How Free Speech Died on Campus

A young activist describes how universities became the most 
authoritarian institutions in America.

By SOHRAB AHMARI
November 16, 2012

New York

At Yale University, you can be prevented from putting an F. Scott 
Fitzgerald quote on your T-shirt. At Tufts, you can be censured for 
quoting certain passages from the Quran. Welcome to the most 
authoritarian institution in America: the modern university-"a 
bizarre, parallel dimension," as Greg Lukianoff, president of the 
Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, calls it.

Mr. Lukianoff, a 38-year-old Stanford Law grad, has spent the past 
decade fighting free-speech battles on college campuses. The latest 
was last week at Fordham University, where President Joseph McShane 
scolded College Republicans for the sin of inviting Ann Coulter to 
speak.

"To say that I am disappointed with the judgment and maturity of the 
College Republicans . . . would be a tremendous understatement," Mr. 
McShane said in a Nov. 9 statement condemning the club's invitation 
to the caustic conservative pundit. He vowed to "hold out great 
contempt for anyone who would intentionally inflict pain on another 
human being because of their race, gender, sexual orientation, or 
creed."

To be clear, Mr. McShane didn't block Ms. Coulter's speech, but he 
said that her presence would serve as a "test" for Fordham. A day 
later, the students disinvited Ms. Coulter. Mr. McShane then praised 
them for having taken "responsibility for their decisions" and 
expressing "their regrets sincerely and eloquently."

Mr. Lukianoff says that the Fordham-Coulter affair took campus 
censorship to a new level: "This was the longest, strongest 
condemnation of a speaker that I've ever seen in which a university 
president also tried to claim that he was defending freedom of 
speech."

I caught up with Mr. Lukianoff at New York University in downtown 
Manhattan, where he was once targeted by the same speech restrictions 
that he has built a career exposing. Six years ago, a student group 
at the university invited him to participate in a panel discussion 
about the Danish cartoons depicting the Prophet Muhammad that had 
sparked violent rioting by Muslims across the world.

...

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323894704578115440209134854.html

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