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University Sues Student Blogger

October 16, 2009

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Butler University has sued an undergraduate student for making libelous and defamatory statements about administrators on a blog he kept anonymously.

Details of the case became public last week when Bill Watts, an English professor at Butler, wrote a piece in the student newspaper and sent an e-mail to the university’s Faculty Senate in which he questioned “the practice of suing our own students for their utterances.” The e-mail provoked a written response from Bobby Fong, Butler president, who defended the lawsuit Tuesday at a Faculty Senate meeting, noting that “academic freedom does not provide protection for defamation and harassment.”

Jess Zimmerman, a junior at Butler, created “TrueBU Blog” in October 2008 to chronicle happenings he deemed of import at the institution. Though he managed the blog anonymously under the tongue-in-cheek moniker “Soodo Nym,” he has recently come forward publicly. In addition to posts by Zimmerman, the blog also featured “reports” from other anonymous faculty and student “correspondents.”

In his first post on the blog, Zimmerman writes, “This is not a forum for attack. It is a forum for truth.” He also asks that all commenters and fellow posters “please refrain from making ad hominem attacks,” noting that “they will not be tolerated.”

The blog did not attract much traffic until December 2008, when Zimmerman started chronicling what he viewed as the unfair dismissal of Andrea Gullickson, then chair of the Butler’s School of Music and Zimmerman’s stepmother. (Gullickson, who retained her faculty job, said that until recently, she did not realize the author was her stepson.) In multiple posts, Zimmerman cites various other anonymous sources and internal e-mails in presenting a case as to why he believes Peter Alexander, dean of Butler’s College of Fine Arts, and Jamie Comstock, Butler’s provost, acted “inappropriately and inexcusably” in their handling of Gullickson’s departure. During that month, Zimmerman said, the blog received more than 2,000 hits.

Just before the New Year, Zimmerman took down the blog after receiving an e-mail (to his anonymous account) from the university’s lawyer noting that it was pursuing charges against him.

The Lawsuit

In January, the university filed a libel and defamation suit against “Soodo Nym,” listing numerous statements from his blog that they argue “have harmed the honesty, integrity, and professional reputation of Butler University and two of its high-level administrators.” University officials insist that, at the time the suit was filed, they did not know that Zimmerman was the blog’s author, and they hoped the case would identify the author.

Michael Blickman, one of the university’s lawyers, wrote in an e-mail that the university “had a sense that the blogger could have been [Zimmerman] or another student” but that it also “could have been an outsider.”

As late as Thursday evening, even though Zimmerman had openly admitted to Butler’s student newspaper and to Inside Higher Ed that he was the blogger, Blickman maintained that Zimmerman “has yet to acknowledge this to the university.” As for naming Zimmerman to the suit in place of the current “John Doe,” Blickman said the university “is reserving all options” in the future.

Among the specific statements written by Zimmerman that the university deems libelous include the following description: “Peter Alexander, Dean of the [College of Fine Arts] is power-hungry and afraid of his own shadow. … He drives away talented administrators. He frustrates students within the departments. He hurts the ability of the school to recruit talented students and faculty members. He announces to the campus that the Butler Way, the ideals for which the school and everyone at it stands, mean nothing.”

The university also takes umbrage at Zimmerman’s description of a meeting Alexander had with the School of Music, regarding the departure of Gullickson, a well-liked chair who received favorable reviews from her peers. Zimmerman writes that Alexander “lied” to faculty and left the meeting “embarrassed” for having done so. The university also challenges Zimmerman’s claim that Alexander and Comstock were, as the suit phrases it, “engaged in a conspiracy to misrepresent the circumstances of the departure” of Gullickson as chair.

The university noted in the suit that administrators “have received threatening/harassing emails in connection with the events reports on the TrueBU Blog.” One such e-mail was sent from Zimmerman on Dec. 25, wishing Alexander and Comstock a “very merry Christmas and a good new year,” but adding that “I haven’t forgotten the abuses of power and poor leadership you showed last semester.”

Fong also noted in his written statement Tuesday that Comstock had received another e-mail that made her fear “for her own safety, for her husband for her house and property.” Fong quoted the e-mail as having read, “We can create much more trouble for you than we have so far.” Zimmerman and Gullickson both said they were not responsible for the e-mail and did not know who had penned it.

Identifying the Blogger

Even though the university had filed a suit against “Soodo Nym,” Zimmerman said he was unaware of any legal action being taken against him until early last summer.

Then, Michael Zimmerman, Jess’s father and a biology professor at Butler, did not have his contract as dean of the university’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences renewed. After hearing that Comstock had openly disparaged him and misrepresented the nature of his departure as dean to members of the college’s Board of Visitors, Michael worked with his lawyer to get Comstock to retract her statements. He said his goal was not to get back his position as dean, noting that like Gullickson, he was content to move on from what he felt was an injustice and return to a teaching position.

In working to get an out-of-court settlement with the university regarding Comstock’s statements about Michael, university attorneys approached Michael’s lawyer with terms that sought to settle not only his complaints but the suit they had filed against his son, Jess, regarding the blog. It was at that point, Michael and Gullickson said they became aware of their son’s sole involvement with the blog.

Dan Altman, Michael and Jess’s attorney, said the university’s attorneys approached them with a settlement that tied both cases together, even though he considered them separate matters. He noted that they made settlement in Michael’s matter contingent upon Jess agreeing to submit to university punishment for the blog and signing away any right of appeal to the university’s decision. Also, the university’s attorneys wanted both father and son to sign confidentiality agreements, mandating that they not speak about either the blog or Michael’s case. Negotiations fell apart a few months ago, he said, when Michael and Jess did not agree to these terms, not knowing what punishment to which Jess would be subjected.

“I don’t think there’s any thing libelous in that blog,” Altman said. “There might be some opinions that Butler people don’t appreciate about certain things, but there’s nothing untruthful. I think the difficulty with the blog is that it was anonymous. If you know where the source is, then there’s a different way to interpret things. If they knew the source, I don’t think they would have interpreted the blog as something that would reach harassment. In regard to the e-mails being cited as harassment, I think any reasonable person would not have interpreted them that way.”

Altman said he believes the case being brought by the university is a strategic lawsuit against public participation [SLAPP], intended to silence his client and burden him with with the cost of legal defense until he ceases his criticism of the administration.

“This isn’t about winning,” Altman continued. “I mean, what damages are they going to get out of a college junior?”

On behalf of the university, Blickman said the case was not a SLAPP and characterized the failed settlement between Michael, Jess and Butler differently.

“Butler University found itself in a position where individuals felt harassed and they believed that Soodo Nym's mission was to maliciously harm their reputations,” Blickman wrote in an e-mail. “We came to the defense of these individuals. Butler did not know Soodo Nym's identity until June. We pursued a resolution that we felt was fair for all parties. Regrettably, that did not occur. The university is following its normal and customary processes in handling this matter.”

He also countered that the university’s suit was fair and reasonable, considering what the blog contained.

“Some people mistakenly believe that the Internet is the Wild West where no rules apply,” Blickman wrote. “But that is just wrong. It is simply a venue no different than the newspaper or the town square. If you defame someone on the Internet you should be held accountable. You can't hope to find shelter from the First Amendment when you engage in serial harassment and defamation. The Founding Fathers certainly could not have imagined the Internet but they surely never intended our First Amendment to protect individuals who engage in malicious conduct that harms others. I suggest that you review each entry in Soodo Nym's blog. It is not appropriate to consider a single e-mail in isolation. If one reads the entire blog the only reasonable conclusion that can be reached is that Soodo Nym's comments were defamatory and legally actionable.”

Impressions of the Case

Now that he has identified himself as the blogger, Jess Zimmerman said he has no regrets about anything he wrote under the previously anonymous moniker “Soodo Nym.”

“I’m willing to say that I might not have been as nice as I could have or should have been,” Zimmerman said. “But, being a little mean isn’t harassment, libel or defamation. There can be good reasons for remaining anonymous. Butler being so small is a blessing and a curse. It’s great that everyone knows everyone, but it can make it hard to discuss serious issues. I’m not in the game of playing hindsight is 20/20. I believe I would make the same decision to be anonymous again.”

He was also willing to acknowledge that the situation involving his stepmother might have affected his writing or decision to write. Still, he noted that he would have done the same for anyone “suffering a similar injustice,” calling himself a student who was “concerned” and wanted to “do something to help the situation” by making it public.

Now that he has come forward as the former “TrueBU” blogger, Jess has started a new blog, “I Am John Doe” to chronicle openly the lawsuit being filed against him by the university. He said he feels it will be “less stressful” to “put [his] name on this blog.”

Michael Zimmerman, while making plain that he and his wife played no role in Jess’s blog, said he was “incredibly proud” of how his son has “handled himself,” noting that his blogging was an example of him putting to use the critical thinking skills the university has taught him.

“The question of whether or not he should have been anonymous from the beginning is an interesting one,” he said. “In particular, I don’t think there’s any second guessing or looking back. … I honestly don’t think people should put so much emphasis on his being anonymous. What’s the difference? If what he wrote was appropriate and he had documents to back everything up, what does it matter that he signed it or not?”

Andrea Gullickson expressed a similar sentiment, but said a “culture of fear” pervades Butler to the point where being anonymous is often the only way students and faculty members feel they can voice concern.

Of what her family has gone through at Butler, she said, “We want to move on with our lives.”

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Comments on University Sues Student Blogger

  • Posted by WTF on October 16, 2009 at 5:15am EDT
  • Yet another example of power-mad administrators gone wild?

  • No Surprise Here
  • Posted by ObservationPostPhD on October 16, 2009 at 7:00am EDT
  • Be wary of administrators who are new and who find themselves in trouble so soon!  This can portend nothing but trouble on the horizon.  I have no card in this "deck" of a story, but really:  A new Provost who already has trouble?  What does this suggest about the decision-making skills of the President?!  This can mean nothing except a probable tumultuous tenure for the Provost.  I wish the professors well at Butler because I think there's going to be some sustained tension there for quite some time.

    Personally, I find it refreshing that a stepchild would support his mother so overtly. It's troubling that he used a blog to undercut the University's credibility, but he's young and it's apparent, unaware of the implications of his actions.

    I still believe, however, that the President and Provost are "protesting too much" and that they are going to find themselves the target of some "votes of no confidence" within a few years.  That's my prediction. Let's revisit this school in three years to see if both of them are still employed as administrators.

  • Posted by talleyrand on October 16, 2009 at 7:45am EDT
  • Whether or not the university should sue its students, this young man needs to be subjected to some kind of serious discipline. What he has done is not fundamentally different from what Juicy Campus was about.

    We have not as a society figured out how to handle anonymous slander on the Internet, but we need to keep working on it, and I (having nothing to do with Butler, but working at a school that has our own anonymous blogger) would be fine with it if the punishment this young man receives comes in hindsight to seem too severe. People who hide behind the anonymity of the Internet in order to damage people they don't like need some motivation to think twice.

  • Posted by reader on October 16, 2009 at 8:00am EDT
  • Thank you Inside Higher Ed for supplying the actual blog in question. Difficult to imagine how anyone could find any of this libelous or threatening. I hope everyone will take a minute to read the actual document before accusing this brave young person of libel.

  • Posted by Bradjward , Former E-Comm Coordinator at Butler U on October 16, 2009 at 8:45am EDT
  • I've posted some initial thoughts and comments on this story over at my blog:

    http://squaredpeg.com/index.php/2009/10/16/butler-university-sues-anonymous-blogger

    As a former employee and the first to have a discussion with this anonymous student, I'm saddened at the way this is being handled.

  • Posted by TLC , Adjunct at Walsh University on October 16, 2009 at 9:15am EDT
  • Put this on the list of places I don't think I would like to work.......

  • Posted by Fienen on October 16, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • @talleyrand: I think you have a fundamental misunderstanding of what libel is. I kept a close eye on this situation as it unfolded a year ago, and the content then was not libelous, at least at face value. Everything that was published was mostly correspondence, and opinion based on that. Truth is the ultimate defense against slander/libel/defamation. You can't be punished for printing it, anonymously or otherwise. People have done this in the media for years ("Our source, who wishes to remain anonymous...").

    Butler is making a big mistake, and I would lay down big odds against them winning this. Heck, the kid wouldn't even need a lawyer. Just show up, and point out it's true, and walk out (okay, it's not that simple, but that's what it will boil down to).

  • anonymity
  • Posted by RM on October 16, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • Talleyrand's comment struck a chord, since I was just thinking about my own habit of commenting only under my initials on this site. Why do I do it? Is it fair? I think he's right that more thinking about writing anonymously has to happen, though I don't think it a new phenomenon--perhaps exacerbated by the internet though.

    Still, I can't help but chuckle that "talleyrand" complains about anonymous posting under the name Talleyrand. Or is that French guy still alive?

  • too sensitive
  • Posted by JW McCoy on October 16, 2009 at 9:30am EDT
  • Does the blanket of free speech only cover faculty and staff but not the students?

  • Shame all around -- Except One
  • Posted by Bryan Price on October 16, 2009 at 9:45am EDT
  • This is quite a fascinating story. I found myself, based upon the information herein, decidedly in the middle--which is most unusual for me--but, at the end of the story, believe there is only one who holds the moral high ground. People in support of Jess Zimmerman, while some of your support sounds appropriately based since you may know him and value the increasingly threatened right to free speech, would, as has proven the case too often within the past several years, take a far different line when the "anonymous" blogger marched onto campus or into someone's home and committed violent and potentially catastrophic criminal acts. Not that this "anonymous" blogger would have done such a thing mind you--now that his identity is known you are certain he is incapable of such things--but the college should have been "proactive" and "mindful" of such potentially threatening advances, doing everything possible to protect the university community--or so your charge would be if things had turned out as mentioned. However, such behavior IS a very real threat and a very real scenario and administrators have a responsibility to protect their safety, their reputations, and their community; they cannot allow alleged slander to go unchallenged by the cowardly anonymous poison pen nor can they, and more importantly, allow perceived threats to go uncontested.

    On the other hand, the University, if the details presented herein are accurate, attempted to settle out of court with Michael Zimmerman by linking his case to his son's, they are clearly misguided. Any ethical high ground they maintained evaporated instantly with such bully, pressure tactics and they have cheapened their political and moral position. They may or may not continue to hold a legal edge relative to the Jess Z. case, but any good will and positive authority they had to pursue such a case under the auspices of community and personal concern were abandoned with the linkage of unrelated, except by blood, cases.

    It is too bad all of this has to be fought in the legal system. Shame on you Jess Zimmerman for using anonymity allegely to slander, defame, and intimidate; kudos to Butler for acting proactively to defend its community and reputation; kudos to Michael Zimmerman for holding the high moral ground and compelling Butler to deal from the top of the deck; shame on you Butler for attempting to link Jess's case with that of his Dad. Spank the boy, deal fairly with the (former) dean/Dad, Butler admit your mishandling of the same, and move on.

  • Posted by Michael Bush on October 16, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • Good point RM. I use talleyrand as a kind of alter ego for a number of things, including my little higher ed blog, but it's not meant to hide my identity. The blog where I currently use it explains my use of that name, and can be found at an address that includes my real name: http://michaeldbush.blogspot.com.

    Thanks for that accountability moment. Real name commenting and blogging is a good idea that brings much-needed accountability for our integrity to Internet communication.

    There are some instances (such as Dean Dad's here on IHE.com) when anonymity is understandable because it is used to avoid gratuitous problems rather than well-deserved consequences. Ordinarily, though I think that if we're not willing to put our names to it, we need to think twice whether we have any business saying it.

  • Is anyone here reading the blog before commenting?
  • Posted by Blackbart on October 16, 2009 at 10:15am EDT
  • I find the remarks by those above who want to "spank" the student involved for committing libel and slander mind-boggling. Did you READ the blog? If so, please point to the precise language that could possibly be legally construed as libel or slander. The blog, read fairly, looks like an angry (and maybe "mean") editorial, but it doesn't come within spitting distance of illegal speech. The issue of the blogger's initial anonymity is legally (and, I'd argue, ethically) moot. And Bryan Price's concern that such a blog constitutes a potential threat to public safety is Orwellian paranoia.

    This kid did nothing wrong. Nothing. Zip. If an administrator doesn't like it when people question his judgement or say mean things about him, then he should seriously consider a different line of work. It's a political job. Calling "libel" and grinding up the university legal machine because you don't like someone else's opinion of your job performance smacks of fascism, and at the least works in a spirit contrary to American discourse and higher education.

    Not only do administrators NOT "have a responsibility to protect their safety, their reputations, and their community" from the terrible dangers of--ooh!--legally-expressed opinions, they have a responsibility to protect the expression of those opinions, even when they disagree with them. Welcome to America. Welcome to higher education. People won't always like what you do. They'll say so. Get over it.

  • Response to Shame all around
  • Posted by reader on October 16, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • You make many good points. I have just one question. Did you read the attached blog in question? If so, did you really find anything you could label as attempts to"slander, defame and intimidate." Maybe I am naive, but my read on it is a student questioning authority figures and calling on administrators to account for their actions. Furthermore, it appears that the University was well aware of the bloggers identity before the law suit was filed. I would hope if the Butler administration had any reason to believe that this would escalate to the level of violence you warn of steps would have been taken to provide protection. How does filing a lawsuit achieve protection for a campus community?

  • Posted by Fienen on October 16, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • Michael, I can't hardly believe you're even serious. How about Richard Sauders or Silence Dogood, both used by a little known figure in American History who's real name was Benjamin Franklin. Maybe you've heard of him? Or Publius, used by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay to write this throwaway document called The Federalist Papers. Anonymity is an EXTREMELY powerful tool in a free society. Saying you shouldn't say it if you're not willing to put your name to it is like saying if you're innocent of a crime you should have nothing to hide in an investigation.

    The U.S. Supreme Court has held, repeatedly, that a constitutional right to anonymous speech is protected under the 1st Amendment. The State of Ohio couldn’t require campaign literature to be signed with name and address of the distributor (McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Commission); the Village of Stratton couldn’t make canvassers register first, despite strong local interests in preventing fraud (Watchtower Bible & Tract Society v. Village of Stratton). Even significant government interests in protecting their citizens can’t be met with restrictions on anonymous speech.

  • Posted by Michael Bush on October 16, 2009 at 10:30am EDT
  • Blackbart, there are a number of claims quoted in the article that appear to be statements of fact that are, at a minimum, not obviously true.

    For example, there is this: "Zimmerman’s claim that Alexander and Comstock were “engaged in a conspiracy to misrepresent the circumstances of the departure” of Gullickson as chair."

    Maybe such claims are true, but that would have to be shown. It is not as obviously either true or an opinion as you seem to be suggesting. Either they conspired to lie or they didn't. If they didn't, saying they did is at least potentially libelous.

  • Posted by Blackbart on October 16, 2009 at 11:00am EDT
  • Mr. Bush: The example you cite is an opinion based on the information collected and presented to that point in the blog. It's certainly not the only reasonable opinion one can form based on that evidence, but if this is libel, then so is just about every newspaper column I read on the op-ed page these days. If Ann Coulter and Maureen Dowd aren't being sued for the virulent conclusions they draw, then neither should this kid.

  • To tallyrand, RM, and Bryan Price
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on October 16, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Two things ...

    First, as one who frequently writes under the pseudonym, Frizbane Manley, I’m asking you to cut this kid some slack. Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay (aka Publius); Jonathan Swift (aka Lemuel Gulliver, Isaac Bickerstaff, M.B. Drapier, etc); Samuel Longhorn Clemens (aka Mark Twain, Thomas Jefferson Snodgrass, Sieur Louis de Conte, etc.); the Rev. Charles Dodgson (aka Lewis Carroll); C.S. Lewis (aka Clive Hamilton and N.W. Clerk); Mary Ann Evans (aka George Eliot); Amandine Aurore Lucile Dupin (aka George Sand); Karen Blixen (aka Isak Dinesen); the Almighty (aka Solomon, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, etc., all of those “secretaries” into whose ears the Almighty apparently “whispered” ... it’s not called The Word of God for nothing); Henri Cartan, Jean Coulomb, Jean Dieudonné, René de Possel, Szolem Mandelbrojt, André Weil, etc. (aka Nicolas Bourbaki); and my all time favorite, Lemony Snicket, would all take issue with your denigration of anonymity or pseudonymity.

    I respect your right to believe what you believe. On the other hand, you will be at a complete loss to present evidence that establishing one’s identity makes hir any more or less accountable for hir views. I, for one, take great pains to treat Frizbane Manley and what he has to say with the utmost respect.

    Second, good show Blackbart!

  • bad choices by Butler
  • Posted by saddened , Bio Prof at Midwest U on October 16, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Wow ! I can see the new student recruitment ads now. "Come to Butler...the place where you can test your critical thinking skills in a court of law."

    Ultimately it will be the students and faculty who remain at Butler that will be the losers in this mess. Michael Zimmerman is very talented...what a sad commentary on the administration to sue a student...and fire one of their finest administrators.

    Best of luck, Michael...we have an opening at our school...you should move here.

     

  • Posted by Read the Blog on October 16, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • Michael,
    I see your confusion. The university may be challenging Zimmerman's claim that Alexander and Comstock were “engaged in a conspiracy to misrepresent the circumstances of the departure” of Gullickson as chair" but that claim was never made by Zimmerman. In fact, there is no mention of "conspiracy" anywhere in the blog.

  • Fact or opinion?
  • Posted by Sandy Thatcher , Penn State University Press on October 16, 2009 at 12:45pm EDT
  • As one who has been threatened with a libel suit, I have taken more thasn a passing interest in libel law. While the line between fact and opinion is often hazy, and some of the remarks the Butler administration considers libelous as quoted in the article seem to me to fall well within the orbit of opinion, I can't agree with some commentators who see no basis for libel at all. Saying that Mr. Alexander "lied" to faculty, for instance, strikes me as much more a matter of fact than opinion. It can presumably be proved true or false, and perhaps Mr. Zimmerman has sufficient evidence to make a credible case for truth here. More power to him if he does, as that would show he has done his homework well and understood the risks he was taking. If he wins this case, perhaps he should consider going on to law school and becoming an expert in libel law!

  • Posted by AK on October 16, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • Doesn't anyone else find it funny that the student outlawed ad hominem attacks on his blog, and then proceeded to engage in...ad hominem attacks? I'm just sayin'.

  • Posted by jim on October 16, 2009 at 1:00pm EDT
  • In regard to the post by Bryan Price:

    Who IS this guy??

    Since I am posting anonymously I suppose I could be accused of behaving in a libelous fashion toward Mr. Price.
    Should I be sued by him?
    I don't see any grounds for that.

    I could work over his post, line by line and attempt to show where and why he is attackable and maybe that would be defamatory.
    Probably not!

    It looks to me (reading the comments) that a number of people who have no legal background are commenting on a very technical and dangerous legal point. Many of the comments reveal a bias toward authority and privilege.

    One thing that struck me is, as "ObservationPostPHD" said, that a stepson would so publicly defend his stepmother. (I say "publicly" because it sounds like he came forward voluntarily to break his anonymity.)
    Somebody is doing something right!!!

  • Butler Sounds Like a Mess
  • Posted by English Prof. on October 16, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • Man, am I happy I don't teach at Butler. And as the father of three college-aged children, I am even happier they do not attend Butler. What can the Provost and President possibly be thinking? Suing a student for opinions expressed on a blog? Intellectual discourse is a rough and tumble world, and college students are notorious for expressing themselves on blogs and in student newspapers in ways that often make university administrators wince. But I can't imagine too many administrators going to court and suing a student for this sort of thing. It's an embarrassment. Sure, zero-tolerance, law-and-order types are going to seize on this and say the kid had it coming, but this is liberal arts college we're talking about--a place of higher learning--not a fascist state. Butler University is going to be defined by this act against one of its students for some time, regardless of the outcome. Reading this article, I can't imagine too many people--students or faculty--who would want to go anywhere near there.

  • Coincidence
  • Posted by Matt on October 16, 2009 at 2:15pm EDT
  • What seems strange to me is that in the midst of all of this, the kid's father was removed from his administrative position. Seems awfully unlikely - especially given the joint settlement Butler allegedly came up with - that these two things are unrelated. Butler comes off looking very badly from this whole ordeal.

  • Posted by Duncan on October 16, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • It seems clear that the Butler administration is pursuing a jihad against this entire family. The TrueBU blog is ill-tempered in places but well written and surprisingly well supported with primary sources, observations from participants, etc. I would wager any amount of money that 95% of universities are subjected to more malicious blogs with less supporting evidence. If TrueBU is actionable libel, we may as well take the editors of every campus newspaper in the country to court. Short of bomb threats, university administrators simply do not sue students for what they say. Whatever happens to this kid, this can not possibly end well for Butler University.

  • Posted by Constance Hindman on October 16, 2009 at 3:30pm EDT
  • The culture at Butler University is that of fear and contempt. The Fac/Staff have been subjecated to an oppressive administration for years. Unfortunately, many of us have tried, failed and paid a price for trying to make the university as is was when Geoff Bannister was president. Now a student is being sued for expressing their fundamental belief. Where is the Board of Trustees in all of the is mess?

  • Big mistake
  • Posted by Hickersonhm , Marketing Communications Coord. at UCM on October 16, 2009 at 3:45pm EDT
  • Wow, Butler University! If you thought you were getting negative publicity from a few unfavorable blog posts, you certainly didn't do yourself any favors by suing one of your students. What good can come of this? I've lost a lot of respect for that institution.

  • Butler's PBK chapter
  • Posted by ADD on October 16, 2009 at 4:30pm EDT
  • If this had come out two weeks ago, I may have voted against Butler getting a Phi Beta Chapter. I certainly would have asked some questions about it.

  • Posted by DG on October 16, 2009 at 5:30pm EDT
  • Those here yelling about "slander" need to learn what slander is. Furthermore, they need a good refresher in Freedom of Speech. Our constitutional freedoms do not end when we step on campus. The idea that an anonymous blogger might be "dangerous" is foolish - this is simply an attempt to stamp out dissent. The idea that a critic of a dean or provost's management style is going to physical hurt them is inane.

    Butler is a private school and can do what they wish, but I do think they are making a huge error. I hope FIRE gets involved.

  • Posted by cvd on October 17, 2009 at 8:00am EDT
  • It is supremely disappointing that few who have posted have taken the time to truly investigate what is going on here before spouting off that BU is a) a horrible place to work and b) making a huge mistake. Butler did not sue this student in response to his blog posts, they asked for subpeonas (which wouldn't have been issued by a judge unless found to have merit) to find the identity of an anonymous party who emailed twice to the provost a "I know what you did last summer" style message. I'd like to hear from any faculty who have righteously posted here: what would YOU do if you got an anonymous email, for example, that says "You gave me a C this semester and I can make things really difficult for you." In this age of school shootings, you are going to tell me that you would stand on your free speech principles and not be the least bit concerned? The university has acted completely appropriately on investigating the harassment of one of it's employees.

  • Posted by ButlerArtsAdminStudent on October 17, 2009 at 8:00am EDT
  • As an Arts Administration (Nonprofit management) major and Public Relations minor at Butler University, I have tried to apply this situation to possible scenarios that I may face in the future. While the world of higher ed is a very different machine than other not-for-profit organizations, the need for transparency is still apparent, especially to its most important public: the consumer, the student. I would not think that an institution that depends on its students' tuition for 83% of its annual income would treat students with the alleged bullying nature described. I would assume that much of this incident would not have occurred if administration had communicated effectively to the students affected.

    Students depended heavily on such blogs as "TrueBU" and "The Butler Underground" for news on campus. I checked both of these blogs almost daily during the last academic year, as did many of my colleagues. I was in Chicago on business when the Gullickson events occurred and depended on TrueBU, as it was the only way to access the information. I attempted to analyze both sides for myself before I came to conclusions about the incident, but never received any communication regarding the incident from administration until the announcement of Dan Bolin as Chair of the School of Music. The lack of transparency forced me to question everything and come to conclusions that may not have been indicative of the actual events. For the first time, I was not proud to be affiliated with Butler University and the Jordan College of Fine Arts administration.

    Concerned Butler student

    I retain my anonymity, as did the developers of our nation to write the Federalist Papers, so that I may not be wrongfully discriminated against in my frequent association with Butler University administration.

  • Posted by untenured so anonymous on October 17, 2009 at 9:15am EDT
  • cvd, sadly it is you who has not taken the time to actually investigate what is going on at your own institution. Your president's statement is so riddled with faulty reasoning that even the undergraduate students are deconstructing it with ease and pointing out its flaws. A former Butler employee removes all doubt as to whether the institution is speaking truth or doing some fancy footwork to rewrite history. Bradjward's post here at 8:45 a.m. yesterday provided the link to his blog: (http://squaredpeg.com/index.php/2009/10/16/butler-university-sues-anonymous-blogger) which makes it clear that the University was aware of the blogger's identity nearly a year ago, months before the lawsuit was filed. If your adminstration is not being honest with you about this fact, might there be other statemenst they are making that are also false?

    Your President has done a good job of providing a statement with unrelated points that he has tied together in what appears to be an attempt to silence the outrage that should be taking place for the bully tactics they have employed and are now trying to defend. As the President did in his communication, in your post you similarly provide a quote of a supposed threat. I am not reading anything in the university statement that indicates any steps were taken to determine the identity of the sender of the e-mail you and he claim struck fear into their hearts. Clearly the President's tactic of presenting items to confuse the issue at hand has worked because it got you to believe that if we allow anyone to voice issues of concern this could result in physical violence. What's in the water coolers at Butler?

    Have we really reached the point in academia where it is illegal to speak out when we believe university administration is traveling down a wrong headed path? Is it really OK for university administration to use the bully tactics employed at Butler University and then claim they had to because employees were "afraid for their own safety"? Really? It has already been pointed out by someone else but I think it deserves a repeat - if you fear for your safety wouldn't the appropriate response be to file a police report rather than a lawsuit?

  • Posted by D Moore , Student Affairs on October 17, 2009 at 11:00am EDT
  • Nontenured, I cound not have said it better, thank you.

  • Accreditation and Academic Freedom
  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee at Florida Higher Education Accountability Project on October 17, 2009 at 11:00am EDT
  • As Butler Univ. prepares for the renewal of its accreditation from NCA/HLC in the next year or so, it might prove worthwhile for their board and administration to re-examine their academic freedom protections.
    According to the NCA Handbook, one of the criterion for reaffirmation is that "The board has approved and disseminated statements supporting freedom of inquiry for the organization’s students, faculty, and staff, and honors those statements in its practices."
    http://www.ncahlc.org/download/Handbook03.pdf

    Third-party comments will be solicited as well (see NCA website for procedures). Well-researched comments that are submitted in a timely manner will ensure that the board and school address any problems with their academic freedom policy.

  • Further reading and reflection
  • Posted by Michael Bush on October 17, 2009 at 1:15pm EDT
  • I'm going to write a blog post about this, but in this thread I'd just like to record the fact that I've come to see my first comment here as hasty. It is clear to me now that I originally blamed Zimmerman the student more out of my own experience with unfair bloggers than out of knowledge of his situation. For that I am sorry. It is also clear to me that neither the young man nor the university has handled this situation constructively.

  • Posted by ACE , Student at Butler University on October 17, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • I am a Butler Student that read portions of the TrueBU blog last year. I am ashamed to say that I attend the same school as Jess Zimmerman. I understand that he may have had issues with the way Butler was handling some situations. However, how he handled his anger / disappointment was certainly not in line with what we call "the Butler Way." I cannot imagine that there is another university in this country with administrators that are so accessible. He easily could have taken his issues straight to Bobby Fong - our university's president who has done much to advance our school forward over the past several years. Am I proud of the actions that Butler is taking? No, certainly not. I am also not happy about the publicity that this case has garnered.
    Butler is a wonderful school, which has enriched me in more ways than I ever could have imagined when I arrived on campus. The way our school is being portrayed currently is taking away from the hundreds of amazing aspects that Butler has to offer. This portrayal never would have happened if Jess Zimmerman could have handled his issues in a more appropriate manner.
    Soon, I will be Butler University alumni. I want to be able to say that with pride, not with shame because other students have gone around telling the world about everything that is wrong with my school. Every university has some problems, and Butler is no exception. So for all of you reading this, who are not associated with Butler...please remember that this case does not define what our school is all about, and that there are so many amazing aspects of Butler that outweigh the few petty problems that this one student brought to light.

  • Posted by reader on October 17, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • Having worked under both Michael Zimmerman and Andrea Gullickson's administration (dean and department chair, respectively). I assert that they are two of the most ethical and capable administrators in Higher Ed. Shame on Butler.

  • Blogging
  • Posted by Zack Ford on October 17, 2009 at 10:30pm EDT
  • As a new young professional who has a blog of my own, this story prompted me to explore the question of how higher education interacts with new media...

    http://zackfordblogs.com/2009/10/does-higher-education-understand-the-culture-of-blogging/

  • Not surprised
  • Posted by Butler , Student at East Coast School on October 19, 2009 at 3:30am EDT
  • I can't speak as to the legality of Jess's posts, but I am completely unsurprised by Butler's handling of this. Whether they have the right to do what they're doing, it's obviously just stupid to be doing it. I can tell you that the problem is not that the administration hates free speech, per se, it's that they absolutely hate any mess or dissension. This just happens to result in them not being big fans of free speech. When I went to Butler and was on student government I met with Bobby Fong and other administrators regularly and they often kept important information to themselves if they knew it would be met with any dissent. The students are treated like children, not like partners (or to be crass, customers). I loved my time there, but there's a reason I stopped being involved in student government. I realized that if there was anything important, the students would not be consulted first. The school is run like a high school, not a university.

  • raising voices
  • Posted by butler student on October 19, 2009 at 7:30am EDT
  • Please help us make our voices heard by signing our petition asking the Butler President and Board of Trustees to come to their senses. This is not just our issue but about freedom of speech on college campuses everywhere.

    www.ipetitions.com/petition/butler

  • Business as Usual at Butler
  • Posted by Butler Alumnus , Archivist & Professor of History at Earlham College on October 19, 2009 at 11:45am EDT
  • I was a student at Butler from 1975 to 1979 and a rather embarrassed alumnus. These ill-advised actions are consistent with what I remember administrators doing thirty years ago. I feel sorry for the dedicated faculty there who have to deal with their successors.

  • As Voltaire said...
  • Posted by Simon Sibelman , Associate Executive Director at Virginia Holocaust Museum on October 19, 2009 at 1:30pm EDT
  • As Voltaire said: "Je ne partage pas tes opionions, mais je suis pret a donner ma vie pour te permettre de les exprimer et de les vivre librement." The Butler Administration needs to step back and recognize its heavyhanded actions suggest it will crush any voices critical of its policy. Expressing opinions contrary to administrative dictates should lead realy leaders to engage in dialogue with its constituents in order to rectify a disasterous series of situations incrfeasingly reflect poorly on Butler University and indeed call into question the ethos on which any university is founded. Sadly, having reading all documents associated with this case currently posed on line, I can only formulate a single view: this is a pathetic effort on the part of several administrators whose egos have been bruised by an undergraduate's courage and chutzah to find a suitable scapegoat for their own inadequancies.

  • Anonymous out of fear
  • Posted by BLJ at Butler University Undergrad on October 20, 2009 at 2:15am EDT
  • Have you noticed the authors of the previous commenters on this article? Posts by people named "ButlerArtsAdminStudent" "Untenured So Anonymous" "Butler student" -- even the commenter who supported the administration is signed "ACE" and I, too, a Butler student sign only my initials out of... FEAR.

    What else can you gain from this situation? This is not a lesson for Butler students and faculty to be responsible users of the internet (as the administration has tried to convince us it is) --it's a warning to whisper, to hide and to forget any free speech we once might have had. Otherwise, who knows what kind of consequences we'll see. Earlier today, I asked another student if she had yet signed the ipetition mentioned in an earlier post. Her response? "I'm too afraid. I don't want to start any trouble with the administration. And an anonymous signature doesn't count."

    Thanks for the lesson on free speech, Butler. Unfortunately, it's one I wish I didn't have to learn.

  • Posted by Doug Moore on October 20, 2009 at 7:00am EDT
  • Board of Trustee,

    Are you hearing what the Students, Faculty, Staff are saying?

  • Proud to be a Bulldog with Jess Zimmerman
  • Posted by Rachel Nealis , Pharmacy Student at Butler University on October 20, 2009 at 1:45pm EDT
  • ACE, I am very proud to be at the same school as Jess Zimmerman. I chose Butler because I love the people, the faculty and most of the administrators here. The academics are also top notch. Jess has repeatedly said that he would not trade his time at Butler for anything. Is it not telling that a student being sued by his University has had such a wonderful experience at other times that he wouldn't transfer even after this situation?

    HOWEVER, I am ashamed of the administration who has taken an outlet of free speech and turned it into a personal attack with no legal basis. There are many other universities out there who have no sought legal action against students who are saying threatening and libelous statements. Comparatively, Butler is pursuing legal action over a very small incident.

    To those of you posting anonymously from Butler, don't give in to the fear that the administration has cast over the campus. As a proud supporter of Jess Zimmerman and a proud Bulldog, I will not be silenced. If Jess's voice is going to be stifled and his credibility dashed by the administration, I will only speak more loudly and more often on his behalf and on behalf of our rights to free speech!

  • Let it go
  • Posted by amywalker on October 20, 2009 at 5:00pm EDT
  • I am not a Butler alumnus. I am an alumnus of another private university, and while I was a student, there was a student who anonymously penned a blog entitled, "The Rumor Mill". For two years he blogged about the unexposed corruption of the University's administration, among other less important issues. Unlike Zimmerman, the student provided no facts to support his statements, and his sarcastic tone did not merit much credibility; however, he did gain some attention. While some of his blog posts resulted in angered faculty, staff members and students alike, more importantly, it generated campus-wide discussion. And because we were college students, rather than junior high or high school students, we were allowed and able to discuss his blog openly and objectively among ourselves and make our own conclusions about his posts. His blog was not shut down, nor were we forced to disgree with him by aligning ourselves with the opposing Administration's filed lawsuit against him. In fact, his identity was eventually revealed, and he received no punishment other than moderate criticism from his own peers. His blog--although inactive for a few years now--still exists today, and it can be pulled up at anytime by anyone.

    More effectively, a group of students created short filmed documentaries that exposed the university's administrative corruption in true Michael Moore fashion. The students did not distribute these videos to the students; they posted them on YouTube and on blogs all over the publicly used internet. No one was forced to watch them; no student was coerced into believing them. Word eventually spread, and hundreds of students, on their own accord, went to see for themselves what had generated so much buzz. As unattractive as those videos were, there was no lawsuit filed against the students by the administration, nor was there any sort of punishment assigned to them.

    It's called free speech. If Zimmerman were actually coercing students to read his blog, it'd be one thing. If he were printing out his articles and manipulatively sneaking them into students' laptop bags, or if it was discovered that he was a learned hypnotist and could persuade students by tricking them into unconsciousness, then I would agree that he should suffer some sort of punishment for his actions. However, he didn't make anyone read or believe his words. If I were a Butler student right now, this whole debacle would make me run to the nearest computer and get on Zimmerman's blog to see what exactly he wrote that caused the administration to react in such a strong fashion. And it would then be the administration's reaction, NOT Zimmerman's blog, that would influence me to read and even believe what Zimmerman wrote.

    Butler's administration needs to realize that they're stirring up more controversy than Zimmerman ever did.

  • Posted by ACE , Student at Butler University on October 20, 2009 at 8:15pm EDT
  • For those of you that think I am supporting the administration, think again...I clearly stated in my last post that I don't agree with the steps that they are taking. That said, Jess Zimmerman needs to realize that if he is going to handle his problems in an immature fashion, there are going to be consequences.

    I think the one main point that is being left unsaid here is that Jess did everything he could to get his blog attention, including soliciting it to potential applicants. That step was beyond inappropriate. I have no problem with Jess wanting the right to free speach. However, if he really cared for Butler, he would have handled the issue internally, and would not have tried to show potential students (who are our school's future) every negative aspect that Butler has to offer.

    Just as a side note...the main support for Jess on campus is coming from his Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity brothers and other members of the Greek community (primarily Pi Beta Phi). It's interesting how that group of people is blowing this issue into such a big deal.

  • Fact, opinion and libel
  • Posted by Afi Scruggs , freelancer/occassional journalism educator at none on October 21, 2009 at 12:30am EDT
  • I'm reading these posts, but I see little or no mention of this important court case: Milkovich v. Lorain Journal. Here's a description from about.com " Milkovich v. Lorain Journal Co., 497 U.S. 1 (1990), was a United States Supreme Court case that rejected the argument that a separate opinion privilege existed against libel."

    If a blogger's opinion is based on an inaccuracy or falsehood, then the opinion is not protected. There's lots of gray area in this law, of course, but claiming an administrator lied, for example, can be risky if the claim turns out to be wrong.

  • What an ad hom isn't
  • Posted by RBH , Ex-prof, retired on October 21, 2009 at 3:00am EDT
  • AK wrote

    •  

      "Doesn't anyone else find it funny that the student outlawed ad hominem attacks on his blog, and then proceeded to engage in...ad hominem attacks? I'm just sayin'."

    You might want to look up what an <i>ad hominem</i> argument actually is. As I read the young man's blog, I didn't see <i>ad hominem</i> arguments. Here's a hint: an insult isn't an <i>ad hom</i>.

  • Posted by Gelhaus , Student at Butler on October 21, 2009 at 2:00pm EDT
  • ACE:

    I'll disagree with you. Also a student at Butler, the support for Jess is fairly strong all over campus, not just from the greek community. For example, both the English department and JCFA have been very vocal in their support for Jess and his situation.

  • Interesting Posts
  • Posted by Michael Landes at Butler University '08 on October 21, 2009 at 2:45pm EDT
  • I have been following this story for quite some time now. I have read all of the blogs, news articles, comments, etc. One of the most consistent comments that I find in each medium is that Butler should use this as a "teaching" moment instead of an aggressive action on a dissenting student. I COULDN'T AGREE MORE. Just look at the discussions that have been going on all over the internet on sites that are following these stories. Opinions are free flowing both for and against Jess's actions and what a healthy discussion it has been.

    Here is a suggestion for on how I think this should be handled moving forward (I am of course not a PhD or anything so just humor me):

    1) Butler, drop everything against Jess. By drop, I mean actually drop it (apparently the lawsuit is still up even though Butler says they dropped it). The legal action is unnecessary.

    2) Jess, apologize for the tone of the email you sent over Christmas. Yea ok the email was written with positive intentions, but it did come out of left field during your break. Best to just sacrifice that one.

    3) Leave the blog alone. Butler, there was nothing libelous on that blog. Dissention does not constitute an immediate need to silence the dissentor.

    4) Butler, quit trying to cover your butts and apologize to Jess for the way that this was handled. I think we can all agree that a threat of a lawsuit is incredibly extreme to put on the shoulders of a young college student. Also, if any of you haven't already, please go to Jess's website to see the documents written by the University addressed to the faculty. All I can say is WOW.

    5) Continue to have open forums about free speech on campus. Good call faculty and students. This in fact could become a very powerful theme for the rest of the semester (or next) and a great teaching opportunity.

    7) Move on. Yes, this has been a very heated issue. Yes, I believe there was injustice. No, I do not feel we need to harbor bitterness. There is this very powerful thing called "forgiveness" that I believe both parties need to employ at some point.

    Agree with me or not I don't really care. Just some thoughts. Also, ACE? Of course his main support would come from his fraternity brothers. Does that suprise you in some way? I would be disappointed if they weren't the loudest voice. Quite frankly if the Greek world is the loudest and most involved in this issue, it only makes me prouder to be an alumnus of it.

    -Michael Landes Butler '08, Lambda Chi Alpha

  • Why Write Anonymously?
  • Posted by Jill Reid , Biology at Virginia Commonwealth University on October 21, 2009 at 3:00pm EDT
  • Considering the fact that his father and stepmother held high positions in the university, it seems in my opinion, that he was trying to protect his entire family by being anonymous. Let's face it, he wasn't a student whose parents didn't work at the university - there was more at stake here than just him wanting to remain anonymous. The actions of Butler (the lawsuit, not renewing his father's position as dean,...) prove that there was something to fear.

    Additionally, by remaining anonymous he allowed readers to judge the merit of the information on their own, without being influenced by who he was (or who his parents were).

  • nothing to fear but fear itself
  • Posted by Estella Lauter , retired at retired on October 22, 2009 at 5:30am EDT
  • The comments from Landes at Butler and from VA Commonwealth are among the wisest to appear here in this interesting exchange. It is clear to me that a young man and his family have been wronged by this institution. The power differential between any administrator and any student blogger is far too great for Butler University to claim any serious threat against its integrity. Almost by definition, a university has far less to fear from an articulate student under any name who makes his or her thoughts public than it does from a student whose thoughts and actions are repressed or oppressed. What alarms me most in the previous discussion is that students who want to sign a petition in support of Jess are afraid to do so. What goes on in the classrooms at Butler may be excellent, but it will not produce well-educated citizens of a democracy if the students are not free to speak outside those rooms. The poet Audre Lorde spoke about the dangers of this kind of fear in a paper delivered at the Modern Language Association in 1977 which was later published in Sister Outsider (40-44): "For we have been socialized to respect fear more than our own needs for language and definition, and while we wait in silence for that final luxury of fearlessness, the weight of that silence will choke us."

    Jess spoke in the best way he knew how in his blog. The University used its power extravagantly. The settlement it proposed was repressive. Not only Jess but many others must continue to speak until this community fully embraces its educational mission despite its fears.

  • Hear Hear Landes
  • Posted by Amherst Prof on October 22, 2009 at 8:45am EDT
  • Landes you appear to be a fraternity brother of Zimmerman and I applaud your common sense about what he should be doing and looking out for his best interests. You are simply asking him to act as an adult. If he apologizes and shows even a moderate sense of honest responsibility, I would expect that this would result in an end to the entire matter. Unfortunately, my conclusion in reading his new blog is that he is actually proud of each and every statement contained in the previous blog and of what he did, including his ill-advised Christmas Day email that was uncalled for and, basically, just plain mean. He has deflected attention from that to the university's lawsuit. How anyone could read the blog and not find libel statements is beyond me-- it certainly contains statements that are potentially damaging to professional reputations.

  • Clarification
  • Posted by Michael Landes at Butler University '08 on October 22, 2009 at 12:00pm EDT
  • I appreciate the kind words Estella and Amherst Prof. I do, however, want to bring some clarification to the points that I was making in my last post (mostly in response to Amherst Prof). First, like was said in this commentor's post and in mine, I do agree that the email over Christmas was ill-advised. Could the message have been communicated more effectively? Yes. Could it have been done in a more well received time frame and medium? Yes. If this had been done, the message that Jess was trying to convey would probably have been received a little better (although they probably still wouldn't have liked it, but obviously that isn't the point). So, we are in agreeance there.

    Where we differ, however, is in the breakdown of the blogs. First, let's address the "TruBU" blog. On this site, Jess and commentors, were highly critical of the school's administration. What we all need to understand here is the difference between libel and criticism. If the accusatory statements which Jess made are found to be true or reasonably deduced opinion (through factual research and sources just like our media, government, and other entities), then the negative effect on the reputation of the administration is mute, regardless of how damaging it is. If, however, Jess was careless and just made things up to trash the administration, then there is a major issue. From reading Jess's blog, in my opinion, I have not found anything there to be libelous. One main reason that I believe this is the administration's reaction to his comments. Instead of being aggresive in refuting the claims of the blog directly with evidence and transparency to the faculty, students, and community, they decided to slap a lawsuit on Jess. To me, that shows at least some validity to what Jess is saying. It also suggests to me that the University is trying to hide something and instead is trying to deflect attention on him and his alleged libelous and defamatory statements.

    The second blog: "I am John Doe." With respect to your opinion Amherst Prof, I did not come to the same conclusion about this blog either. I think we would be naive to think that Jess is not proud of what he is doing. Of course he is! He is doing a very brave thing. Whether you agree with him or not, standing up to a University over such a highly visible and controversial topic like free speech is commendable. From my point of view, this blog is only a record of the happenings of this crisis. It also is meant to shed light on what he believes are inaccuracies in their statements, not only about him, but about their claims with the situation as a whole (please reference their statements about the lawsuit being dropped and never persued as an example. FYI, the court case is still active 3 days later).

    Look, there is a lot going on here and a lot that many of us are assuming is happening. Unfortunately, only two parties know exactly what is going here: The Butler Administration and the Zimmerman family. My hope and prayer is that this ends quickly and in the best interest of both parties. We must rely on them to settle their differences and hopefully in a constructive manner. This situation has already escalated way higher than it ever needed to be.

    Butler, let go of the pride and come clean with the issues. A little transparency could prevent misinterpretations in the future (Note: I am in no way stating that any have been made on behalf of Jess). Jess, I am proud to call you a brother and am proud that you are standing up for yourself and your rights. Just make me a promise. Don't let this bury you. Work to find common ground and work with the University (I know that is going to be difficult) to make a positive impact on the Butler community as a result of this issue.

    Peace out,

    Michael Landes, Butler University '08 Lambda Chi Alpha

  • Posted by prometheus on October 22, 2009 at 10:45pm EDT
  • Congratulations to Jess! Real education is about critical thinking and articulation.Shallow thinking and deference to authority is the product of the Corporate University, an entity whose primary function is to perpetuate itself and its income stream, while turning out functionaries who won't question the status quo.

  • Who would apply to Butler now?
  • Posted by Stella B. , accounting at andersen u. on October 28, 2009 at 10:00am EDT
  • I would hate to be the Admission Director at Butler right now. If you are potential applicant to the college, and you see the college suing a current student for an opinion different from the administration, would you go there? That's what I thought. Bad decision to sue the student and make all this national news.

  • free speech
  • Posted by Richard M. Berthold , Assoc Prof history at UNM -retired on October 28, 2009 at 5:45pm EDT
  • It is my experience of 30 years that universities really do not care what you say so long as it does not harm the institution's reputation/image or threaten a PC-based lawsuit. I ought to know: on 9/11 I made a comment about blowing up the Pentagon, and any pretence of free speech disappeared completely in the face of public ouitrage. Some in the state legislation even proposed what was in effect an unconstitutional bill of attainder.