quote:
quote:
quote:
And, according to that article, will possibly receive disciplinary action from her college.
SHSU would be wise not to wade into that. Speech codes for colleges are repugnant.
Would it be much different than what happened with OU recently?
No, and that was ****ty, too. The fraternity, as a private organization, was in its rights to yank the chapter's charter, but a university, especially a public university, should be very wary about limiting the speech rights of its students. A statement like "We strongly condemn the statements of XYZ student and they in no way reflect the ideals of the university. One of the ideals of this university, an ideal upon which this country is founded, is the right to free speech. We do not punish students for expressing their opinions, no matter how reprehensible we find them."