Nazi group, the university's lawyer replied
"yes," arguing that "hateful speech has a place in our society too."

To which the court responded, "but the Constitution does not mandate
that citizens pay for it." The court  then cited Thomas Jefferson: "To
compel a man to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of
opinions which he disbelieves, is sinful and tyrannical."

The Southworth decision gives us the opportunity to terminate the
"sinful and tyrannical" way that the  radical leftwing movement has been
picking the pockets of college students. We hope that other college
students will follow Southworth's lead and cut off the funding of
radical causes on their campuses.



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