Keeping Free Speech Alive on Campus
…in North Carolina, promise free speech anyway.) For example, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro maintains a red light policy stating that “UNCG will not tolerate any harassment of,…
…in North Carolina, promise free speech anyway.) For example, the University of North Carolina at Greensboro maintains a red light policy stating that “UNCG will not tolerate any harassment of,…
The University of North Carolina is proposing to charge lower tuition to out-of-state students who live close to the state border. The UNC Board of Governors will consider the proposal,…
…of higher education’s bureaucracy. They have, instead, begun to participate in a rapidly growing movement of Christian Study Centers. Christian study centers, in most contemporary iterations, are independent non-profit organizations…
…just the latest attempt by states to impose some order on institutions by compelling their colleges and universities to take free speech seriously. Thus far, North Carolina is the only…
…While excellent, these suggestions overlook the most effective “reform” of all. Institutions that are serious about protecting free speech on campus should eliminate Bias Response Teams and Systems immediately. Jenna…
…in the case, I’m sure professor Porter will be writing about it, but it will also all be publicly available on the website of the federal courts. Professor Porter, you…
…the point where he/she can open their own engineering firm. A law student can open their own firm the day after passing the bar exam. It takes a lawyer 7…
…some on the left, this capitulation offers greater freedom than free will ever did: if we are merely biological organisms responding to chemical stimuli, then we are absolved of our…
…officers. The outcome will be less-prepared officers entering a fleet in times of great peril across the globe. DEI will continuously grow and will command scarce resources that could otherwise…
…they will do for the course, b) how much drafting and revision will be done for that writing, c) when the writing will be submitted, and d) how much “peer-review”…