The liberty principle for this Freedom Friday concerns paying laws to protect the rights of Americans. According to Adam Kissel at The Daily Signal, the End Woke Higher Education Act, a bill that pass the U.S. House of Representatives, deserves a grade of A+. He claims that the policies in the bill “are right on point” and “articulated well.” The policies affect freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, freedom of religion, and accreditation reform.
Following the anti-Israel, antisemitic
encampments and civil rights violations at multiple U.S. universities, it’s
especially welcome to see the House clarify where free speech ends and
actionable conduct begins.
Being more restrictive risks violating the
First Amendment or a college’s own promises of free expression. But being any
less restrictive risks violating civil rights.
Colleges have failed on both sides of this
equation. The End Woke Higher Education Act, following Supreme Court
precedents, shows them what they must and must not do. In particular, the bill “recognizes
that free expression, open inquiry, and the honest exchange of ideas are
fundamental to higher education.” In that light, the bill “recognizes that free
expression, open inquiry, and the honest exchange of ideas are fundamental to
higher education.” In that light, the bill encourages colleges to adopt the
Chicago principles of free expression, which the University of Chicago uses as
a touchstone and which also follows Supreme Court precedent.
Furthermore, colleges must disclose their
speech and association policies to students. At student orientation, public
colleges must explain students’ constitutional rights and their civil rights.
And to prevent public colleges from reclassifying their public spaces to
exclude the public, the bill reminds colleges that their public spaces are
public forums for free speech.
The bill also condemns and discourages the
use of a DEI (“diversity, equity, and inclusion”) statement – or any political
litmus test – in hiring and admissions. That’s because a nonsectarian
university should be neutral and merit-oriented, not activist, when bringing scholars
and students into their academic community.
Similarly, the bill prevents accreditors –
the bodies that vouch for colleges so that they can access federal student aid
programs – from having DEI requirements. As colleagues and I have argued,
accreditors too often abuse their gatekeeping power. This bill ensures that, at
least for student aid purposes, accreditors do not stray beyond the letter of
the law….
The bill protects student organizations in
five ways. For one, sometimes a disfavored organization cannot find a faculty adviser
as required due to social pressure on faculty members to avoid even advising
the group. In such cases, a college must recognize the organization anyway.
Second, sometimes a college has given the
student government authority over recognizing student organizations, but the
student government abuses its power and rejects a group for ideological
reasons. At a public college, that’s unconstitutional. The bill makes it clear
that a group may appeal to the administration.
Third, it is common for a college to give
the student government authority over expending funds from a mandatory student
activities fee. These funds frequently go to ideologically and culturally
favored organizations without the use of neutral funding standards….
Fourth, sometimes a student organization
is assessed an unreasonably high – and therefore unconstitutional – “security
fee” to host a disfavored speaker, on the ground that protesters may disrupt
the event….
Finally, some colleges have shown so much
animus against single-sex social organizations that they ban students from
joining them – even if such groups are unrecognized and off-campus.
No college, under the bill, may punish
students for being part of a fraternity or sorority.
Overall, this bill mainly puts into law
what the Supreme Court and lower courts have been saying for decades about how
the First Amendment applies on college campuses.
If colleges had protected these rights in
the first place, such a law would not be needed. But free speech violations are
so pervasive across so much of American higher education that it is high time
to implement policies such as the ones just passed by the House.
Kissel
is correct in his statement that colleges and universities should have already
been protecting the rights of all their students. Colleges and universities
should be in the business of teaching students HOW to think rather than WHAT to
think. Too many students are being indoctrinated rather than being taught.
I
am grateful that the House passed a bill to protect the rights of college and
university students. We can only pray that the Senate also passes it and sends
it to President Joe Biden to be signed.
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