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Tufts President Bacow Just Doesnât Get It
A FIREsupporter wrote to Tufts President Larry Bacow to express his concerns about free speech and academic freedom at Tufts after FIREexposed the universityâs disgraceful decision to punish The Primary Source (TPS) student magazine for harassment for publishing two parodies that offended some people on campus. Below is President Bacowâs response in full:
Dear [FIRESupporter],
I believe in freedom of speech and expressed my own views in the attached article that was published in the Tufts Daily. I have no problems with students expressing political opinions however unpopular.
That said, they should take responsibility for what they write. The Committee on Student Life did not limit the Primary Sourceâs capacity to publish. They only held that they must sign their articles. I donât think this is unreasonable.
Respectfully,
Larry Bacow
So, in Bacowâs opinion, the punishment of TPS is no big deal. Letâs take a look at this argument, shall we? Tuftsâ punishment for TPSâs âharassmentâ was twofold: first, since the parodies were published without bylines, every article in TPS must now be attributed to ânamed author(s) or contributor(s).â Second, the hearing panel said, â[w]e ask that student governance consider the behavior of student groups in future decisions concerning recognition and funding,â which is ominous but which doesnât take any direct action. Could be worse, right? Sure, but itâs bad enoughâand Iâll get to that soon. But thereâs something Bacow is overlooking here:
TPS IS NOT GUILTY OF HARASSMENT.
Bacow seems to think that the disciplinary process went fine because the punishment is forcing TPS to do something he thinks is goodâtake responsibility for what it has published (although I have yet to hear Bacow call for The New York Times, The Washington Post, or even the Tufts Daily to eliminate unsigned editorials and the like; people seem to understand that the editorial boards as a whole are responsible for them). But this is a morally bankrupt position, because what TPS didâprinting some parodiesâis not harassment under any meaningful definition of the term. TPS editors did not publish the parodies and then chase people around and force them to look at them. They did not call people in the middle of the night and read the parodies to them. Their only âoffenseâ is that some people didnât like them. But to Bacow, apparently, that doesnât matterâthe fact that he likes the punishment is enough to excuse the fact that itâs utterly unwarranted. This exemplifies the sort of bizarre âends justify the meansâ thinking that passes for justice on Americaâs college and university campuses, and it must stop.
Now, a brief word about the wisdom, or lack thereof, of Tuftsâ requirement to have named authors for all contributions in TPS. First, as I pointed out above, unsigned opinions in periodicals are generally understood to reflect the opinion of the editors of the publication, who are easily discernible by looking at the paperâs masthead. It is blindingly obvious that the reason Tufts wants to require all articles to be signed is that they want the mob of offended students to have an easier time finding those with unpopular opinions. It also has the salutary (in Tuftsâ eyes) benefit that signed articles make it easier to come up with immoral, bogus harassment charges against individual students rather than publications. Why settle for inconveniencing a publication when you can throw a wrench into someoneâs career? (You try getting a good job after having even a bogus âharassmentâ judgment on your academic record. Let me know how it goes.)
Bacow and the Tufts âCommittee on Student Lifeâ know that they are disgraceful hypocrites when it comes to non-attributed works, and they obviously donât care. Has President Bacow banned Mark Twainâs books from the curriculum because Samuel Clemens saw fit to hide his identity? Have the seven members of the Committee on Student Life ignored Orwellâs writings because of Eric Blairâs deception? Are David Dennis and the members of the Muslim Student Alliance (TPSâs accusers) ready to excise George Eliot from the canon because Mary Ann Evans falsely pretended to be a man? Before they jettison a fundamental right in order to ensure that they have an easier time figuring out who to bully, maybe they should have a word with perhaps the most famous non-attributed author in American History: a âmanâ named Publius. The disgraces hiding behind this name? Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay. Itâs too bad that Tufts President Bacow will never have the opportunity to tell these deceivers that their irresponsibly anonymous rhetoric is not welcome at the glorious center of freedom that is todayâs Tufts University.
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