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April 2011

Making Saint Mary’s Safe For Expression And Discussion

Mark Mercer

That the current students’
association at Saint Mary’s is hostile to freedom of expression on campus took
no one by surprise. After all, previous Saint Mary’s students’ associations
have joyfully been on the side of restricting and suppressing expression. A few
years ago, the association supported orders to remove cartoons from a
professor’s office door. Once it banned a campaign poster by a student hoping to
be its president.

As well, students’ associations
across Canada have been tripping over themselves to outlaw whatever falls beyond
a very small pale. Indeed, not long ago the students’ union at Dalhousie
debated whether student societies should be able to express opposition to this
or that. The campus atheist society may advocate atheism, but should it be
allowed to speak against religion?

What really gets student
politicians into high gear, of course, is the pro-life stance toward abortion.
And so it was bound to happen sooner or later that the Saint Mary’s pro-life
student society would find itself on the receiving end of a students’
association gag order.

On 30 November last year,
pro-life students manning an authorized display on campus were ordered by Saint
Mary’s University Students’ Association (SMUSA) president Matt Anderson to
remove one of their signs. Reports on what the sign said differ. Perhaps it
read “Women do regret abortions,” perhaps “Women regret abortions,” maybe
something else similar. Whatever it said exactly, some students were offended
and hurt by it, and they complained to SMUSA.

Mr. Anderson had the sign
removed, he explains in a letter to the campus newspaper, in order to maximize
the positive university experience and to help students overcome challenges they
face.

Mr. Anderson interpreted the
sign to say or imply that all women who have chosen to have an abortion
eventually regret their decision. Because, according to Mr. Anderson, that
claim is false as well as offensive and hurtful, he did the right thing in
ordering the sign removed. But it doesn’t matter what the sign said. It might
as well have read “All women who have abortions are child murderers (and let’s
restore capital punishment).” By ordering the sign removed, Mr. Anderson
wilfully interfered with the peaceful and orderly expression of claims and
opinions.

Why was it wrong for him to do
this? First, a university campus should be a place that encourages people to
exchange claims and opinions, for university people want to live in intellectual
community and central to intellectual community is being able to examine issues
from all sides and make up one’s mind for oneself. We want to live in such a
way that our beliefs and values respond only to the pressure of evidence and
argument. That is the type of people we are.

By his actions, Mr. Anderson not
only expressed disdain for our way of life. He actively interfered with our
living it.

Second, Mr. Anderson treated the
students at the table badly, as one always does when one prevents another from
speaking her mind.

Third, Mr. Anderson
mollycoddled the students who complained about the sign. Rather than
instruct them how to deal properly with views that upset them, Mr. Anderson
treated them as emotionally and intellectually incompetent and fragile, in need
of protection from mere words. They should feel insulted. As well, since a
central task of a university is to create emotionally and intellectually mature
people, Mr. Anderson came between the students who sought to have the sign
removed and their education.

Again, that SMUSA is hostile to
ideals of university life is not surprising. What is a bit surprising, though,
and very much more dispiriting, is that the administration at Saint Mary’s, and
maybe a good section of the professoriate, as well, doesn’t much care.

To date, neither the president
of Saint Mary’s nor any other official has condemned Mr. Anderson’s actions. No
official has publicly said anything at all about them. And professors don’t
seem to be pressing Saint Mary’s to condemn this act of censorship, to explain
why it was wrong, or to act so that nothing like this happens again.

Mr. Anderson claims that as
president, he is authorized by SMUSA’s constitution to vet and censor messages
student societies wish to communicate. Maybe he is. If he is, Saint Mary’s
must encourage student politicians to change their constitution so that SMUSA
officials may no longer harm campus culture.

Mr. Anderson also claims that
Saint Mary’s has no authority over the independently incorporated SMUSA to force
it to behave itself. That might be true; it might even be how it should be.
But then the Saint Mary’s administration needs to create a system whereby
students can organize themselves into societies outside the reach of SMUSA,
where they will be free to say what they want. It also makes imperative that
the university have in place mechanisms for denying SMUSA what it needs to live
should it again prove itself a threat to campus culture. Student Services can
easily take over its functions.

Matt Anderson is a student, and
students are students. They are going to make all sorts of mistakes. They are
here at university to be educated. By failing to correct their mistakes and to
clean up after them, though, university administrators, and the professors who
fail to hold administrators’ feet to the fire when things like this happen, deny
students the education that is their due.

Disdain for freedom of
expression and university culture is a serious problem in education in this
province and, indeed, throughout this country. The good news is that it is a
problem that won’t require a cent of taxpayer or student money to fix. The bad
news is the sloth, cowardice or connivance of those who should be fixing it.


Mark Mercer is a member of
SAFS Board of Directors.

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