By
Lathan Watts
Tuesday,
June 20, 2023
Imagine the
reaction if a college professor created an additional course requirement that
each student pay a subscription fee to an online “community” secretly
controlled by the professor, who donated every dollar to pro-life advocacy
organizations. One would expect student protests, alumni withholding support
for the university unless the professor was fired, counselors brought in to
help students cope with their unwitting support for a cause they vehemently
oppose, wall-to-wall media coverage, and perhaps even the local district
attorney announcing a criminal investigation for fraud.
This
scenario did play out at a well-known university, but with one significant
difference that explains why it’s receiving so little national attention.
Instead of donating to causes on the political right, the professor donated the
funds to left-wing causes, including Planned Parenthood.
Two
college students are suing over the matter. Their attorneys with Alliance Defending
Freedom filed the lawsuit against Michigan State
University officials for failing to correct their policies and recover student
fees used to advance political messages that the officials favor and that
conflict with the deeply held beliefs of the students. The case, Barbieri
v. Jeitschko, is currently in the U.S. District Court for the Western
District of Michigan, Southern Division.
Amy
Wisner, a professor of marketing at MSU’s Broad College of Business, operating
under the guidance and approval of the business college’s interim dean,
compelled each of her nearly 600 students in the spring semester to pay a $99
membership fee to join an outside leftist political-advocacy organization she
controlled. She then donated the proceeds of those fees to external groups —
including Planned Parenthood — that engage in political advocacy that is
antithetical to the sincerely held religious beliefs of students Nathan
Barbieri and Nolan Radomski.
The
lawsuit explains that Wisner designed her course to promote her political
views. On her syllabus under “course requirements,” she required students to
purchase “The Rebellion Community membership.” As the syllabus explained, “The
Rebellion Community . . . is a global social learning community with a private
space dedicated to this course.” Once students paid the $99 subscription fee
online, they saw a statement that said:
Your membership fees are used to (1) pay for use of the technology and
(2) pay guest speakers, educators, and facilitators. Your professor does not
receive any financial compensation from your membership fees as that would be a
conflict of interest.
The
lawsuit notes, however, that Wisner personally controlled the group and was
using the substantial funds she extracted — nearly $60,000 — to engage in
political speech and donate to advocacy groups that directly conflict with the
rliegious beliefs of Barbieri and Radomski. For example, in a Facebook post,
Wisner linked to a Facebook page associated with “The Rebellion Community” and
wrote, “The Rebellion community is a safe place to coordinate our efforts to
burn everything to the f***ing ground.” Wisner’s post also said, “100% of
membership fees are donated to Planned Parenthood,” though elsewhere she stated
that “Proceeds of The Rebellion Community membership fees are donated to
organizations fighting systemic oppression.”
Students
pursuing a college degree shouldn’t have to wonder whether they are being
defrauded into supporting political causes. By authorizing professors to force
students to support speech antithetical to their deepest values and faith,
Michigan State officials have violated the First Amendment and federal
civil-rights laws.
Many
American universities have abandoned the once widely accepted notion that
higher education is the pursuit of knowledge and that civil discourse is
pivotal to a free society, but this case highlights a disturbing new
development. At Michigan State, the cultural decline in academia has reached
new depths, moving beyond indoctrination to coerced activism. And the yawns
from our nation’s media are just as telling.
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