After Kirk assasination, students less comfortable with ‘controversial’ events on campus
Following the assassination of Charlie Kirk, half of the nation’s college students report feeling less comfortable attending controversial public events on campus and nearly half are less comfortable voicing opinions on controversial subjects in class.
Chief Research Advisor Dr. Sean Stevens at the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression told The Center Square that Charlie Kirk’s September assassination at Utah Valley University “has had a chilling effect — not just at UVU, but across the country.”
The Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) surveyed 2,028 undergraduates nationwide – including an “oversample” of 204 students from Utah Valley University – in order to “understand how the assassination is shaping student attitudes and behavior.”
Stevens told The Center Square that “some of the data from Utah Valley University students are encouraging – revealing signs of increased tolerance, and even relative trust in administrative protections for free speech.”
However, Stevens also said that the assassination of Kirk “appears to have deepened existing ideological fractures between liberals and conservatives on campus.”
A press release on the survey showed that following the assassination, “moderate and conservative students across the country became significantly less likely to say that shouting down a speaker, blocking entry to an event, or using violence to stop a campus speech are acceptable actions.”
“In contrast, liberal students’ support for these tactics held steady, or even increased slightly,” the release said.
Additionally, according to the survey, half of the participating students reported they are “less comfortable attending or hosting controversial public events on their campus.”
Forty-five percent of students surveyed are “less comfortable expressing their views on controversial topics in class,” with one in five students saying that “they are now less comfortable attending class” – all following the killing of Kirk.
Stevens told The Center Square that “the worst thing colleges and universities could take away from Charlie Kirk’s assassination is that open debate and controversy are too dangerous.”
“Instead, schools need to stop using ‘safety’ as a pretext for censorship, apply the same free-speech rules to everyone, and protect the speech rights of students, faculty, staff, and speakers better,” Stevens said.
Stevens outlined three ways in which schools can begin to accomplish this free speech initiative.
For one, schools can begin “emphasizing that violence and true threats are unacceptable no matter who the speaker is,” Stevens said.
Additionally, Stevens said schools can make “their policies viewpoint neutral so that the same procedures are applied regardless of the speaker’s ideological views.”
Furthermore, schools can begin “defending speech about the assassination regardless of how offensive or loathsome it may be, provided the speech is protected by the First Amendment,” Stevens said.
Latest News Stories
Green Beret pleads not guilty to betting on his own mission
Cook County Judge Lyke’s decisions allowed accused cop killer to be free
Congress urged to defund abortion in wake of Planned Parenthood $90M COVID loan revelation
Madigan’s next option the U.S. Supreme Court
VA performance improves as concerns over cuts fade, survey finds
Arizona sues DHS over plans for ICE detention facility
Trump commemorates America’s British heritage during rare royal visit
Congressional progressives introduce $25 federal minimum wage plan
Illinois Quick Hits: Gas prices rise again
UAE quits OPEC as gas prices hit $4.19 a gallon nationwide
Feds raid more than 20 sites in Minneapolis in fraud probe
State legislative investigation: Camp Mystic created ‘complacent flood culture’