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DePaul Continues to Rail Against Viewpoint Diversity, Bans Ben Shapiro

In an article for , the vice chairman for DePaul Universityās chapter of Young Americans for Freedom, John Minster, revealed that DePaulās administrators are once again acting as censors, banning another speaker from campus. This time, the school is forcing his group to disinvite conservative commentator Ben Shapiro from speaking on campus.
In an email to the groupās executive board, DePaul Vice President of Facilities Operations Bob Janis stated security concerns were the reason for not allowing the editor-in-chief of The Daily Wire to speak at the university. Shapiro addressed these concerns , saying:
What I love most about this situation is that they donāt even say that what Iām saying is so terrible. Instead, what they say is that because Iāve been met with violence at other campuses, this raises security concerns. So in other words, they canāt keep their own students from assaulting people . . . basically, we now have the riotersā veto.
This marks the second time in under thirty days that DePaul has denied a request for space to host a conservative speaker on campus due to potential security concerns posed by protesters. In early July, the DePaul College Republicans had their request for an event with controversial Breitbart contributor . This denial came despite statements by the universityās president, , condemning the āhecklerās vetoā that arose during Yiannopoulosā previous visit to campus in May. The day after that incident, Holtschneider published an open letter to the university community, stating:
Yesterdayās speaker was invited to speak at DePaul, and those who interrupted the speech were wrong to do so. Universities welcome speakers, give their ideas a respectful hearing, and then respond with additional speech countering the ideas. I was ashamed for DePaul University when I saw a student rip the microphone from the hands of the conference moderator and wave it in the face of our speaker.
It should be noted that Holtschneider soon after , effective in the summer of 2017. Regardless, Yiannopoulosā disinvitation marks a continued disjunct between DePaulās expressed commitments to free speech values and its actual practices.
While DePaul University is a private university, it advertises a strong commitment to free speech to current and potential students. DePaul must hold itself to those promises. In its , DePaul makes explicit commitments to free speech principles:
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS have the right to their own ideas, beliefs and political associations. Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS have the right to ask questions and express their opinions without affecting their academic evaluations, as long as such do not interfere with the normal operations of their classes or infringe on the rights of other students in their classes. Instructors shall evaluate studentsā performances without prejudice.
After Yiannopoulos was banned from campus, Vice President of Student Affairs sent mixed messages to the media, saying, āDePaul will continue to work with student organizations to sponsor events and speakers representing a broad range of opinions on the issues of the day.ā The denial of facilities for Shapiroās speech proves this laudable commitment is an empty promise.
In the wake of Shapiroās disinvitation, issued a statement condemning DePaul for the dissonance between their words and actions. The statement demands that:
If DePaul does not reverse its decision to ban Ben, it must immediately remove any claim to support free speech and expression from its website and marketing materials or become a fraudulent laughingstock.
DePaul has had a long history of hostility towards free speech, including discriminating against a drug policy reform group, shutting down an affirmative action protest, suspending a professor for his expression without a hearing, and forbidding a student group from protesting Professor Ward Churchillās visit to campus. In 2013, DePaul āearnedā a spot on Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās annual list when it punished a student for revealing the names of those who vandalized his student groupās campus display.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS will continue to monitor the situation at DePaul and will update Torch readers as new information arises. To learn more about trends in campus disinvitations, visit Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās Disinvitation Database.
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