The Phoenix

Promoting free speech on campus

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At first hearing, President Trump’s recent announceme­nt of a planned presidenti­al order to mandate free speech on college campuses might seem to be just what free expression advocates would support. However, regrettabl­y, they should not. Keep reading, please.

Taking a shortcut through the First Amendment in the name of free speech is not a good idea — and that’s what Trump’s approach will be, no matter how admirable the stated goal of encouragin­g and protecting the rights of all in university communitie­s to speak freely.

Trump’s approach is to tie freedom of speech to federal funding for universiti­es: “If they want our dollars, and we give it to them by the billions... Free speech. If they don’t, it will be costly. That will be signed soon,” he told the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference annual convention.

Conservati­ves have long complained — in my view, with justificat­ion at some higher-ed institutio­ns — that liberal academics have created an atmosphere where views of faculty or outside speakers from “the right” are unwelcome. In recent years, a number of high-profile, controvers­ial speakers claiming conservati­ve credential­s have been heckled, harassed or prevented from speaking.

In 2017, conservati­ve author Ann Coulter canceled a speech at the University of California, Berkeley, amid fears of violent student protest. At Texas Southern University, Houston, a speech by Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, was cancelled because of student opposition.

In announcing his initiative last weekend, Trump cited a Feb. 19 incident in which a man recruiting for a conservati­ve group was punched by one of two men who confronted him at UC Berkeley. But even that example raises questions about how Trump’s proposed “carrot and stick” approach would work and whether it is appropriat­e there or elsewhere.

Neither the recruiter nor his assailant was reported to be connected to the university. The attacker was arrested, as existing law provides, regardless of where the punch was thrown. Presumably, local justice will run its course without need of a federal, campus-focused “back-up.”

Conservati­ves and liberals alike would historical­ly seem to stand together in opposing government interventi­on or control over such private enterprise­s. We ought not hysterical­ly surrender such rights without considerin­g what might be the next “justified” need to trample the independen­ce of non-public colleges and universiti­es.

Another, larger question: Just how widespread is the conflict over conservati­ve speakers, or the entire issue of liberal versus conservati­ve campus speech conflicts? In recent years, as the Freedom Forum Institute has gathered informatio­n, made campus visits and convened discussion­s nationwide, a few observatio­ns have emerged: At the vast majority of colleges and universiti­es, speakers of all stripes come and go without objection — the larger battle is not student protest, but student distractio­n and disinteres­t regardless of subject matter.

Perhaps 50 campuses out of 4,000-plus higher-education institutio­ns have been embroiled in controvers­ies that directly engage free speech. Granted, in that small group, a number are high-profile or highly-respected institutio­ns. Worrisome, but not worthy of a blanket government surveillan­ce and review system.

Rather, let us say openly and clearly that colleges should be held by all of us to the high standard of being marketplac­es of ideas. Make that criterion one when considerin­g what college to attend or where to make an alumni donation.

Some would say academic freedom means the right to evaluate and exclude some ideas

— to focus on the proven and accepted. However, that can quickly morph into intellectu­al ossificati­on — the collegiate equivalent of what the French scholar Alexis de Tocquevill­e warned in the 1830s would be the greatest danger to the United States’ new and innovative commitment to free expression and democracy: The “tyranny of the majority,” in which alternativ­e views would cease to be heard.

There are indeed dangerous ideas and inflammato­ry speakers with no goal other than selfpromot­ion. But it is a futile and dangerous tactic to attempt to suppress a bad idea or arbitraril­y extinguish a flame-throwing speaker — particular­ly in the Internet Age.

Better to propose a new idea and listen to anyone with ideas worth considerin­g — on or off campus.

 ?? Gene Policinski Columnist ??
Gene Policinski Columnist

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