There was an interesting back and forth between Thomas Sowell ( RealClearPolitics - their daily summary is one stop shopping for political articles) and Eugene Volokh (the Volokh Conspiracy - my favorite legal blog). The debate is over the relative restrictiveness of campus speech codes in schools, universities in particular. Not surprisingly, the debate started with Berkeley and their recent rebuke of Marine Corp recruiters. This event of course irritated conservatives (check out this Tucker Carlson tirade) including Thomas Sowell who had this to say:
Liberals in general, and academics in particular, like to boast of
their open-mindedness and acceptance of non-conformity. But they mean
not conforming to the norms of society at large.
They have little or no tolerance to those who do not conform to the
norms of academic political correctness. Nowhere else in America is
free speech so restricted as on academic campuses with speech codes.
I have often criticized campus speech codes -- but I think we need
to put them in perspective: Speech on campuses (at least outside graded
class projects, which necessarily must be evaluated based on their
content) is generally far more free of institutional punishment than
speech in many other places.
The obvious example, which probably affects about ten times more
people than do campus speech codes, is restrictions on speech in
workplaces. In most workplaces (again, university workplaces are in
some measure something of an exception) speech is quite seriously
restricted.
We notice campus speech codes, I think, in part precisely because
student speech is otherwise so generally protected, both at public and
private universities. In my experience, academics -- certainly
including liberal ones -- are actually quite tolerant of a wide range
of criticism, and generally speaking wouldn't try to restrict the sort
of speech that is routinely restricted in workplaces (again, consider
most criticism of the institution or even of named faculty members).
Against this decades-old tradition of broad student free speech, the
restrictions on allegedly racist, sexist, anti-gay, and similar speech
stand out as exceptions. I'm glad they stand out, and I'm happy to
condemn them as generally unconstitutional (in public universities) and
generally improper (in all universities). But we shouldn't let these
exceptions blind us to the broader rule, and view campuses as unusually
speech-restrictive places, where in reality they are quite
speech-protective places.