Columbia wrestling

Started by dbilmes, November 14, 2016, 06:51:50 PM

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Trotsky


KeithK

Explain to me why a University has any business policing the speech of its students, no matter how offensive it might be.  Particularly private speech, which this appears to be.

ugarte

Quote from: KeithKExplain to me why a University has any business policing the speech of its students, no matter how offensive it might be.  Particularly private speech, which this appears to be.
Because it makes the university look like shit. Don't be stupid.

RichH

Quote from: ugarte
Quote from: KeithKExplain to me why a University has any business policing the speech of its students, no matter how offensive it might be.  Particularly private speech, which this appears to be.
Because it makes the university look like shit. Don't be stupid.

If someone comes forward with a harassment complaint, and it comes out that Columbia had this information and didn't at least investigate...well, I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know what that means in terms of liability. But I can imagine that it isn't good.

Beeeej

I'm not a huge fan of campus speech codes, either - particularly the ACLUer in me - but in most instances, just like buying a ticket to Lynah with that "license" on the back, you matriculate at a university fully aware that it's under certain conditions, including the expectation that you'll live by their code of conduct. It's also not atypical for colleges to try to hold their varsity athletes to higher standards, which makes lapses like this one seem that much worse.

Kappa Delta Rho is, btw, my fraternity (as well as that of several other eLynah folks). From the standpoint of the expectations KDR has of its gentlemen, I'm pretty appalled. Not "expel the lot of 'em" appalled, but I think they have some serious work to do.

Also interesting that KDR at Columbia now seems to have lots of wrestling team members in it; last I knew several years ago, IIRC, it was largely basketball players.
Beeeej, Esq.

"Cornell isn't an organization.  It's a loose affiliation of independent fiefdoms united by a common hockey team."
   - Steve Worona

KeithK

Quote from: BeeeejI'm not a huge fan of campus speech codes, either - particularly the ACLUer in me - but in most instances, just like buying a ticket to Lynah with that "license" on the back, you matriculate at a university fully aware that it's under certain conditions, including the expectation that you'll live by their code of conduct. It's also not atypical for colleges to try to hold their varsity athletes to higher standards, which makes lapses like this one seem that much worse.
I'm not questioning whether a private institution has a right to do this.  Heck, a public institution may even have the right to do so in the same way that employees aren't given the same level of speech protection in the workplace that the First Amendment generally provides.  Certainly there is no right to compete as a college athlete.

But like you mentioned, this amounts to policing speech.  That's not something that a univesity ought to be engaging in. Period.

KeithK

Quote from: RichH
Quote from: ugarte
Quote from: KeithKExplain to me why a University has any business policing the speech of its students, no matter how offensive it might be.  Particularly private speech, which this appears to be.
Because it makes the university look like shit. Don't be stupid.

If someone comes forward with a harassment complaint, and it comes out that Columbia had this information and didn't at least investigate...well, I'm not a lawyer, so I don't know what that means in terms of liability. But I can imagine that it isn't good.
If there was a harassement complaint I understand that they would have to investigate.  There's no indication of that in the linked stories and I'd hesitate to assume that there was anything greater without some statement to that effect.

Cop at Lynah

In this day and age it's all about Title IX.  You don't want the DOE doing an investigation of your institution , each violation is $25,000.00 fine.

Swampy

If the mission of a university is to educate its students, then to fulfill this mission the university must strive to maintain a social/cultural atmosphere that's conducive to educating all its students. Part of this is to eliminate harassment of some students by others, which is particularly important if the harassment is against particular categories of students, when those categories have been oppressed historically.

I say this because it's one thing to harass someone, e.g., because they get upset when they're teased, but it's something else to harass someone because of their race, religion, gender, etc. In one case, an individual may realize there's always a chance of being harassed at any institution, but it's something else for someone to know that they attend institution X, they will be harassed simply by virtue of belonging to a particular group.

There are three parts to this:
  • harassment
  • of groups
  • that are historically oppressed

In each case, the seriousness of the harassment, and correspondingly the severity of university response, increases from mere harassment, to harassment of groups, to harassment of groups that have been oppressed historically. None of it is good, and universities should try to prevent all forms of harassment. But their responses should be stronger in cases of harassment of historically oppressed groups.

But now suppose, as may be the case at Columbia, there was no overt harassment, but just "racist, misogynistic and homophobic" texting among members of the wrestling team. If a good case can be made that the team members are using a university-sponsored activity/organization as a way to reinforce their attitudes of denigrating members of historically oppressed groups, then to do everything in its power to make the university a place that's equally welcoming and conducive to learning for all its students, the university must step in and do something about the organization. Otherwise, specific activities and organizations might become associated with specific biases (wrestling is misogynistic, the debate club is antisemitic, student government is white supremacist, etc.). Even in the unlikely event that every group would have its own activity/organization in which it's OK to reinforce bias, equal intolerance and oppressive behavior is something a university should try to prevent. Also, while oppressive talk to others with similar opinions is not the same as such talk to members of the target group, or worse, hostile acts against members of the target group, such talk "among friends" normalizes oppressive attitudes and makes them seem OK, thereby increasing the likelihood of speech acts and physical acts against other students.

Finally, in the "culture wars," things like Columbia's actions against the wrestling team are often ridiculed as "political correctness" and condemned as not only attacking freedom of speech, but also as betraying the purpose of the university as a place for the exchange of ideas. This is really a red herring. Universities are primarily places of learning, and to be conducive to this they must be equally welcoming and "home" to all their students. The Klan member may have the right to say whatever hateful thing he wants on the street corner, but he does not have the right to barge into your house and start shouting it at you. Universities, especially residential universities, are the collective homes for their entire student bodies, and therefore they have the duty to exclude certain kinds of speech. Second, there's a big difference between reasoned debate and unilateral speech acts with no venue or rules to ensure a fair exchange of ideas. There's a big difference between between a psychology class discussing differences in IQ scores among "racial" groups versus students randomly calling other students "ni****" as they walk across the quad. Third, insofar as knowledge involves some standards of truth, universities must make judgements about which ideas merit serious discussion and which don't. Otherwise, they would become like a Doonesbury cartoon in which students in a math class debate if 2+2 = 3. Nothing would ever get done. Finally, there's the elephant in the room. Universities in the U.S. are indeed as much about indoctrination as education, but the indoctrination is subtle and widely accepted. At most universities in the U.S. you can go to business school and learn how to run a capitalist business, but if you want to learn how to run a workers cooperative you're out of luck. (In fact, you're unlikely even to be exposed to the knowledge that there are some very successful workers cooperatives around the world, that there have been social movements to make workers coops the main organizational form in society, or that this was once the main plank in the Republican Party's platform.) If you want to learn about government, you can find entire departments devoted to the subject, but if you want to learn about anarchism you'll be lucky to find a single course. Etc. In other words, the bias and indoctrination are structural and systematic, with virtually no regard for giving an equal chance to all serious alternatives. So beware of those who bemoan universities clamping down on students who call others derogatory names but say nothing about universities subtly inculcating the tacit acceptance of the corporate nation-state as the natural human condition. Such people may claim to be defending free speech, but this is not their real agenda.

Jim Hyla

Quote from: KeithK
Quote from: BeeeejI'm not a huge fan of campus speech codes, either - particularly the ACLUer in me - but in most instances, just like buying a ticket to Lynah with that "license" on the back, you matriculate at a university fully aware that it's under certain conditions, including the expectation that you'll live by their code of conduct. It's also not atypical for colleges to try to hold their varsity athletes to higher standards, which makes lapses like this one seem that much worse.
I'm not questioning whether a private institution has a right to do this.  Heck, a public institution may even have the right to do so in the same way that employees aren't given the same level of speech protection in the workplace that the First Amendment generally provides.  Certainly there is no right to compete as a college athlete.

But like you mentioned, this amounts to policing speech.  That's not something that a univesity ought to be engaging in. Period.

Does a business have the right to police their environment as to keep it such that everyone can feel comfortable and do their best work? If they have workers who go out to represent the company, can they require that they live up to certain standards and if they don't, they can no longer represent the company?

A university is a business, albeit a different kind of business, but I see no reason why they can't and shouldn't go by those same standards.
"Cornell Fans Made the Timbers Tremble", Boston Globe, March/1970
Cornell lawyers stopped the candy throwing. Jan/2005

underskill

my concern is that these were group text messages, that were stolen by someone and screencapped then leaked --I think it's one thing if there's any evidence of actual harassment or unlawful behavior, another if it's a private group text (no matter how ill-advised some of the convo may be)

ugarte

Quote from: underskillmy concern is that these were group text messages, that were stolen by someone and screencapped then leaked --I think it's one thing if there's any evidence of actual harassment or unlawful behavior, another if it's a private group text (no matter how ill-advised some of the convo may be)
You are presuming "stolen" - there has been no accusation of hacking as far as I'm aware. The original report said that the anonymous leaker was a recipient who reached his breaking point.

underskill

nah, it was apparently screencapped by a jilted girl

ugarte

Quote from: underskillnah, it was apparently screencapped by a jilted girl
source? (though i'll admit that what i thought i remembered reading in the original report doesn't seem to be there)