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Regis University claims it didnāt censor bake sale event, then boasts about how quickly it censored the event

In less than a month, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS has written two letters to Regis University contesting its decision to shut down a studentās āSocial Justice Bake Saleā event, a deanās refusal to admit the university censored the bake sale, Regisā presidentās shift to boasting that the university quickly censored the bake sale, and Regisā repeated statements that the studentās bake sale violated federal law.

The controversy over the bake sale at the Denver, Colorado university first began March 16, when student Alexander Beck set up a āSocial Justice Bake Saleā as a response to the universityās āSocial Justice Weekā programming. Beck had received permission for the event from the universityās event coordinator the day before.
The bake sale offered different prices for baked goods depending on studentsā gender, race, sexuality, or religion and invited students to discuss the prices if they disagreed with them.
Bake sales like Beckās are not uncommon protests, and have led to controversy and censorship at campuses across the country. Beckās bake sale proved no different.
About an hour after he set up, Dean of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS Diane McSheehy approached Beck, asked to speak with him, and rejected his request to record the conversation. According to Beck, McSheehy claimed that because Beck stated that his event was being held in protest of Regisā Social Justice Week, the table constituted a ādemonstration,ā and that Beck had not followed the schoolās demonstration guidelines. Beck was not allowed to continue with his event.
Later that day, Beck emailed McSheehy to ask, āHow does two students behind a table constitute a āDemonstrationā?ā and clarify his rights. McSheehy replied:
Thanks for your email. Your table was not āshut downā. I thought in our conversation I was very clear about that. I simply wanted to connect with you about the correct process and procedures that need to be followed in order to have a recognized organization and to table as such. When I first came down to talk with you, you were the one that stated you were āprotestingā that is why we also had the conversation about the correct procedures for having a demonstration. I thought we had a good conversation and I am happy to answer any questions or concerns that you may still have. I also have you and Nick on my calendar for next Tuesday for a follow-up conversation as we agreed to today. Looking forward to continuing our conversation on Tuesday.
Obviously itās troubling for a university to say it can shut down an approved student event just by labeling it a demonstration and claiming it requires special permission. Itās even more troubling when that university is one that its āacademic traditions of honesty, freedom of expression and open inquiry.ā
Thatās why we wrote our first letter to Regis President John P. Fitzgibbons March 22, arguing that Regis cannot simply shut down student speech because the university perceives the expression to be in āprotestā of Social Justice Week. Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās letter explained:
Under this practice, any speech that is disfavored by administrators could be censored on the basis that it could be seen as a ādemonstrationā against something. While Beckās expression was certainly intended to be a āprotestā of events going on at Regis University, that does not mean it can be unduly burdened by further restrictions intended to apply to protests in the form of marches or rallies that may incur additional logistical considerations. Many students feel compelled to make their voices heard specifically because they encounter speech they believe deserves a response, or a āprotest.ā Indeed, even students who wish to host a tabling event in support of Regisā Social Justice Week are arguably āprotestingā injustice. Surely Regis would not claim that those students could not continue their event as well, even if they only gained approval from Regisā Event Services?
Regis failed to respond to the concerns raised in our letter. Instead, the administration made public statements admitting that the university shut down Beckās event, and even went so far as to argue that the bake sale violated federal law.
āRegis University welcomes and encourages diverse viewpoints on campus. However, the bake sale you referenced violated university policy and federal law by selling items at different prices based on race and gender,ā Regis claimed in a March 31 .
At Regisā April 5 āCourageous Conversationsā event, a forum set up by the university for students to discuss the bake sale and racism at Regis, Fitzgibbons accused Beck of a ācrystal clearā violation of federal law, and explained that administrators ātook care of [the bake sale] as soon as it was noticedā and āgot on it when we understood thatās what was going on.ā
Thatās an interesting claim from Regisā president since the universityās dean of students claimed Beckās event was ānot āshut downāā in her March 16 email to him.
On Friday, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS sent another letter to Regis demanding answers about the universityās apparent celebration of censorship and disputing its erroneous claim that Beckās bake sale constituted a violation of federal law, rather than an act of satirical speech:
Categorizing the bake sale as a violation of federal law ignores or willfully misinterprets the expressive purpose of the event. Beck did not seek to create a profitable commercial enterpriseāindeed, he pledged not to keep any meager profitābut to make a statement. Protests that rely on satireāsuch as Beckās āSocial Justiceā bake sale and feminist āwage gapā bake sales, both of which utilize proposed transactions to highlight perceived flaws in society or policyāexist to challenge, provoke, and, indeed, often offend.
Satirical political protest is at the very heart of our countryās honored traditions. In Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, 485 U.S. 46 (1988), the Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the First Amendment protects even the most blatantly ridiculing, outlandishly offensive parody.
Lastly, we noted that Regis ā which offering students an opportunity to voice their thoughts about the bake sale, including āan open forum for students who felt marginalized, attacked or unsafeā because of the event and the āCourageous Conversationsā discussion ā clearly understands the power of counter-speech, and has no reason to resort to censorship.
[T]hat someāor even manyāmembers of the campus community were offended by Beckās event is not cause to censor it. The proper response to speech that offends others is āmore speech, not enforced silence.ā Whitney v. California, 274 U.S. 357, 377 (1927) (Brandeis, J., dissenting). That Regis held discussions in response to community membersā opposition to the event is evidence that the university is aware of the power of rigorously debating and refuting ideas with which one disagrees. Regis clearly recognizes the value in encouraging students to use their own voices to respond to the bake sale, but it cannot expect students to substantively engage each othersā views, or to change each othersā minds, if the expression of some views is to be met with censorship and punishment.
We hope Regis finally responds to the concerns weāve raised in our letters ā and with better arguments than the ones its leadership has put forth thus far. Until the university changes course, no student speech will be safe at Regis.
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