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In the comments section below my and Azhar Majeed’s Inside Higher Ed , the infamous makes some outrageous accusations against my and ݮƵAPP’s writings.  He claims we do not “substantiate” our claims, that our articles are “dishonest” and that our articles “do not merit publication.”  Here is my response:

Professor Furr,

In claiming that my and Azhar Majeed’s article is “dishonest” and that we do not “substantiate” our claims, you make multiple unsubstantiated, dishonest, and willfully ignorant statements of your own.  ݮƵAPP documents all of its cases and provides access to that information through links to primary documents and articles; in fact, we do so more thoroughly than any group with which I am familiar.  If you had bothered to follow the links provided in the article (here, again, are the links to the William Paterson University materials, the Suffolk County Community College materials and the Washington State University materials) the falseness of your claims should have been obvious.

Most outrageously, you claim, “ݮƵAPP has a shameful history of falsely claiming suppression of free speech. A long ݮƵAPP article in the CHE of Aug. 1 ’03 about ‘Speech Codes’ similarly failed to give a single example of a ‘speech code.’”   This is either a gross oversight on your part or a lie.  In that article, Harvey Silverglate and I reference over half a dozen kinds of speech codes and directly quote a speech code from Shippensburg University (which was enjoined by a federal court in Pennsylvania) and the code from Citrus College (which the college abandoned just weeks after ݮƵAPP Legal Network attorney Carol Sobel filed suit). 

Perhaps your unstated argument is that you do not agree that the policies we cite are “speech codes,” because they are not labeled “SPEECH CODES” in the university policies.  We even addressed that anemic argument in the article.  We define a speech code in the most straightforward way imaginable: “as any campus regulation that punishes, forbids, heavily regulates, or restricts a substantial amount of protected speech.” We went on to write:

No one denies that a college can and should ban true harassment—but a code that calls itself a “racial-harassment code” does not thereby magically inoculate itself against free-speech and academic-freedom obligations.

Courts have overturned speech code after speech code, whether they are called “harassment” policies (see for example Doe v. University of Michigan, 721 F. Supp. 852 (E.D. Mich. 1989)), “fighting words” policies (see for example The UWM Post, Inc. v. Board of Regents of University of Wisconsin System, 774 F. Supp. 1163 (E. D. Wis. 1991)) or “free speech areas” (see Roberts v. Haragan, 346 F. Supp. 2d 853 (N.D. Tex. 2004)) when they intrude on clearly protected speech.

The Citrus College “free speech area” policy, which we cite in the article, required that students "[G]et permission in advance, alert campus security of the intended message, and provide any printed materials that they wished to distribute, in addition to a host of other restrictions."

Further, this free speech area was open only from “8 a.m. through 6 p.m, Monday through Friday.”

If that was not a speech code, nothing would be a speech code.

In that article, Harvey and I also referenced an on-line database of speech codes ݮƵAPP was assembling at the time.  That database has existed for years now and catalogues hundreds of speech codes across the country.

You could have easily found it if you bothered to look—and you would have looked for it if you had read our article carefully or honestly.

In that database, we directly pull university policies and often link to them in their entirety.

Finally, you insult the Chronicle of Higher Education by claiming that we had no evidence to back up our article.

The Chronicle carefully and thoroughly scrutinized every claim we made and they were satisfied with everything in that article.

You can ask our editor, Sarah Hardesty-Bray, for proof of that if you like.

Further, you baselessly assert, “Calling someone ‘cunt’ in an email sent to that person is certainly ‘harassment.’ Does ݮƵAPP consider this email appropriate?”  If you had bothered to follow the link we provided (again, which was in the text of the article!) you would know that your claim that this is “certainly” harassment is refuted by numerous sources including the Office for Civil Rights of the Department of Education.  You also might have noticed that Suffolk County Community College itself eventually concluded the student’s one-time e-mail with a bad word accidentally sent to a professor did not constitute harassment.

As for whether or not we see we see that word as “appropriate,” you entirely miss the point.  Free speech is (thank goodness) not limited just to what ݮƵAPP, Grover Furr, or I deem “appropriate.”

The Supreme Court recognized years ago in Papish v. Board of Curators of University of Missouri, 410 U.S. 667 (1973) that speech, “no matter how offensive to good taste -- on a state university campus may not be shut off in the name alone of ‘conventions of decency.’”

You also seem to place great importance on whether or not William Paterson University used the word “guilty” in finding Jihad Daniel guilty of “discrimination” for his one time e-mail in response to unsolicited e-mail from a professor in which he called homosexuality a “perversion.”  I have been to many a conference of student administrators where they are advised to stop using the word “guilty” when they find someone guilty of violating campus policy; for a variety of reasons, they now sometimes use the word “responsible” or simply say that someone had “violated” their policy.  If you had bothered to read the university’s own finding or the rejection of Daniel’s appeal by the WPU president or the letter from the New Jersey Attorney General you would have seen constant references to Daniel being “in violation” of state and campus policy; these documents also talk about appeals, letters of reprimands, and the disciplinary committee.  Jihad Daniel was found guilty of violating state and university policy—it’s clear, undeniable, and the fact they don’t like using the word “guilty” is a laughably irrelevant point.  You also question if Daniel was punished—a letter of reprimand was placed in his file and he was found to have violated state law.  If you don’t believe that being formally labeled a “harasser” or “discriminator” under state law is punishment, I challenge would you to try to get a job at a college these days with such labels in your permanent file.

With regard to Washington State University, you also make some inchoate point that “[e]ven ݮƵAPP” cannot claim that campus security’s refusal to defend the play from the mob was “the policy of the university.”  If you had bothered to read any of the documents in the link on WSU, you would have seen that the administration facilitated and encouraged the protests and afterwards took no action against campus security and defended the rights of the protestors even though they had made threats of physical violence at the event.  From reading your articles, I don’t think that you would argue that police abuses (say, police brutality) can be forgiven if the state can show the abuse was not “official policy.”  Police and campus security abuses are bad enough; standing by those abuses is unforgivable, and facilitating bands of censors shouting physical threats is criminal.Stalin, the mass-murdering overachiever of the 20th century is somehow underappreciated and that the back in 1981 because he was too liberal, as well as numerous other claims many would consider outrageous, offensive, and absurd.  You, like ݮƵAPP, should be arguing for a conception of free speech and academic freedom that is as strong as possible, as you benefit from a strong conception of academic freedom and free speech every day.

To be clear, everyone at ݮƵAPP believes in your right to speak your mind.

I noticed that some of your more controversial opinions have gotten the notice of the media, including .

The author of that piece has just as much right to criticize you as you have to criticize him.

However, if you find that you are being officially punished for your opinions, don’t hesitate to contact ݮƵAPP.

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