Iowa State University bans as “sexual harassment” a wide range of speech, including “derogatory or demeaning comments about women or men in general, whether sexual or not.” Saying — even quite accurately — that women are genetically less likely to be good at certain things may well be seen as “derogatory or demeaning.” (After all, it apparently made some biology professors feel like they were “going to be sick,” made their “heart . . . pound[],” presumably not in a good way, made their “breath . . . shallow,” and made them “extremely upset.”)
Of course, saying that men are more likely (whether for genetic or other reasons) to be violent criminals, rapists, child molesters, sexists, or for that matter fools driven by their genital organs would also be “derogatory or demeaning,” and thus sexual harassment.
Fortunately for professors who hold these views, “Interpretation of this policy will give due consideration to the principles of academic freedom and freedom of speech.” If you weren’t a university President, but just a young academic hoping for tenure, would you get much comfort out of this promise of “due consideration,” whatever exactly that means?
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