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The Iowa State Daily has devoted much coverage this week to the issue of free speech on campus, prompted in large part by the publication of FIRE's latest national report on campus speech codes across the country, in which Iowa State University receives a "red light" rating for its speech codes. These ratings, of course, are based on the extent to which university policies, as written, impermissibly restrict free speech. This approach occasionally elicits protestations from within university communities that our rating system may unfairly paint universities as being "bad" on free speech, when in fact (they say), the spirit of the First Amendment on campus—if only we could get there to check it out for ourselves—is alive and thriving. Iowa State Daily writer Kelsey Kremer is among those to offer a critique along these lines. In her recent Daily column, she writes:
We can indeed attest that there is quite a contingent of people on the Iowa State campus who care deeply about free speech. After all, it was only last year that FIRE's Adam Kissel (along with Kelsey Kremer) was on hand for Iowa State's celebration of First Amendment Day. But as FIRE's Samantha Harris wrote in a post on this issue some time ago: "The fact that [a] university isn't currently punishing protected speech cannot legitimize policies that allow it to do so." For one, the mere existence of such policies on college campuses like Iowa State undeniably and impermissibly chills speech, and even if such policies are never enforced, they remain ripe for abuse by administrators, who might not always be so friendly to free expression as this year's administrators may seem. This argument helps explain why speech codes have been struck down as facially invalid in court after court for over two decades. As Sam continues:
Besides, if administrators really are so friendly to free expression, it should be no trouble at all to revise Iowa State's policies to fully conform to the First Amendment, just like many other university administrators have done elsewhere. Iowa State's "red light" rating should, if anything, embolden students, faculty members, and staff to work harder to make sure that appreciation for free speech rights is as well-reflected in policy as it is in spirit. And indeed, as Kremer notes in her column:
With that kind of attitude, such positive reform is within reach at Iowa State University. Of course, FIRE stands ready to help. |










