National Free Speech News & Commentary

Calls for censorship are a familiar wartime mistake

Calls for censorship are a familiar wartime mistake

Nico Perrino March 04, 2026 1 min read

It’s like clockwork. War breaks out. Then come the calls for censorship. After the war with Iran began over the weekend, the group Columbia University Apartheid Divest tweeted “Marg bar Amrika” — Persian for “death to America.” The group is not a recognized student organization at Columbia University, and it’s unclear who operates its X account. But that didn’t stop demands for punishment.

The group’s tweet is unquestionably protected speech. The Supreme Court has twice held that even flag burning — often a visceral, symbolic expression of contempt for the nation — is constitutionally protected. As the Court famously declared, “If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.”

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The Weekly: Building vs. Banning in Pursuits of Viewpoint Diversity

The Weekly: Building vs. Banning in Pursuits of Viewpoint Diversity

Nicole Barbaro Simovski, Ph.D. March 04, 2026 1 min read

To keep the frontier of inquiry truly open, we must address the lack of viewpoint diversity in the academy. HxA’s most recent report reviews literature on faculty political diversity, and draws attention to a potentially narrow range of political viewpoints on campus — with some important caveats. We found that left-leaning faculty are the norm, yet many faculty are apolitical or independent and only a small proportion are conservative.

Higher education faces a choice on how to proceed: build to expand, or ban to counter. Both of these competing approaches are underway, and this week’s news displayed that tension.

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The War on Student Speech

The War on Student Speech

Josh Moody February 25, 2026 1 min read

The pro-Palestinian demonstrations and encampments that sprang up on many campuses in spring 2024 created unprecedented conditions for an aggressive crackdown on student speech. Unlike during previous protest movements, such as the Vietnam War, when most students took one side of an issue against the adult establishment, the pro-Palestinian movement pitted pro-Israeli and pro-Palestinian students—and faculty—against one another, fueling tensions that spilled into classrooms, dorms and quads.

That unrest collided squarely with President Donald Trump’s re-election and his second-term agenda, which included targeted attacks on both immigrants and “woke” higher ed institutions.

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Trump administration expands efforts to dismantle the Education Department

Trump administration expands efforts to dismantle the Education Department

Juan Perez Jr.  February 25, 2026 1 min read

The Trump administration is expanding its efforts to dismantle the Education Department by moving its oversight of school safety grants and foreign funding for universities to other agencies, the administration announced Monday.

The Department of Health and Human Services is slated to take over work related to school shootings and student mental health programs. The State Department will be tasked to help the Education Department manage how the federal government monitors the flow of billions of dollars in foreign gifts and contracts to higher education institutions.

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FIRE statement on the University of Texas System Board of Regents adopting guidelines for ‘controversial’ topics in class

FIRE statement on the University of Texas System Board of Regents adopting guidelines for ‘controversial’ topics in class

FIRE February 25, 2026 1 min read

On Feb. 19, the University of Texas System’s Board of Regents approved new rules governing how faculty members can and cannot teach about “controversial” topics. FIRE is concerned that the guidance’s vague language, as well as the backdrop of censorship in Texas, will cause faculty to self-censor.

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What Trump’s Top Higher-Ed Official Has in Mind for College Accreditation

What Trump’s Top Higher-Ed Official Has in Mind for College Accreditation

Eric Kelderman February 19, 2026 1 min read

The official charged with carrying out the Trump administration’s higher-education agenda has a particular diagnosis for what’s ailing colleges.

“We are here because the value of higher education is in question by too many — and at the center of that is our quality-assurance system,” Nicholas Kent, under secretary of education, said in a Tuesday interview. “It is undeniable that accreditors are failing institutions, they’re failing students, and they’re failing taxpayers.”

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