Chattanooga Times Free Press

DOES HARVARD’S BAN

ON FRATERNITI­ES AND SORORITIES VIOLATE STUDENT RIGHTS?

- Jenna Robinson Commentary

YES New rule replaces free thinkers with goose steppers

RALEIGH, N.C. — Harvard, like many elite universiti­es, has become increasing­ly intolerant. It has sought, through a series of administra­tive decisions, to substitute its own values for the individual moral conscience­s of its students and to punish those who stray from the university’s narrow dogma.

Most recently, Harvard moved to ban all exclusive social clubs, including fraterniti­es and sororities, by 2022.

Despite Harvard’s promises that student rights are of primary importance on

campus, the proposal would deprive students of their fundamenta­l right to freedom of associatio­n, enshrined in the First Amendment.

Ultimately, Harvard’s decision to punish students who are members of such organizati­ons, which choose members based on gender, comes down to a difference of opinion about values.

President Drew Faust explained in a 2016 letter that Harvard’s commitment to having “a truly inclusive community” was one of the university’s “deepest values.”

Faust, who recently announced she will step down as Harvard’s president July 1, also asserted that gender is an “arbitrary” distinctio­n between individual­s.

Harvard’s position, then, is to punish students who disagree, in practice, with the university’s progressiv­e position on gender difference. This is the definition of intoleranc­e.

But Harvard’s position on exclusive social clubs is just one example. Harvard has multiple illiberal policies in place that punish students and faculty for unpopular speech and imperil their individual freedom.

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) has given Harvard a “Red Light” rating for their policies, which means that the institutio­n has at least one policy that “clearly and substantia­lly restricts freedom of speech.” But in fact, it has several.

One such regulation requires student organizati­ons to obtain approval from Harvard’s Office of Student Life prior to distributi­ng printed materials anywhere on campus.

At a public university, such a policy would be unconstitu­tional censorship. At Harvard, it is yet another example of administra­tive intoleranc­e.

Harvard’s intoleranc­e was also on display last year when the school used its power to police private communicat­ion between individual­s. Before the beginning of the fall semester, the university rescinded admission to 10 incoming freshmen students because of the students’ involvemen­t in a private group chat where they created and exchanged “obscene” memes.

Also in 2016, the university chose to punish the entire men’s cross country team for “crude” comments made by past team members.

Harvard placed the team on athletic probation for sometimes-explicit comments, made years ago in privately circulated documents, about the women’s team.

Harvard also punished the men’s soccer team because of lewd — but private — annual “scouting reports” in which players rated the appearance of female soccer recruits.

For that offense, the university canceled the team’s games for the year and initiated a Title IX investigat­ion.

To be sure, the students in all three cases made poor choices. But Harvard’s decision to punish them for insensitiv­e private jokes is another attempt to force others to conform — not only in their actions but in their private conversati­ons — with the university’s own subjective values.

Harvard’s actions and policies have shown that the university values conformity over debate and narrow dogma over open inquiry. Harvard’s intoleranc­e has caused it to abandon the most fundamenta­l mission of education: the pursuit of truth.

Jenna A. Robinson is president of the James G. Martin Center for Academic Renewal, Raleigh, N.C., and serves on the North Carolina Advisory Committee for the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights.

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