I've recently been reading and thinking a lot about administrative repression of speech on college campuses. More and more, colleges and universities are restricting what can be said and to whom. A few months ago, Slate had
an article about speech codes being imposed by various academic institutions. The author makes the claim that speech codes are beneficial: "Critics complain that universities are treating adults like children. The problem is that universities have been treating children like adults." The argument is generally that we need to protect students for themselves, from themselves, creating "safe spaces" as discussed in a recent article in the
New York Times. "A year and a half ago, a Hampshire College student group disinvited an Afrofunk band that had been attacked on social media for having too many white musicians; the vitriolic discussion had made students feel 'unsafe.'”
Salon has also
commented on the subject. As has
Reason and many other notable publications. In March, FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights in Education)
published a study that showed that 50% of the nation's colleges have implemented restrictive speech codes.
Throughout much of recent history, college was a place to explore ideas, to be confronted with opinions and doctrines opposed to yours, and to be broadened by such experiences. Now it's being sanitized for everybody's protection. We are teaching students not to face the inevitable trials of adult life, but instead to run to the nearest (older) adult for comfort and refuge from bogeymen. And I think students are poorer for the it. And so will be our country.
Today's college students are the teachers, doctors, lawyers, politicians, engineers, scientists, accountants, and architects of Tomorrow. How are they going to be able to survive in an unknown and—extrapolating from the rest of human history—chaotic, confrontational future, if they can't—and won't—earn the skills and gain the experience to cope with such challenges today?