Chattanooga Times Free Press

COLLEGE PRESIDENTS GAVE TERRIBLE ANSWERS

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U.S. Rep. Elise Stefanik posed a simple question to the presidents of three prominent schools of higher education: Would calling for the genocide of Jews violate each university’s code of conduct?

University of Pennsylvan­ia President Liz Magill, Harvard President Claudine Gay and MIT President Sally Kornbluth each had a surprising­ly difficult time formulatin­g a coherent answer, and, when pressed by Stefanik, all more or less gave legalistic responses that tiptoed around full condemnati­ons of genocide.

“If the speech turns into conduct, it can be harassment,” Magill said during the Tuesday hearing.

Now, I didn’t go to an Ivy League school so I may not be as smart as Magill and the others, but …

What the heck? Are we to believe that a Penn or Harvard student would need to attempt some sort of genocidal, violent act to run afoul of the school’s conduct policies?

What happened to basic civility? What happened to campus safe spaces and making all students feel welcome? Do such things not apply to Jewish students?

The blowback to the hearing was swift and bipartisan, with Stefanik earning praise, explicitly or implicitly, from unlikely corners. With an effective bit of political theater, the North Country Republican had exposed something dark.

“I’m no fan of @RepStefani­k, but I’m with her here,” Laurence Tribe, constituti­onal scholar and professor emeritus at Harvard Law School, wrote on X. “Claudine Gay’s hesitant, formulaic, and bizarrely evasive answers were deeply troubling to me and many of my colleagues, students, and friends.”

What’s particular­ly dumbfoundi­ng about the responses is that genocide against Jews isn’t theoretica­l or unimaginab­le. It literally happened within recent memory. It’s both a fresh horror and a historical throughlin­e. Condemning it should be easy.

Magill, Gay and Kornbluth have spent the days since apologizin­g and attempting to clarify — damage control, in other words. Magill resigned Saturday.

Don’t equate this with a First Amendment question. Yes, every student should feel free to protest the Israeli government and how the country is conducting its response to the Hamas terrorism. Condemnati­on of Israel’s policies and concern about the plight of Palestinia­ns are not necessaril­y antisemiti­c, of course, and even ugly, horrific or violence-endorsing speech is generally protected against government­al interferen­ce.

But that doesn’t mean that hateful language comes without consequenc­es. We’re talking about codes of conduct, remember, and we know that calling for the harm of nearly any other minority group would not be tolerated under the rules in place at most schools.

It would be one thing if colleges were true bastions of free speech and consistent­ly took a hands-off approach to discrimina­tory rhetoric. But that hasn’t been the direction of travel. Many schools have become increasing­ly intolerant of free debate and expression, with some even releasing lists of everyday words that students and staffers should not say.

Yet hateful language directed at Jewish students is tolerated? The double standard and lack of consistenc­y are striking.

So fair play to Stefanik for asking the question — and for pressing when it became clear that the university presidents were doing their best to evade providing answers that would have reflected basic human decency. What follows is how the hearing should have played out.

Elise Stefanik: Would calling for the genocide of Jews violate your university’s code of conduct?

Presidents: Yes, it absolutely would. Our Jewish students deserve the same protection­s granted to other students.

There. Was that so hard?

 ?? ?? Chris Churchill
Chris Churchill

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