Editor's Note: The following is a press release announcing the launch of the Alumni Free Speech Alliance (AFSA), a new organization dedicated to mobilizing college and university alumni in defense of free speech on campus. The organization was co-founded by Stuart Taylor, Jr., journalist and author of Mismatch: How Affirmative Action Hurts Students It's Intended to Help, and Why Universities Won't Admit It, and Edward Yingling, former president and CEO of the American Bankers Association. To learn more, visit AFSA's website here. This press release is posted with permission.
October 18, 2021 — Millions of college and university alumni around the country are dismayed by the intolerance of unpopular viewpoints at their alma maters, and now some have begun to fight back.
Alumni have organized groups at five of America’s most prestigious higher-ed institutions—Cornell University, Davidson College, Princeton University, the University of Virginia, and the Washington & Lee University—to defend free speech, academic freedom, and viewpoint diversity on college campuses. Today these groups are announcing that they have joined forces under the banner of the Alumni Free Speech Alliance to launch a national effort to mobilize alumni.
“Free speech and academic freedom are critical to the advancement of knowledge and to the success of our colleges and universities,” said Edward Yingling, a co-founder of the Princeton alumni group. “Yet these basic principles are under attack today at schools across the country.”
National and school-specific polls show that high percentages of students and many faculty are afraid to express their views on controversial topics. In fact, discouraging numbers of students indicate in polls that free speech is not justified if certain groups find the ideas offensive. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) found in a survey this year that more than 80% of students report self-censoring their viewpoints at least some of the time, with 21% saying they censor themselves often.
College administrators and boards of trustees are often too timid to push back against the culture of intolerance on their campuses. Alumni have influence with college presidents and board members, who are constantly asking for their involvement and contributions. The five groups comprising the Alumni Free Speech Alliance share the conviction that alumni can create a countervailing force to stand up for free speech. The Alliance will promote the exchange of information and best practices between its member organizations and provide assistance to alumni at other universities who wish to create free-speech organizations and join the Alliance.
"American universities and colleges are entrusted with educating our youth to think critically, to explore all options, and to gain the skills needed for leading productive lives,” said John L. Craig, president of Davidsonians for Freedom of Thought and Discourse. “This can be accomplished only in environments where the search for truth is unfettered. The forces against campus free speech and for ideological indoctrination are entrenched, and things can change only if alumni stakeholders strike back."
“Forty years ago, Cornell was a campus that embraced freedom of speech and great viewpoint diversity but the demographics of its student body and faculty were monolithic. Today Cornell enjoys great diversity within its student body and faculty but imposes significant barriers to freedom of speech and viewpoint diversity on campus,” said Kenneth P. Wolf, co-founder of the Cornell Free Speech Alliance. “Neither of these extremes support academic excellence and, in the long run, will destroy a world class institution of higher learning.”
“Conservatives, and increasingly liberals, are afraid to speak against “woke” orthodoxy at the University of Virginia,” said Bert Ellis, president of the Jefferson Council. “The Jefferson Council was formed to preserve the legacy of intellectual freedom at the institution Thomas Jefferson founded. Core goals include the protection of free speech, free expression, and intellectual diversity.”
“Education based on victimization, grievance, and critical race theory harbors the seeds of tribalism, cultural segregation, and erasure of history,” said Tom Rideout, president of the Generals Redoubt. “Conversely, education based on diversity of viewpoint and free speech promotes robust learning, the pursuit of truth, and an inclusive culture based on shared values.”
MEDIA CONTACT:
Edward Yingling, through the “Contact Us” page at alumnifreespeechalliance.com
The members of the Alliance are:
Cornell University
Cornell Free Speech Alliance
Davidson College
Davidsonians for Freedom of Thought and Discourse
Princeton University
Princetonians for Free Speech
www.princetoniansforfreespeech.com
The Jefferson Council
Washington and Lee University
The Generals Redoubt
Image: Ken Lund, Wikimedia Commons, Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 2.0 Generic license, cropped.