Students and academics know cancelling speakers is trivial compared with the structural collapse in tertiary education
It was recently announced that the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, is due to appoint the UKโs first โfree speech tsarโ in order to combat the apparent epidemic of cancel culture in Englandโs universities. At a time when the newspapers are filled with stories of strikes and shortages, and of the most vulnerable people in society having to endure extreme hardship, talk of the โdeath of free speechโ must be like music to the ears of those in power.
For the best part of a decade now, column inches have been filled by claims that freedom of thought and speech is being strangled by โsnowflakeโ students and overzealous academics. Routine annual changes in course materials to freshen up the syllabus are turned into moral panics about white authors being cancelled. Mundane invitation decisions by student societies are treated as if they form the lifeblood of British democracy.
Continue reading...