Unshelved by Bill Barnes and Gene Ambaum
comic strip overdue media

Saturday, November 17, 2012

Interesting bit about how we have lost freedom on campus in the name of political correctness and anti-harrassment

How Free Speech Died on Campus: A young activist describes how universities became the most authoritarian institutions in America.
In his new book, "Unlearning Liberty," Mr. Lukianoff notes that baby-boom Americans who remember the student protests of the 1960s tend to assume that U.S. colleges are still some of the freest places on earth. But that idealized university no longer exists. It was wiped out in the 1990s by administrators, diversity hustlers and liability-management professionals, who were often abetted by professors committed to political agendas.

"What's disappointing and rightfully scorned," Mr. Lukianoff says, "is that in some cases the very professors who were benefiting from the free-speech movement turned around to advocate speech codes and speech zones in the 1980s and '90s."

Today, university bureaucrats suppress debate with anti-harassment policies that function as de facto speech codes. FIRE maintains a database of such policies on its website, and Mr. Lukianoff's book offers an eye-opening sampling. What they share is a view of "harassment" so broad and so removed from its legal definition that, Mr. Lukianoff says, "literally every student on campus is already guilty."
Good that there are folks like that defending free speech it an atmosphere where ideas and ideals are so important.

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