By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
I think I should stop being coy. I keep saying how I am
not a free speech absolutist, but I haven’t really explained what I mean, at
least not for a while and some readers and listeners are understandably getting
annoyed. And since I’ve been working through the philosophical underpinnings of
my conservatism, I thought this would be a good opportunity to lay down some
markers. (Also, The Dispatch has internal meetings this week
so I have to write this outside the news cycle anyway.)
So in the spirit of thinking out loud—and
explaining how I think about this stuff— let’s start with a
familiar argument of mine.
Democratic societies depend on undemocratic
institutions.
This argument should be familiar to readers by now. The
U.S. military is an institution that protects democracy, but it isn’t a
democratic institution. Soldiers don’t vote on strategy, and outside a few
specific battlefield conditions they don’t vote on tactics, either.
The free market not only sustains democracy, it is
broadly speaking democratic in the sense that people “vote” with their money.
But neither private businesses nor public corporations are meaningfully
democratic internally. Sure, shareholders often vote on this or that, but the
employees for the most part do not. Spare me the counterexamples of your
employee-owned vegan co-op bakery, you get the point.
Organized religion is widely—though not
universally—believed to be a bedrock of a democratic society. Most churches,
mosques, temples etc. do not regularly put important questions of doctrine or
dogma up for a vote. “Nicene Creed? Who’s with me? Come on Todd, raise your
hand.”
Education is even more widely believed to be a vital
ingredient of a functioning democracy. And yet, while math teachers sometimes
ask for a show of hands for what the class thinks the correct answer to the
problem on the blackboard is, the result of the polling isn’t supposed to
determine what the correct answer is.
Perhaps even more than education, journalism—a free
press, “the Fourth Estate” —is seen as perhaps the most vital bulwark against
tyranny. “Democracy dies in darkness” and all that. But, to my knowledge, no
journalistic outlet is particularly democratic internally.
And finally I should say that the nuclear family, for
many of us, is the most important institution in democratic society, or in any
society. While families do occasionally put some questions up to a vote—what
movie should we see? What do you want for dinner?—I don’t think many people
would say the family is a definitionally democratic institution.
For reasons I don’t completely understand, a lot of
people get very angry at me when I say that you can have too much
democracy. I’ve learned to say stuff like, “I’m for democracy in the areas
where democracy is necessary, but nowhere else.” But that pisses some people
off, too. Even though I think everyone understands my point—that most of these
institutions would be harmed or outright ruined if they were to become fully
democratic internally.
Okay, with that out of the way, I think about
liberalism—which I’m using synonymously with the idea of a free society—in very
similar ways. All of the above institutions are vital to liberalism, for
largely the same reasons. Indeed, we generally teach liberalism and democracy
in the same lesson plan (i.e. democracy is essential to a free society, and a
free society is necessarily democratic). The right to vote is just one of the
rights sloshing around in the bucket of constitutional rights.
But here’s the thing: A lot of those constitutional
rights are undemocratic. By this I mean we put those rights on a very, very,
high shelf—i.e., in the Bill of Rights—so voters can’t reach them without
putting in a huge amount of effort. American voters can opt to do some truly
idiotic things about how we organize society, but for the most part they cannot
vote to repeal the basic rules of liberalism. The Constitution forbids the
government from violating the Bill of Rights. “Congress shall make no law” that
prohibits the right to worship or associate or exercise free speech etc. In the
great philosophical game of rock-paper-scissors, democracy is scissors and
liberalism is rock.
Democracy, at least for our purposes, really just speaks
to how we choose political leaders. Liberalism—again, our conception of a free
society—goes deeper and wider. No one freaks out over the fact that the New
York Yankees deny the people on their payrolls the ability to vote on the
starting line-up. But if the Yankees management put a player in a cage because
he refused to bunt when instructed to, people would rightly get angry and
lawyers would get paper moving. In other words, the authority of liberalism
extends to places democracy does not.
But liberalism doesn’t necessarily extend everywhere,
either. Some of it does extend really, really, far. But like the tide, the
farthest out it comes onto the land is also where the sea is shallowest.
That whole “Congress shall make no law” thing is about
restraining government. Like Ron Burgundy, that’s kind of a big
deal.
There are some other commitments that work alongside
liberalism and can be more important than liberalism. In non-liberal (and
non-democratic) societies, murder, theft, etc. are still against the law (even
if the exceptions to the rule are one of the defining features of such
societies). The distinction between liberal rules and criminal laws is often,
but not always, subtle. But I also think it’s sufficiently easy to grasp for
most people that it’s not worth wading too deeply into. Suffice it to say, business
owners can tell an employee to empty the garbage cans, but they cannot whip
them. An army captain can order a soldier to stand guard, but he cannot
summarily execute the soldier who has an unauthorized pledge pin on his
uniform.
I know what you’re thinking: “Wasn’t he going to talk
about free speech?” Well, here we go.
I’m generally for it. Hell, I’m in the free speech
business. So, for most of the controversies over free speech, I’m generally on
Team Free Speech (and Team Free Press, though these are not synonymous
terms).
Where I get off the team bus, or simply display a lack of
team spirit, is when it comes to institutions where there are competing
priorities. Let’s use a very easy example for illustration purposes. I think
every family should have a very liberal attitude toward free speech. Kids and
parents alike should be able to speak freely about their feelings and concerns.
When children ask stupid questions—which happens a lot—parents shouldn’t mock
them, they should converse with them, for the purpose of educating them.
Kids need to be encouraged to think expansively, creatively, rigorously, etc.
And that requires a lot of good-natured patience. Moral education is a form of
education, too.
Which is why parents with a liberal attitude on speech
should also expect their kids to speak politely and respectfully. As often
happens, kids don’t always have a great grasp on what constitutes politeness or
respect. And so you teach them: “We don’t use that word in this family.” “That
was rude.” “Don’t talk to your mother that way.” “Apologize to your sister.”
“Take down that post on Instagram. I thought better of you.” “Take down that
poster.” Etc.
In other words, free speech is a good family value, but
it’s not the only one, and it’s certainly not the most important one.
Schools, both at the K-12 level and at the university
level, deal with the same issues at scale. In loco parentis isn’t
just a mossy Latin phrase. A second-grader who drops F-bombs or bigoted slurs
should be punished or at least remonstrated. Teachers and administrators have
some leeway, but, at some point parents should be notified about this kind of
behavior and, hopefully, there will be further consequences.
Part of my objection to the mantra that universities
should have a blanket free speech policy is that this can be an
abdication of the in loco parentis function of moral
education. Schools, like families, are essential to forming good character.
They used to take this function much, much, more seriously and there were
surely drawbacks to that. But the argument that a principle was taken too far
is not an argument for eliminating the principle entirely. We all understand
this when it comes to, say, cheating or plagiarism (though maybe not
at Harvard), but we get fuzzy when it comes to free speech.
My friend Charlie Cooke and I once got into an argument
about whether it’s okay to debate Holocaust denial on college campuses.
Charlie—who is in no way, shape, or form a Holocaust denier—believes in a
robust, fairly unlimited free speech regime. And while I think I agreed with
him that if a school invites a Holocaust denier to speak the school should
probably honor the invitation regardless of the blowback, I have no problem
with banning such invitations. There’s little to nothing important gained from
treating such issues as “open” questions. Weirdly, there are a lot of people
who disagree with that but who would be aghast at the idea of inviting a
defender of slavery to speak on campus. I’d be against that, too. Some
propositions should be closed, some questions settled, some ideas planted in
the bedrock of moral dogma. The value of taboos resides entirely on what is
considered taboo.
Now obviously, the question of “Where do you draw the
line?” looms over all of this. It can be a hard question. I have responses to
this.
First, this introduces another vital liberal value:
Pluralism. I am a passionate defender of theological pluralism but moral unity.
Different institutions will answer hard questions differently. I have no
problem with the idea that, say, Notre Dame can declare that some egregiously
sacrilegious speech is forbidden on its campus while the same speech at Brown
University is considered uncontroversial. Plenty of Catholic high schools once
banned certain kinds of expression—often enforced by a nun with a ruler—that
would be tolerated at other schools. That is fine with me.
Second, universities are literally crammed with
well-compensated people who are asked, as part of their job descriptions, to
answer hard questions and draw defensible lines.
Third, you always want someone in the room making
the maximalist free speech argument. I’ve always said that every
meeting of government planners should have at least one hardcore libertarian in
the room to ask, “Should government do anything at all here?” I think the same
about college campuses. There should always be someone in the room making the
pure, principled, case for free speech.
Egregious thought and speech policing is the product of
groupthink (often with the intent of imposing groupthink). You want someone in
the room to make Charlie’s or David’s (or FIRE’s) case, not least because it’s
always going to be principled, insightful, and—99 percent of the time—correct.
In the 1 percent of cases where I think they might be wrong, you’ll still make
better decisions about crossing the line if you at least know where the line
is.
With that in mind, let’s address the controversies that
have bedeviled universities since October 7.
I have fairly deep and profound contempt for the DEI
racket. But you don’t have to buy into all of the newfangled intersectional
gobbledygook about how speech can be violence and violence can be speech to
believe that celebrating and endorsing a vicious pogrom against Jews is
inappropriate in the immediate aftermath of such a pogrom. And I’m
not even talking about the actual crimes of harassment and
intimidation. A rally celebrating “resistance” and calling for extirpating the
Jews “From the River to the Sea” that adhered to all of the free speech rules
would still be in incredibly poor taste, to use a perfectly serviceable, unsophisticated
term. When the first newsreels from Auschwitz reached America, if members
of Harvard’s German American Bund asked to have a celebratory event, and I was
the school president, I wouldn’t have had to think hard about whether to give permission
for it. “Hell, no. What’s wrong with you?” would be my answer. And if the kids
did it anyway, I’d suspend or expel them.
Character is formed by what you allow and don’t
allow.
Now, academic freedom is a different thing, inviting
different lines to be drawn and different questions to be asked. And I’m more
of a purist on this score. But it’s worth keeping in mind that none of these
schools are remotely pure about this sort of thing. Many schools require
faculty to sign DEI
pledges. Great professors are fired, denied tenure, or unpersoned, because
their perfectly defensible scholarship doesn’t align with the ideological
priorities of these schools while shoddy and tendentious “scholarship” is
rewarded.
One of the things that’s not fully appreciated in the
antisemitism debate ignited by the three
presidents’ testimony is that the “except for Jews” standard
violates both free speech values and DEI
values. You can’t routinely suppress and police “hate speech” in the name of
DEI but have a carve out for anti-Jewish hate speech by hiding behind
selectively enforced free speech rules. You can’t celebrate robust free speech
when it comes to antisemitism while claiming that you actually believe all that
B.S. about hurtful speech being violence. Well, you can—if you think Jews don’t
count.
Now, to be very clear: If forced to choose between these
elite schools embracing a serious free speech regime or simply adding Jews to
the official DEI list of oppressed groups, I’d pick free speech every time. But
I don’t think that has to be the choice. DEI should go because DEI should go.
It teaches kids to think that they are victims and that white people are
oppressors regardless of context or personal behavior. That’s simply illiberal.
It also wastes a vast amount of money and time on nonsense that could be better
spent almost anywhere else.
It’s also a warped and pernicious approach to character
formation, one that starts with the admissions process. Applicants are
encouraged to define themselves as a member of a marginal group and wax
eloquent on their intersectional struggles. They get more helpings of DEI at
orientation, and yet more in the classroom. You are not helping young people
when you teach them that they lack agency, that their problems are
presumptively someone else’s fault, that the decent country they live in is
structurally racist and oppressive. No good parent should teach their kids that
way, nor should any institution that is acting as a parent (which is what in
loco parentis means after all).
So yeah, free speech principles are better. But, as David
French is often at pains to tell people, free speech principles allow for all
sorts of reasonable limitations. Age restrictions, for instance, are perfectly
consonant with the First Amendment. Rules against obscenity clear the hurdle,
too. I like community standards more than David does, but he still allows for
some restraints along those lines. Yes, yes, as a legal matter public
institutions have different rules than private ones. And that’s fine. All three
universities we’ve been talking about are private universities.
I should add that universities haven’t in fact abandoned
moral education. They care about character a lot. It’s just that their
definition of character is deformed. Free expression about unpopular ideas is
suppressed, while free expression about often ill-informed or uninformed
feelings is celebrated and rewarded. It is now considered a vital part of the
“college experience” to protest for the sake of protest. The liberal in
“liberal arts” used to refer to both the knowledge and critical thinking skills
necessary for maintaining a free society. In too many cases, “liberal arts” is
now an exercise in equipping students to believe that society is either not
free—or shouldn’t be.
But that’s a conversation for another time. I’ve done
enough thinking out loud for now.
Let’s circle back to where I began. Democracy is great
for the things democracy is great for, in the same way that forks are better
than spoons for eating some things, but worse than spoons for eating
soup.
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