San Francisco Chronicle

Newest excuse to censor speech — ‘security’

- Email: crampell@washpost.com Twitter: @crampell

Around the country, colleges have found a new excuse for shutting down free speech: safety.

Just as “national security” has periodical­ly served as a pretext for robbing Americans of civil liberties, so too has “campus security” newly become a convenient rationale for discarding commitment­s to free speech.

Ben Shapiro, a young conservati­ve firebrand who has criticized Black Lives Matter, has been disinvited from two college campuses due to “security” concerns. In February, his scheduled talk at Cal State Los Angeles was canceled so that administra­tors could “arrange for him to appear as part of a group of speakers with differing viewpoints on diversity.”

The university president said the decision “was made in the interest of safety and security.” (Shapiro showed up on campus anyway; security indeed had to smuggle him through a back entrance to protect him from protesters.)

Then, last month, a student group at DePaul University in Chicago had to revoke its invitation to Shapiro after administra­tors barred him from campus over “security concerns.”

A month earlier, DePaul had barred Milo Yiannopoul­os, a sort of profession­al troll and informal spokesman for the racist, antifemini­st alt-right, from returning to campus. An earlier visit resulted in student protesters storming the stage, with one protester allegedly assaulting Yiannopoul­os; security hired for the event did not intervene. When the College Republican­s invited him back, an administra­tor said a review of video footage of the previous event revealed “it is clear that it would not be possible for DePaul to provide the security that would be required for such an event.”

Lest you assume that only inflammato­ry conservati­ves get barred from campuses for supposed safety reasons, consider the cancellati­on of a talk slated for last week at Newman University in Wichita.

The student history club had invited Kansas Supreme Court Justice Carol Beier to “discuss topics such as how to get into law school, what it is like to be a judge and what role judges play in the judicial system,” according to the Wichita Eagle.

Sounds like a relatively innocuous speech, no? But antiaborti­on activists vociferous­ly objected to her presence, because the judge had previously ruled in favor of abortion rights. The administra­tion caved.

Newman is a private, Catholic school, meaning it is not bound by the First Amendment. The administra­tion would have been well within its rights to forbid any speakers who did not share the school’s values. Alternativ­ely it could have pushed back against critics on the grounds that it protects open discourse, even when coming from speakers who do not share all its values.

Instead, the administra­tion — like that at other schools — lacked the courage to do either.

Exactly what kind of “safety” is being safeguarde­d in these cases remains ambiguous, of course. Is this primarily about students’ emotional safety and mental well-being, per the typical usage in the term “safe spaces”? Or is this about safety from physical harm?

Indeed, administra­tors are justified in fearing violence when there is an inflammato­ry speaker. But somehow schools still manage to provide sufficient numbers of security officers at other potentiall­y unruly public events. If they truly cared about zeroing out the possibilit­y of public unsafety, they would cancel all football games, or really any large campus gathering.

Colleges seem to be making a calculatio­n about what will result in less-bad PR.

And so appealing to “safety” becomes their escape hatch, which incentiviz­es more threats of violence. The heckler’s veto lives on.

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