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Could this be a trend?

For the second time in less than a year, a campus newspaper that ran a creepy, nasty rape joke has followed up not with a defense of its “satire” or a mealy-mouthed apology-to-anyone-who-might-have-been-offended, but a lengthy, thoughtful essay on the subject of rape and rape culture.

Here’s the end of the essay, but the whole thing is really worth reading:

“I deeply regret that I didn’t see what was depicted, and I apologize to the campus, to any survivors of sexual assault and, well, to any decent person who saw the graphic Friday and was offended. You’re right. We are absolutely in the wrong on this one and we’re doing our best to correct it. Part of that includes heightened awareness, on my part and on the part of the opinions editor, of what constitutes an acceptable graphic or editorial content. Part of that is painfully reviewing this issue in the light of comments on various websites and Facebook pages – both those attacking and those defending us. And to those defending us: While we appreciate some of your arguments on our behalf, ladies and gentlemen, suggesting that someone was “asking for” rape is misguided and precisely the problem here.

“Most of all, we, and the rest of The Exponent’s staff, are taking this as a learning opportunity. We’re students, just like many of the people contacting us. The Exponent is an educational institution. We’re making an effort to fully comprehend what we did wrong and to help educate others about issues of rape, sexual assault and sexual abuse on college campuses, and we will be running several stories exploring these problems. To that end, I encourage you to participate in a constructive dialogue with us: What can we do to better cover women’s issues on campus? How can we help educate our readers?

“The first step, however, is to admit our mistake and apologize. That’s what I’m doing here. We erred and we’re sorry – not because of your response, but because we were wrong and would’ve been wrong even if nobody had said so.”

Kudos to Zoe Hayes for getting this one right.

This story is being spun as a left-vs-right one, but it’s really just a reflection of the habitual, unquestioned regulation of student speech and organizing that happens on most American college campuses every single day.

Christina Beattie, a student at Palm Beach State College, is trying to launch a local chapter of Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative political group. As part of that project, she set up a table at a campus club fair, but her club hadn’t yet registered and the university made her stop.

The university says that Beattie was told to leave the fair because her group wasn’t formally chartered. Beattie says it was because of her politics. She also says that she’d asked in advance whether she could participate in the event, and that the same administrator who threw her out gave her the go-ahead by phone. But even if we take the university’s story at face value, their defense isn’t much of a defense.

College spokesperson Grace Truman told the local paper that “you can’t just come in, set up a table and say you’re forming a club,” and that “the college needs to be very clear who the clubs are.” It’s not clear, though, why that should be. There’s no indication that Beattie’s table was interfering with others’ use of the space, or that her actions were disruptive in any way. Why not just let someone “come in, set up a table, and say you’re forming a club”?

The reason, of course, is that it’s simpler for the university. If you limit tabling to registered clubs, the fair will be easier to manage. In exactly the same way, restrictions on demonstrating, chalking, and other extra-curricular activities help keep the campus running smoothly. But a campus, like any community, is a boisterous place, and whether it’s “running smoothly” isn’t — or shouldn’t be — the only measure of its health and vitality.

Conservative commentators assume (and assume and assume and assume) that Beattie would have been treated differently if she’d been a liberal, and it’s possible that they’re right. (YAF contends that other, apolitical, unregistered groups were able to participate in the fair, without saying whether those groups’ participation was brought to administrators’ attention.)

As any campus activist can tell you, though, liberal and left-wing students’ speech is frequently restricted at American colleges and universities. And even if Beattie was singled out because of her politics, that discrimination was only possible because limitations on student speech and assembly on campus exist.

There’s no legitimate reason why a college “needs to be very clear” which student groups exist on campus. There’s no legitimate reason why students shouldn’t be able to just set up a table at a meet-and-greet, so long as there’s enough room for them. To give priority to those student groups (formal or informal) who have signed up in advance, or to those who have been active on campus for a while, makes sense.

But to arbitrarily distinguish between “registered” and “unregistered” student groups serves neither the needs of the student community nor the demands of the First Amendment.

This piece was also published at Huffington Post.

Earlier this month, Martin Peretz — owner and editor in chief of the frequently-liberal New Republic magazine — wrote a blogpost suggesting that “Muslim life is cheap” and that it was time to stop “pretend[ing] that they are worthy of the privileges of the First Amendment.”

He’s since sort-of apologized, but he’s said this kind of thing before, and anyway like I say the apology was pretty half-hearted.

But it turns out that Harvard University plans to honor Peretz by naming a student research fund after him, and that the fund is supposed to be formally announced at a big gala this Saturday. Various members of the Harvard community have raised a stink about this plan since the current story broke, but Harvard seems to be sticking with it.

Now, though, the presidents of five student of color groups at Harvard –the Islamic Society, RAZA, the Harvard Society of Arab Students, Latinas Unidas, and the Black Student Union — are asking the university to reconsider.

In an open letter released Thursday, the students point out that Peretz has made offensive comments about Latinos…

“[Mexico is] a Latin society with all of its characteristic deficiencies: congenital corruption, authoritarian government, anarchic politics, near-tropical work habits, stifling social mores, Catholic dogma with the usual unacknowledged compromises, an anarchic counter-culture and increasingly violent modes of conflict.”

…and blacks…

“So many in the black population  are afflicted by cultural deficiencies … in the ghetto a lot of mothers don’t appreciate the importance of schooling … a mother who is on crack is in no position to help her children get through school.”

…in the past, and argue that the Harvard honor “lends legitimacy and respectability to views that can only be described as abhorrent and racist.”

Harvard’s first statement on the controversy declared that “it is central to the mission of a university to protect and affirm free speech, including the rights of Dr. Peretz, as well as those who disagree with him, to express their views,” but the students of color letter points out that free speech is not the issue here. “We acknowledge Mr. Peretz’s right to hold and express these views,” they wrote, but object “to Harvard giving such ideas a platform, and … worry that in so doing the University, and the Committee on Degrees in Social Studies in particular, will be alienating a large segment of its student body.”

The students have asked Harvard to “reconsider having Mr. Peretz as one of the Celebration’s speakers, or at least [require] that he be publicly challenged to defend views that are, in our opinion, indefensible.”

The Harvard Crimson reported this morning that the director of the program that is honoring Peretz declined to comment for their article, except to say that the program’s governing committee would be releasing a statement on the matter later today.

Tuesday | The Crimson is now reporting that Peretz has been scrubbed from the speaker’s list for Saturday’s gala.

These are the five most-read stories on the site this week. (Numbers one and five are my personal favorites.)

1. Don’t Stop Believing

Some thoughts on gay teens, bigoted preschoolers, anti-racist parenting … and Glee.

2. Union, Students Aim to Shut Down Today’s UC Regents Meeting

Liveblogging a demonstration against pay cuts in the University of California.

3. O’Donnell: Co-ed Dorms Will Lead to “Orgy Rooms”

One of the wackier claims from Delaware’s new Senate candidate.

4. Stories to Watch #5: The DREAM Act

Immigration reform and the student movement. See also the follow-up post, DREAM Act Organizing Kicks Into High Gear.

5. The Birmingham Church Bombing: Remembering the Six Who Died

The forgotten stories surrounding one of the civil rights era’s worst acts of racist violence.

Not sure what, if anything, to make of this, but Jordan Marks, the executive director of Young Americans for Freedom, has taken a seat on the board of marijuana legalization group Just Say Now.

YAF, a right-wing student group created by William F. Buckley in 1960, has long been a major conservative force on the American campus. They have historically opposed drug legalization, and as far as I can glean from Google, that hasn’t changed.

But college conservatives are growing more libertarian by the day, by all accounts, and with California’s Proposition 19 apparently leading in the polls, legalization may be about to break as a national political issue in a big way.

Is YAF turning pro-pot?

About This Blog

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StudentActivism.net is the work of Angus Johnston, a historian and advocate of American student organizing.

To contact Angus, click here. For more about him, check out AngusJohnston.com.