By Lee Rowland
Controversial, critical, confrontational, and challenging speech is an essential part of any successful college education. Without it, institutions of higher education cannot truly be said to be preparing students for the world outside of the ivory tower.
For many, a college campus is the last stop on the train to true adulthood. Part of being an adult in America means living our constitutional values — foremost among them, our First Amendment rights to make our opinions heard — and to listen to others speak.
The Supreme Court has spilled barrels of ink defining the First Amendment rights of students, from kindergarten to post-graduate studies. And there’s no question that the law has resolved into an age-based sliding scale: For young ones, the core goals are safety and discipline. But as students age, the shadows of the Constitution start to spread across the school day. By the time students graduate from high school, courts expect freedom of speech to be not just in the students’ best interests, but the schools’ interest as well.
And that’s not just because free speech is a formalistic constitutional principle; it’s an indispensable part of our civic education. Justice Robert H. Jackson, writing for the Supreme Court in 1943, wrote something truly beautiful about the purpose of an education:
“That they are educating the young for citizenship is reason for scrupulous protection of Constitutional freedoms of the individual, if we are not to strangle the free mind at its source and teach youth to discount important principles of our government as mere platitudes.”
Remarkably, Jackson was referring to grade school students, and the court rightly held that forcing patriotism on little ones was both unconstitutional and foolish. If we think inculcating constitutional values is important when kids are in K-12, it should be nothing less than a core part of the curriculum at any college or university.
Soon, your students will graduate. And when they do, they’ll step into the maelstrom of civic life, which can be, frankly, horrific. By constitutional design, ours is a world where homophobic street preachers have a right to accost you at a funeral for a loved one, where avowed racists can bring a Nazi rally to your town, where Congress has no right to criminalize appalling images of animal violence.
I suspect that many students would like to be able to effectively counter-protest the Westboro Baptist Church. Or effortlessly dismantle the racist garbage spewed by today’s alt-right. Or publicize and advocate against animal cruelty. I sure hope they do! Because we need them to tackle public policy issues with the confidence of a generation determined to better us all.
That means being an advocate: speaking out and convincing others. Confronting, hearing, and countering offensive speech we disagree with is a skill. And one that should be considered a core requirement at any school worth its salt.
To be clear, I am not suggesting that free speech is without grave costs. I cannot imagine the pain that Holocaust survivors felt knowing that the KKK would march through their towns or the anguish a grieving father felt when his son’s funeral was surrounded by the petty signage of hate. On campus, if and when speech crosses the line into targeted harassment or threats or creates a pervasively hostile environment for vulnerable students, it isn’t protected. We fortunately have federal laws to ensure safe learning environments and equal access for all students. But being offended does not rise to that level. We live in an odd country, where the very First Amendment in our Bill of Rights protects hateful speech until it crosses that line.
But that same First Amendment also protects the most heart-swelling markers of our democracy: the right to speak our values, to have a press free from censorship, to gather en masse in the streets and speak truth to power. Our Constitution protects hateful speech, yes — but on the theory that truly free speech means the best ideas will win out. We need students trained to really listen to ideas they hate — and respond with better ones.
In that regard, recent incidents suggest that colleges are fundamentally failing their students in imparting these skills. In just the past few weeks, from one campus to another and another and another, liberal students have silenced conservative speakers with violence, outrage, and threats. This collection of heckler’s vetoes is the farthest thing from a victory for the progressive causes these students champion.
These incidents have not shut down a single bad idea. To the contrary, they’ve given their opponents’ ideas credence by adding the power of martyrdom. When you choose censorship as your substantive argument, you lose the debate. Because none of us are the wiser about the better world those protesting students want to see — instead of telling us, they silenced others. In curricular terms: They didn’t do the assignment.
When students leave the nest of higher education, they will immediately be thrust into a rough-and-tumble world filled with things many of us don’t want to see: racism, sexism, ableism, cruelty. But we all know these things won’t go away if we close our eyes. We need a next generation of students trained to take a deep breath, open their eyes, and change that world with their words and ideas.
Lee Rowland is a Senior Staff Attorney with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project
I agree with the author’s defense of free speech even in the cases that we personally find the most odious. For me, that would include the Westboro Baptist Church and the KKK. Until very recently Ann Coulter was just a bit player for me in the pantheon of ridiculous racist nationalistic chest thumping. I did not until recently see any reason for shutting down her speech at all and would have unequivocally defended her right to speech.
However, I am now conflicted. I wonder if she may not have crossed a line. No one claims that anyone has the right to speech that incites violence. And that is what she has done. She publicly stated that she would “like to see more violence from the right”. She will doubtless claim that she did not mean that, that it was taken “out of context” or that it was not an invitation to violence. But, might not some of her less intellectually discerning fans have seen it as a call to violence ?
I am especially interested in people’s thoughts since we have had to deal with these issues at UCD recently.
Especially now because we have an unhinged left rearing its ugly head because they detest Trump that will try any means available to resist him should we also be shutting down hateful left wing speech? I can’t imagine the uproar if that were to happen.
Just wait until the middle becomes unhinged, and takes out both the far left and far right…
I look forward to witnessing that.
I agree with the article but I must admit I have such a hard time taking Ann Coulter seriously. She a provocateur and then she gets surprised when people react. She’s a bit like a much less witty version of Milo.
Suspect that it is feigned surprise…
I agree that it is most likely feigned surprise. Which brings up another point about the seriousness of Ms. Coulter. If she is “feigning surprise”, which other of her words and actions are put forth not because she is passionate about her ideas having a legitimate hearing, but rather because she wants to reap more fame and financial rewards from her persona ?
What I find most interesting is that the University has defended its actions by victim blaming…
Wow – this is really well-written.