MikeG
Senior Member.
I thought that this excerpt from the article was interesting. [emphasis mine]
I may have said it before, but there is always some confusion between academic freedom, free speech, and responsible speech. That last quality is an important part of the debate, beyond the collective bargaining agreement (which Tracy violated) or due process concerns.External Quote:"There's still a lot that most of us don't know," said Peter Bonilla of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. "I would hope that it not be the case that this investigation and their termination proceedings are motivated by hostility to his views — which are obviously quite in the minority and quite unpopular. I can only hope that they give him the same process that it would give any other faculty member who is accused of the same violations that Professor Tracy is.
"… It's very easy for anyone's message to go viral and to lose control of that message, and universities have in those situations a lot of pressure to look for a kind of quick and easy solution," Bonilla said. "It's unfortunately easy for universities in those situations to forget their institutional values where free speech and academic freedom is concerned. That is a concern of ours."
Academics have rules to follow, especially ones that pertain to handling claims and evidence. Tracy was bound by those rules. Sidestepping that core obligation distracts from his departure from professional standards.