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The Condescending Paternalism of Williams President Adam Falk

As FIREco-founder Alan Charles Kors has said, âYou cannot say to people, youâre too weak to live with freedom. Only that group is strong enough to live with freedom.â
But thatâs exactly what Adam Falk, the patronizing president of Williams College, has said to the collegeâs student body. Yesterday, Falk unilaterally canceled a speech by John Derbyshire, who was invited as part of the student-run âUncomfortable Learningâ speaker series. While Falk claims to ârespectâ studentsâ desire to explore ideas, he believes that sometimes âadministratorsâ (i.e., him) must âstep in and make decisions that are in the best interest of students and our community,â saying, âThe college didnât invite Derbyshire, but I have made it clear to the students who did that the college will not provide a platform for him.â (The UK magazine Spiked to end common âno platformingâ practices in Britain for quite some time, but this may be the first time a blanket ban on a speaker, rather than a âdisinvitation,â has been so explicitly issued by a leading U.S. college .)
If Falkâs patronizing of Williams students was not already clear enough from his announcing the cancellation, consider this: Zachary Wood, the president of the student group who invited Derbyshireâknown for his controversial statements about raceâis African-American. Wood wanted to hear Derbyshire speak, , because he âwanted to understand his positions and refute them.â Woodâs comments to the Eagle are worth reading in full, because they reflect a deep understanding of the importance of free expression to society:
As an African-American, Wood said he is strongly opposed to the positions expressed by Derbyshire, but those views are held by millions of Americans and need to be debated and disproved.
âI disagree with John Derbyshire on just about everything, but I think he should be allowed to speak at Williams College,â he said. âWe should hear what he has to say, and take him to task for it. I wanted to understand his positions and refute them.â
Woodâs comments remind me of by longtime FIREfriend Jonathan Rauch explaining why, as a gay man who lived through anti-gay discrimination, he believes in unfettered free speech:
You cannot be gay in America today and doubt that moral learning is real and that the open society fosters it. And so, 20 years on, I feel more confident than ever that the answer to bias and prejudice is pluralism, not purism. The answer, that is, is not to try to legislate bias and prejudice out of existence or to drive them underground, but to pit biases and prejudices against each other and make them fight in the open. That is how, in the crucible of rational criticism, superstition and moral error are burned away.
This is not how Williams College sees it. Rather, the Williams administration believes that students must be shielded from hurtful speechâeven if they explicitly seek to engage with that speech for the purpose of challenging it and possibly opening the speakerâs mind.
John Derbyshire and the students might actually have learned something from their encounter with one another. That is, one would think, nearly always the point of inviting a speaker to a college campus, and was in fact the explicit purpose of this invitation. But Adam Falk thinks he knows better. If you find it jarring that in 2016, a white college president would unabashedly take it upon himself to determine what ideas about race are too dangerous for the college's black students to hearâeven when the person expressing the âdangerousâ ideas was invited by one of those black students for that very purposeâyouâre not the only one.
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