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The Remarkable Connection Between Free Speech and Bodily Autonomy at Universities
Substack ^ | Feb. 10, 2023 | David Zweig

Posted on 02/20/2023 5:42:53 AM PST by untenured

The free speech advocacy organization FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) creates an annual ranking of colleges from best to worst environments for free speech on campus. 2022/2023’s list, based on responses from 45,000 students at more than 200 schools, placed University of Chicago in the top spot, meaning the school “promotes and protects the free exchange of ideas” more than any other college on the list. Columbia University was dead last, with “by far, the lowest score,” and its speech climate rated as “abysmal.”

There are a few notable things about the rankings (a detailed methodology, highlights, summary, and full list is available here). Many of our nation’s most prestigious private universities, including Harvard, Princeton, Yale, Amherst, Vassar, Johns Hopkins, Penn, and Northwestern, are in the bottom twenty percent. Conversely, the majority of the top fifth of the list are public and state schools.

It seems pretty clear that while the alumni of fancy colleges may get to enjoy humblebragging and an easier acceptance into top graduate programs or certain professional tracks, if a student is interested in an environment that encourages a diverse range of views and in becoming a heterodox thinker they’re likely better off elsewhere.

But, as someone who has investigated and written extensively about Covid-19 vaccines, and vaccine mandates, there’s something even more intriguing about the list:

The colleges with the most stifling atmospheres for speech also have the most aggressive Covid vaccine policies. The colleges that most welcome and protect a free exchange of ideas, in turn, have the least intrusive vaccine requirements.

Number 1 ranked Chicago has no vaccine mandate at all. The university merely “strongly recommends” Covid vaccination. Numbers 2, 3, 4, and 5 on the list – Kansas State, Purdue, Mississippi State, and Oklahoma State – do not require any Covid vaccination either. They do each highly encourage vaccination, though.

At the bottom, Columbia not only requires the primary series for its students, but also requires the most recent bivalent booster. Ditto for second-to-last place Penn. For the many students who received an initial booster early on, this means a requirement of four doses. Rounding out the worst five colleges for free speech, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Georgetown, and Skidmore also mandate all students be boosted. Though compared to Columbia and Penn they are relatively lax, only requiring “a booster,” meaning the third shot could have been from a long while ago, and not necessarily the bivalent.

Why are the colleges with the worst limits on free speech also the worst for limiting bodily autonomy?

Columbia and its ilk had a history of liberalism which, as is well-known now, has recently morphed into a more stifling form of modern progressivism that doesn’t tolerate dissent. The political tribalism that demands in-group thinking also demands in-group behavior — during, and now exiting the pandemic, the more extreme that one reacted toward Covid, the more one demonstrated their membership in the left wing. (Being double masked and triple vaxxed was for a long time a progressive identity marker.) Quite simply, an extreme vaccination policy, out of step with much of the world yet perfectly accepted in progressive America, announces one’s institution as an unimpeachable member of the tribe.

That there is an association between respect toward free speech and respect toward bodily autonomy — or a lack thereof for each — at academic institutions shouldn’t surprise anyone. Both reflect attitudes either in agreement with or against a libertarian ideal of individual freedom. But the degree of correlation is still disheartening. There is no evidence that requiring boosters (or even the primary series) at many colleges made an iota of difference regarding the transmission of Covid on campus or, more importantly, the incidence of severe disease relative to colleges that simply encourage vaccination. (It is not a secret that the vaccines do not stop infection or transmission, a phenomenon that most people have experienced firsthand.) But the administrators at Columbia and the like, by being the most militant with their vaccine requirements, get to signal their progressive bona fides, which, it seems, is what their institutions care about most.

Though my kids are not college-aged, I’ve become intimately familiar with the harm of these university policies that are rooted in signaling rather than science.

I receive a steady stream of emails and messages from people around the country responding to my work, often seeking help or advice, or simply looking for a sounding board. I let out a sigh of recognition when I recently opened yet another email, similar to many I had received before, from a mom in Connecticut whose high school son got accepted to an elite university that requires the bivalent booster. “I’m a lifelong democrat. I was an early Elizabeth Warren supporter. I’m vaccinated. I believe the vaccines help prevent serious illness and death in older people. But I don’t want my son to get another dose. He’s already had Covid, twice. He’s healthy and he doesn’t need it.”

Unfortunately, I had no suggestions to offer her. It’s also telling that she included the “I’m a liberal” preamble, still a common occurrence in messages I receive where there is even a hint of questioning vaccines. That people feel the need to declare a preemptive apologia for expressing the “wrong view” is a damning indictment of the illiberalism of the modern left.

Apparently the bureaucrats at Columbia and the like are unaware (or don’t care) that several advisors to both the FDA and CDC stated that their “yes” votes for various vaccine approvals were not to be construed as an invitation toward mandates. And Paul Offit, an FDA advisor and renowned vaccine expert and advocate, has publicly condemned the government’s booster recommendations, and advised his son, who is in his twenties, to not get a booster.

It is an embarrassment that policies at many of our most elite institutions of higher education are the most divorced from scientific evidence, and are now, finally, even alienating mainstream liberals. FIRE’s free speech rankings, alas, help explain how we got to this place.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: covid; freespeech
It’s all about the control. In every respect.
1 posted on 02/20/2023 5:42:53 AM PST by untenured
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To: untenured

Yes sir!!! All about control
Make no mistake, Our college system is a domestic enemy!


2 posted on 02/20/2023 5:49:04 AM PST by bantam
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To: bantam

Momma doesn’t want her son to get anymore shots. I always encourage those with shots, followed by Covid, to get the entire shot protocol again. Us? Hell no, but someone needs to be the guinea pigs of the world.


3 posted on 02/20/2023 7:09:46 AM PST by healy61
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To: bantam

As I see it, the elite Universities have no incentive to change, and will experience no substantial pressure to do so. Since the 1960s, these institutions have continued a slow but steady march to the Left; that journey recently has picked up speed, given the current political climate and the embedding of many of their graduates in government, Big Pharma, tech and other national and international businesses. Those sent on by the elite Universities to enjoy the good life, courtesy of a worthless sheepskin embossed with the logo of a favored institution, will not bite the hand that helped to feed them and may do the same for their children. So, why change course now?


4 posted on 02/20/2023 8:15:58 AM PST by JGPhila
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To: untenured

In the late 1950s and early 1960s, I attended the School of International and Public Affairs plus their East Asian Institute, with a two years voluntary army break in Korea. I found the experience very interesting. In truth, I enjoyed language courses in the Institute more, where I studied classical and modern Chinese under Chi-Chen Wang (whom I remember with great fondness) and Japanese under the writer Donald Keene (a very amusing chap; he did a great parody of a Japanese lady explaining something in falsetto) and others. That was a long time ago.


5 posted on 02/20/2023 3:46:53 PM PST by Hiddigeigei ("Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish," said Dionysus - Euripides)
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