By Bill Donohue, Catholic League President
For the past
several years, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) has
published a survey on the status of free speech on college campuses. In my
remarks on the 2021 study, I pointed out that three Jesuit-run
institutions—Fordham University, Boston College and Marquette University—were
listed among the worst in the nation. In the 2022-2023 survey, another Jesuit
school, Georgetown, was rated #200. Only three schools out of a total of 203
were rated worse; Columbia University was dead last.
Georgetown
shows such contempt for free speech that it merited a special section in the
study. Three specific cases, all very serious, were cited.
In 2022,
Ilya Shapiro was suspended over a tweet thread in which he criticized President
Biden’s pledge to nominate a black woman to the Supreme Court. Dean William
Treanor issued a statement denouncing the tweets, insisting that Georgetown is
committed to “inclusion, belonging, and respect for diversity.” [Note: Treanor
said nothing about Georgetown’s commitment to academic freedom.] Shapiro was
eventually reinstated, but the damage was done; he subsquently resigned.
In 2021,
Sandra Sellers was fired over a viral video in which she was unknowingly
recorded talking to her colleague, David Batson, about the relatively poor
performance of black students in her class. Dean Treanor condemned the two of
them, pledging commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion. Batson later
resigned following the backlash.
In 2021,
Timothy Wickham-Crowley made jokes in class that evoked racial stereotypes and
for dropping the n-word when reading aloud from a course textbook. He was
investigated by the Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity, and Affirmative
Action. While it was determined that his conduct was not “severe or pervasive,”
he was no longer asked to teach again.
These
incidents say nothing about the way students, especially conservative students,
feel about freely expressing their thoughts on campus. But Georgetown didn’t
earn a lousy rating on the basis of muzzling the free speech of faculty alone.
It should be
pointed out that Georgetown’s fidelity to Catholic teachings has long been
questioned. It has two pro-abortion clubs on campus: H*YAS for Choice for
undergraduates, and Georgetown Law Students for Reproductive Justice. It has no
racist clubs on campus—nor should it—but it has no problem allowing
pro-abortion clubs. For liberals, racism is clearly more offensive than child
abuse in the womb.
As I said
with regard to Fordham, Boston College and Marquette, the time has come for
these schools “to have a campus-wide forum on the root causes of Jesuit
intolerance for freedom of speech.” Georgetown needs to do the same.
No comments:
Post a Comment