The Star Malaysia

Free speech vs campus safety

Nd usc’s cancellati­on of valedictor­ian speech sparks debate about what a legitimate security threat is.

- By JENNY JARVIE

FIVE months ago, University of Southern California cited safety as a rationale for banning economics professor John Strauss, who is Jewish, from campus after student activists said they felt threatened when he approached them at a protest and said “Hamas are murderers . ... I hope they all are killed.”

“Our north star is protecting the safety of our community,” a USC spokespers­on said at the time.

Now the university is again citing safety concerns for cancelling a Muslim valedictor­ian’s speech at its May commenceme­nt ceremony.

More than six months after the Israel war on Gaza started, campus administra­tors nationwide are struggling to uphold principles of free expression amid mounting pressure from donors, legislator­s and activists who claim an ever-expanding amount of speech – or potential speech – subjects students not only to physical danger but also to psychologi­cal harm.

Free speech advocates note that the decision regarding Asna Tabassum, a USC senior who is graduating with a major in biomedical engineerin­g, was not caused by anything she said or planned to say. Instead, the university said, online discussion had taken on an “alarming tenor” as activists objected to her minor resistance to genocide and a link to a pro-palestinia­n website Tabassum had shared on her Instagram profile.

“This sets a very bad precedent,” said Alex Morey, director of campus rights advocacy with the non-profit civil rights group Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.

“Moving forward, are they going to cancel every speech that could have anything to do with Israel-palestine because they’re worried about ‘safety concerns’?”

Free speech experts fear that USC, in cancelling its valedictor­ian’s speech, is paving the way for a censorious commenceme­nt season, offering others a playbook on how to silence potentiall­y controvers­ial speakers in the weeks to come.

“A university, except in the most exceptiona­l cases, should not be giving in to threats of violence in order to suppress speakers,” said Keith Whittingto­n, a political scientist at Princeton University and author of Speak Freely: Why Universiti­es Must Defend Free Speech.

“It’s a corruption and compromise of the university’s very basic commitment­s.”

The use of safety concerns to shut down campus speech did not start after Oct 7. But, Morey said, universiti­es have increasing­ly cancelled events as they have seen an uptick in protests of Israel’s actions in the Gaza Strip.

Experts who track campus speech say university leaders have predominan­tly targeted speakers expressing support for the Palestinia­n cause.

“It’s definitely the pro-palestinia­n speech that we are seeing very broadly being subjected to institutio­nal punishment­s,” Morey said. “That’s not to say that there aren’t cases where pro-israel or Zionist speakers are being punished.”

Part of the reason pro-palestinia­n activists are targeted in greater numbers is that more students have embraced the Palestinia­n cause in recent years.

Some protests have crossed the line into unprotecte­d expression, Morey said. But there is also growing pressure on university officials from donors and legislator­s worried about antisemiti­sm to crack down on pro-palestinia­n speech.

“It’s a pressure cooker for administra­tors,” Morey said. “In these cases, we want to make sure that their lodestar are student and faculty rights, rather than who is exerting the most pressure.”

When USC announced that Tabassum would be the valedictor­ian, two groups – Trojans for Israel, a campus student group, and Endjewhatr­ed, a national movement dedicated to fighting antisemiti­sm – spoke publicly against her.

In an Instagram post, Trojans for Israel said Tabassum “propagates antisemiti­c and anti-zionist rhetoric,” but did not cite anything she had written or said publicly. Instead, the post points to a link she had shared on her social media page that leads to a website describing zionism as a “racist settler-colonial ideology.”

In an interview with The Times, Tabassum said she had not spoken to administra­tors about her speech, in which she said she had planned to convey hope and emphasise that “we must continue to use our education as a privilege to inform ourselves and ultimately make a change in the world.”

“The university has betrayed me,” she said.

USC administra­tors contested the idea that Tabassum’s inability to speak is a free speech issue.

“There is no free-speech entitlemen­t to speak at a commenceme­nt,” Provost Andrew T. Guzman said in a campuswide letter. “The issue here is how best to maintain campus security and safety, period.”

The 1st Amendment guarantees only that the government refrains from abridging freedom of speech. But experts on campus discourse asserted that as an institutio­n of higher learning, USC has a responsibi­lity to defend freedom of ideas.

USC communicat­ions professor Christina Dunbar-hester, chapter president of the USC American Associatio­n of University Professors, said in a statement that it was disingenuo­us to frame Tabassum’s speech as a security issue without specifying a threat.

Guzman, she noted, did not offer any details, saying only that the discussion had “escalated to the point of creating substantia­l risks relating to security and disruption at commenceme­nt.”

And that, Dunbar-hester said, raises the question of whether USC faced a specific credible threat or was just trying to find a way to get around controvers­y.

“Here, we have capitulate­d to a ‘heckler’s veto’ before the fact,” she said. “Why is the burden of a potential threat placed on the shoulders of the valedictor­ian rather than those who would disrupt her?”

Dunbar-hester said USC’S action – coming days before conservati­ve legislator­s in Washington grilled the president of Columbia University – plays into the hands of “anti-intellectu­al reactionar­ies” who cynically sought to “demonise campus communitie­s that express solidarity with the Palestinia­n freedom struggle.”

Howard Rodman, a professor of the writing division at the USC School of Cinematic Art and former president of the USC-AAUP chapter, said administra­tors decided to cancel Tabassum’s speech without buy-in from the faculty.

“I have spoken to many people who feel that this is a disastrous decision, and no one who feels that it was a correct decision,” he said.

Among USC faculty, Rodman said, there was no widespread agreement on free speech.

“There are people who say, ‘We’re 1st Amendment absolutist­s,’ who believe that the remedy for speech you don’t like is more speech,” he said. “There are people who believe that the structural question of who owns the megaphone supersedes that. ... Why should the people who own the apparatus of the transmissi­on of ideas have the sole access to it?”

Rodman blamed officials, donors and legislator­s for the assault on campus free speech.

“The traditiona­l values of the university are under assault by donors who wish to determine policy,” Rodman said. “They’re under assault by a government that places restrictio­ns on what you can do once you have received government money.”

Students have also played a key role in setting up a climate of censorship, experts say.

About a decade ago, Morey said, 1st Amendment attorneys at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression began to notice a shift: Students, who had long advocated for their own free speech rights, were increasing­ly asking administra­tors to regulate words and ideas.

In 2014, students at Wellesley College started a petition calling for the removal of an outdoor statue of a man in his underwear, claiming that it was a source of “triggering thoughts regarding sexual assault.” The following year, students at Yale University demanded that Nicholas Christakis step down from his position as faculty-in-residence at Silliman College, after a viral moment in which he tried to converse with students who took offense at an email his wife, Erika Christakis, wrote to students questionin­g administra­tors’ guidelines on Halloween costumes.

Commenceme­nt ceremonies have long been a magnet for protests, with a rich tradition of students and faculty heckling speakers, turning their backs on them or forcing them to withdraw.

Over the last few years, commenceme­nt disputes over controvers­ial speakers calmed down as universiti­es exercised more caution over who they invited. “They tried to avoid controvers­y, not by cancelling speakers, but by avoiding inviting speakers in the first place,” Morey said.

The focus of controvers­y may now be turning to students.

Last year, a law student speaking at the City University of New York’s law school commenceme­nt caused a national furor when she called for a “revolution” to take on the legal system’s “white supremacy,’’ CUNY’S collaborat­ion with the “fascist NYPD” and Israel’s “project of settler colonialis­m.”

After the New York Post rana front-page story about the student, Fatima Mousa Mohammed – headlined “Stark Raving Grad” – CUNY’S Board of Trustees and chancellor announced that 2024’s commenceme­nt would not feature student speakers.

Figuring out what is a legitimate security threat on campuses has become increasing­ly fraught as activists and administra­tors blur the line between physical and psychologi­cal safety.

“Part of what has happened on university campuses for quite some time has been a claim about a kind of emotional and psychologi­cal safety,” Princeton’s Whittingto­n said. “That’s primarily a conceptual argument – one that doesn’t seem to require any evidence in order to assert. Universiti­es then can be extremely sweeping in who they might decide to censor or suppress or punish, in reaction to those kinds of complaints.”

Cancelling speech while upholding safety in a vague way, without outlining a concrete threat or distinguis­hing between physical or psychologi­cal harm, would only encourage more complaints, Whittingto­n said.

“Universiti­es have an important obligation to explain that these kinds of concerns about emotional psychologi­cal safety are just not something that they can be responsive to at all,” Whittingto­n said. “And in the case of genuine threats to physical safety, there ought to be a very high bar before the university is willing to take the step of shutting down a speaker.”

The irony of what happened to Tabassum is it has given her a much bigger platform.

In the last few days, she has conducted a whirl of media interviews, appearing on CNN’S Newsnight and in a front-page story in The Times.

“When you silence us,” she said, “you make us louder.” — Los Angeles Times/tns

 ?? — los angeles Times/tns ?? Tabassum: ‘ When you silence us, you make us louder.’
— los angeles Times/tns Tabassum: ‘ When you silence us, you make us louder.’

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