Some Dubious Reasoning in Judge Gerard McHugh’s Haverford Opinion
Eugene blogged earlier today about Judge Gerard McHugh’s opinion dismissing a hostile environment complaint by Jewish students against Haverford College. I have not read the complaint, and I’m not going to take issue with Judge McHugh’s ruling–I tend to think that the strongest case Jewish students typically have is disparate treatment, not hostile environment, in part for the First Amendment reasons Judge McHugh identifies–but I did find some of his reasoning rather dubious, to wit:
(1) Plaintiffs also discuss assorted social media posts made by Haverford Professors Gina Velasco, Guangtian Ha, and Tarik Aougab on their personal social media accounts. Id. ¶¶ 49, 51, 54-57. These posts all disparage those who continue to support Israel, but vary in tone, taste, and conviction. Id. I begin with the observation the social media posts are leveled at the state of Israel, not people of Jewish descent.
Well, no. If social media posts by professors are disparaging supporters of Israel, those posts are disparaging individuals, not the state of Israel. On northeastern liberal arts campuses like Haverford, the most vocal supporters of Israel will be predominately, perhaps exclusively, Jewish students. Professors nevertheless have a right to criticize people, including Jewish people, for supporting Israel. However, there is a point where such criticism can be of a nature where the professor may be justly suspected of being unwilling to treat some of his or her students fairly. (Imagine a professor who says, for example, “I will take any opportunity I can to take revenge on any Zionists I come across.”) At that point, the university may have a duty to step in.
(2) At a meeting with Jewish community leaders to discuss the campus climate, Vice President Young also reportedly said that “Jewish students needed to condemn ‘genocide’ rather than report[] antisemitism.” At a similar meeting with Jewish community leaders, Plaintiffs also aver tha
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