Interesting Critical Mass piece
Jun. 6th, 2004 03:07 pmhttp://www.erinoconnor.org/archives/000959.html
'Last year, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education defended the Advocates of Conservative Thought, a would-be student group at the University of Miami, after the group was denied recognition by the Committee on Student Organizations. The university took the position that one conservative student group was enough, and that since there was already a College Republicans chapter on campus, and since there was already a political forum on campus (the Council for Democracy), there was no need for this new group to form. FIRE successfully defended the group's associative rights, demonstrating not only that the mission of the group differed substantially from those of the College Republicans and Council for Democracy, but pointing out, far more fundamentally, that UM had no business making viewpoint a criterion for assessing the viability of prospective student groups. FIRE additionally noted that there are numerous liberal student groups on campus and urged UM not to impose a politically-oriented double standard on student groups. UM president Donna Shalala agreed, and ordered ACT to be recognized.
Now an intriguingly analogous case has arisen at Catholic University of America, where a group of students proposing to open a campus chapter of the NAACP has had their request denied. The university says that the proposed NAACP chapter would be redundant, as there are already two black student groups on campus. The university also says that the NAACP's recent support of a pro-choice rally reflects views that are not consistent with those of the school, and that therefore a campus chapter is out of the question. The NAACP does not have a formal position on abortion, and the students who sought to open the chapter say they wanted to do so in order to promote voter registration, not reproductive rights; they even pledged not to use the group as a forum for advocating choice. No go.
Catholic University of America, as a private institution, does have the right to engage in viewpoint discrimination when it comes to deciding what student groups it will and will not allow. At the same time, its reasoning in this case seems more than a little shameful, and more than a little spurious. It is as insulting to black students as it is to conservative students to tell them that all their associative interests and needs can be served by one or two groups (for the record, there are no other civil rights groups on campus--so the NAACP would hardly be redundant). It is also disappointing to see the university refuse to recognize an active, interested, engaged group of students simply because the organization with which they wish to affiliate themselves has supported the rights of others to express views the school does not like (picture a school refusing to recognize a campus chapter of the ACLU because the ACLU has been known to support the KKK's rights to free speech).
Worth noting: Georgetown, which is also Catholic, has an NAACP chapter.
The NAACP is threatening to sue.'
'Last year, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education defended the Advocates of Conservative Thought, a would-be student group at the University of Miami, after the group was denied recognition by the Committee on Student Organizations. The university took the position that one conservative student group was enough, and that since there was already a College Republicans chapter on campus, and since there was already a political forum on campus (the Council for Democracy), there was no need for this new group to form. FIRE successfully defended the group's associative rights, demonstrating not only that the mission of the group differed substantially from those of the College Republicans and Council for Democracy, but pointing out, far more fundamentally, that UM had no business making viewpoint a criterion for assessing the viability of prospective student groups. FIRE additionally noted that there are numerous liberal student groups on campus and urged UM not to impose a politically-oriented double standard on student groups. UM president Donna Shalala agreed, and ordered ACT to be recognized.
Now an intriguingly analogous case has arisen at Catholic University of America, where a group of students proposing to open a campus chapter of the NAACP has had their request denied. The university says that the proposed NAACP chapter would be redundant, as there are already two black student groups on campus. The university also says that the NAACP's recent support of a pro-choice rally reflects views that are not consistent with those of the school, and that therefore a campus chapter is out of the question. The NAACP does not have a formal position on abortion, and the students who sought to open the chapter say they wanted to do so in order to promote voter registration, not reproductive rights; they even pledged not to use the group as a forum for advocating choice. No go.
Catholic University of America, as a private institution, does have the right to engage in viewpoint discrimination when it comes to deciding what student groups it will and will not allow. At the same time, its reasoning in this case seems more than a little shameful, and more than a little spurious. It is as insulting to black students as it is to conservative students to tell them that all their associative interests and needs can be served by one or two groups (for the record, there are no other civil rights groups on campus--so the NAACP would hardly be redundant). It is also disappointing to see the university refuse to recognize an active, interested, engaged group of students simply because the organization with which they wish to affiliate themselves has supported the rights of others to express views the school does not like (picture a school refusing to recognize a campus chapter of the ACLU because the ACLU has been known to support the KKK's rights to free speech).
Worth noting: Georgetown, which is also Catholic, has an NAACP chapter.
The NAACP is threatening to sue.'
no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 01:14 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 01:22 pm (UTC)I would be somewhat sympathetic if they were trying to block funding for, say, a pre-National Education Association group, or some other organization that is nominally centered on a particular issue even though it does have official stances on abortion and all kinds of other unconnected things.
no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 02:31 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 03:26 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 03:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 04:22 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-06-06 05:51 pm (UTC)