Table of Contents
2016? More Like ‘1984’ for Student Athletes

FIRE’s Samantha Harris for the New York Daily News, published online last night, that explores the growing number of cases in which universities punish for engaging in constitutionally protected speech. While recognizing that “student athletes agree to increased regulation of their lives in exchange for the ability to represent their university on an athletic team,” Sam argues that, in some instances, universities go too far:
[T]here must be some limits on the university’s ability to intrude upon its athletes’ rights. A university cannot claim to be a bastion of freedom and openness and then operate like a totalitarian state with regard to its athletes. After all, they’re students, too.
Sam argues that while universities can regulate speech that the student athletes engage in while publicly representing the university, they cannot declare all of a student’s private communications to be fair game for investigation and sanction simply because that student is also an athlete.
To read more about this issue, be sure to check out over at the New York Daily News.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Is cancel culture dead?
Podcast
The co-authors of "The Canceling of the American Mind" discuss its new paperback release and where cancel culture stands a year and a half after the book's original publication. - -- President and CEO of FIRECo-author of "The...

After brazen attack on expressive rights, faculty at Sterling College aren’t in Kansas anymore

Colorado reversal on misgendering ban is a crisis averted but a danger revealed
