SCU case study: Free speech falling out of favor at local higher ed institutions?
Stanford and San Francisco State aren't the only Bay Area universities actively combating diverse ideas. We can't overlook one of 2022's top 10 least free speech-friendly U.S. colleges: Santa Clara University. A Reason recap reads below of SCU's efforts a few years ago to shut down a conservative student club, and cogent implications re: discrimination.
Santa Clara University's student government has voted against granting official status to the campus chapter of Young Americans for Freedom (YAF), on the grounds that the group's goals—bringing conservative speakers to the California campus—would contribute to an unsafe climate for marginalized students.
"I also think that the presence of YAF would further marginalize minority students on campus and if anything makes minority students feel more unsafe or targeted," said one student senator in a statement.
Another student senator lamented that YAF might bring conservative pundit Ben Shapiro to campus and Shapiro's presence would cause "emotional harm."
The vote was 13–13, which fell short of the needed two-thirds majority to confer formal recognition, according to The College Fix.
Recognized student groups have access to university funding. The school is therefore engaging in viewpoint discrimination as long as it denies YAF this status because of the organization's ideology. This conflicts with the private university's stated commitment to free speech, and so the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education is calling on the college to overturn the student government's decision...
This article originally appeared in Reason. Read the whole thing here.
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