The Volokh Conspiracy
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Settlement of University of Wyoming "God Created Male and Female and Artemis Langford Is a Male" Case
I wrote about the court decision in favor of plaintiff back in August; now I see that the parties have settled, and are asking for court approval of the following consent order:
1. Defendants are hereby permanently enjoined from censoring Schmidt's views on the sexual identity of Artemis Langford and from applying the one-year table ban on Schmidt that was initiated on December 7, 2022.
2. This injunction does not diminish Defendants' ability to sanction possible future misbehavior by Schmidt, such as continuing to engage with students who do not wish to speak with him.
3. Defendants shall pay certain attorney fees and expenses in the amount of $35,000 within 20 days of this Order….
Here's my original post:
[* * *]
From Schmidt v. Siedel, decided yesterday by Judge Nancy Freudenthal (D. Wyo.) (see also the coverage in Cowboy State Daily (Clair McFarland), and this post about a pseudonymity issue in a lawsuit stemming from the sorority controversy):
Schmidt is an elder at the Laramie Faith Community Church…. He has reserved a table in the UW Union breezeway on a regular basis for the past 17 years. The UW Union allows campus groups and various outside organizations to utilize breezeway tables to communicate with students. The breezeway tables provide access to a high degree of student pedestrian traffic. Schmidt uses his breezeway table to display various DVDs and books. He also places on his table a Velcro-backed sign with plastic lettering to display different messages.
According to UW Officials, they have over the years warned Schmidt to stay behind his breezeway table and not engage in a confrontational manner towards passersby. The University alleges it has received and documented complaints from students that Schmidt "got in people's faces" while trying to talk to them and chased after students who refused to speak with him. Schmidt states that he was not aware of any student complaints to University staff about him and received no warning from the University regarding student complaints.
In September of 2022, a UW student named Artemis Langford joined a UW sorority. Langford was born a biological male but identifies as female. In October, the UW university newspaper, the Branding Iron, ran a story about Langford joining the sorority, and included quotes from Langford. Other publications, including the Cowboy State Daily, Washington Examiner, and National Review, ran articles about Langford as the first openly transgender student in UW history to join a sorority.
Schmidt disagrees with the propriety of transgender students joining sororities, and on December 2, 2022, he placed a sign at his breezeway table in the Union stating, "God created male and female and Artemis Langford is a male." Various students gathered in front of his table in an attempt to block others, and Langford, from seeing Schmidt's sign. {Artemis Langford is both a UW student and an employee in the Wyoming Union.} These students engaged in tense debate with Schmidt.
UW Dean of Students Ryan O'Neil asked Schmidt to remove Langford's name from his sign because it violated Article II Section 2.B.4 of the UW Union policies {"Requests [for table space at the WY Union] may be denied for reasons which include, but may not be limited to, conflict with the mission of the University, conflict with the mission of the Wyoming Union, unfeasible setup/turnaround time, and historic negligence or abuse."}, and because it targeted an individual University student in a protected class. Schmidt initially refused to remove Langford's name; however after O'Neil responded that she would call University Police, he agreed to remove Langford's name. O'Neil left and Schmidt continued to speak with students from his table.
On December 5, 2022, UW President Edward Seidel sent out an email message to the UW community regarding the tabling incident. He stated that Schmidt had removed Langford's name from his sign when asked and that "while [Schmidt] engaged in heated exchanges with students and perhaps others throughout the afternoon, these interactions, were not in obvious violation of UW policies." Seidel went on to encourage community members to "engage regarding those with different perspectives with respect and integrity."
Various student groups felt disappointed with Seidel's response and on December 7, 2022, a UW alumni group sent a letter to Seidel disagreeing with his statement that Schmidt had not broken any UW policies. The letter recounted prior incidents in which Schmidt had allegedly yelled at and harassed students regarding their sexual identities. The letter asked Seidel to ban Schmidt from tabling in the UW Union. They stated that if he did not do so they would resign from alumni memberships, withhold donations to the University, and refuse to return to campus for future activities.
Later that day, Dean O'Neil sent Schmidt a letter suspending his ability to reserve a table in the UW breezeway until Spring 2024. She also reminded him to adhere to University policies or risk trespassing. She based this decision on a December 7th report from the University's Equal Opportunity Report and Response Office which stated that Schmidt had violated UW Regulation 4-2 (Discrimination and Harassment) and noted that his behavior was "on a trajectory which, if continued, is likely to also create a hostile environment." {UW Regulation 4-2 defines … ["harassment" as "Verbal or physical conduct that unreasonably interferes with an individual's work or academic performance or creates an intimidating or hostile work or educational environment.["]}
Dean O'Neil also cited the Wyoming Union Policies and Operating Procedures Article II Section 5.B.15 which prohibits discrimination or harassment and requires individuals tabling in the Union to bring views in a respectful and civil manner. Lastly, she referenced prior multiple verbal warnings to Schmidt for previous student complaints. Although Schmidt is unable to reserve a table in the breezeway until Spring 2024, he is not banned from campus, nor the Union building….
This likely violated Schmidt's First Amendment rights, the judge concluded, and therefore issued a preliminary injunction that "enjoins [university officials] from censoring Schmidt's views on the sexual identity of Artemis Langford and enjoins the application of the ban on tabling currently in effect."
Discriminatory harassment at a university is primarily governed by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. "Hostile environment" harassment cases first originated in the workplace. To bring a Title VII action for sexual harassment in the workplace, the harassment must be "must be sufficiently severe or pervasive to alter the conditions of the victim's employment and create an abusive working environment." To determine if an environment is hostile the court examines the "frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it is physically threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably interferes with an employee's work performance."
The Supreme Court extended these Title VII hostile environment cases to the Title IX context in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education (1999), holding that "a plaintiff must show harassment that is so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victims are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities."
In Bostock v. Clayton Cnty., Georgia, the Supreme Court ruled that Title VII extended to situations in which "an employer … intentionally treats a person worse because of sex—such as by firing the person for actions or attributes it would tolerate in an individual of another sex."
These cases thus focus primarily on conduct, rather than pure speech. See also R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul (1992) ("Where the government does not target conduct on the basis of its expressive content, acts are not shielded from regulation merely because they express a discriminatory idea or philosophy.") "[N]on-expressive, physically harassing conduct is entirely outside the ambit of the free speech clause." Saxe v. State Coll. Area Sch. Dist. (3d Cir. 2001). However, where "pure expression is involved, anti-discrimination law steers into the territory of the first amendment." "'Harassing' or discriminatory speech, although evil and offensive, may be used to communicate ideas or emotions that nevertheless implicate First Amendment protections." There is no "categorical 'harassment exception' to the First Amendment's free speech clause." …
Here, the facts do not demonstrate harassment under the Davis standard, i.e., harassment so severe, pervasive, and objectively offense that it denies the victims' equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities. Schmidt engaged in tense debate with students regarding the propriety of a biological male joining a sorority. He did not engage directly with Artemis Langford. His sign was pure speech and not conduct. Furthermore, Schmidt's speech does not meet the University's own definition of discrimination of harassment. There is no evidence Langford suffered any adverse consequences or experienced interference with academic or work performance.
Nor does Schmidt's speech meet the lesser Tinker standard of "substantial disruption" or "invasion of the rights of others." The University puts forth no evidence of either. Various students were upset by Schmidt's speech, but the "'mere desire to avoid the discomfort and unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular viewpoint' cannot justify the prohibition by school officials of a particular expression of opinion".
Schmidt's speech was expressive, with the intent to convey a particular message. Schmidt mentions Artemis Langford by name, but that is unavoidable, as the debate revolves around the propriety of a particular biological male participating in an activity— joining a sorority—traditionally reserved for biological females. Schmidt does not misgender Langford to denigrate her, but to debate a public issue. Normally, mentioning a student by name or ignoring a student's requested pronouns has low expressive value. Outside of a debate about gender, misgendering is of limited communicative value.
Here Schmidt's speech is part of an earnest debate about gender identity, a matter of public importance. "Gender identity … [is a] sensitive political topic[] and … undoubtedly matter[] of profound value and concern to the public…. Such speech occupies the highest rung of the hierarch of First Amendment values and merits special protection." "Speech on matters of public concern is at the heart of the First Amendment's protection. [I]t is the essence of self-government." This is particularly true on college campuses because they are the "marketplace of ideas." While elementary and public schools prioritize the inculcation of social values, universities seek to encourage inquiry and the challenging of a priori assumptions.
Therefore, this Court finds that Schmidt's speech is protected free expression and not harassment or discriminatory conduct.
The court went on to conclude that the "because University breezeway tables are not open to the general public and a reservation is required for use, this Court finds that the breezeway tables are a limited public forum," where the government as property owner may impose reasonable and viewpoint-neutral restrictions. But it concluded that the restriction imposed by the university was likely viewpoint-based, and thus impermissible even in a limited public forum:
Here, Schmidt wishes to express his viewpoint that Artemis Langford is a male and to debate the propriety of Langford's participation in a sorority. This is a viewpoint. The University counters that it allowed Schmidt to keep the remainder of his sign that did not contain Langford's name. However, without Langford's name Schmidt is unable to fully express his views regarding Langford's sex specifically. Students approached Schmidt's table to debate his views on Langford's sex. Presumably some of these students have views opposed to those of Schmidt and believe that Langford is female and belongs in a sorority. There is no indication that those students were prohibited from debating Schmidt or speaking Langford's name. Therefore, the University appears to be favoring one viewpoint over another….
{The granting of Schmidt's preliminary injunction does not diminish the University's ability to sanction possible future misbehavior by Schmidt, such as continuing to engage with students who do not wish to speak with him.}
I think this is the correct result, though I am even more skeptical of attempts to recharacterize speech as "harassment" than the judge is (see here). Note that a policy categorically forbidding outside groups from mentioning students by name might be seen as permissibly viewpoint-neutral; but that wasn't the policy here: Saying that Langford is a woman and not a man wouldn't have been forbidden; likewise as to, for instance, condemning by name one of the students challenging Langford's admission to the sorority.
Schmidt is represented by Douglas J. Mason (Mason & Mason) and Nathan W Kellum (Center for Religious Expression).
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To determine if an environment is hostile the court examines the "frequency of the discriminatory conduct; its severity; whether it is physically threatening or humiliating, or a mere offensive utterance; and whether it unreasonably interferes with an employee's work performance."
Interesting that the truth of a statement is not involved - - - - - - - - -
I find it interesting that the manner and purpose of the speech aren't mentioned. I don't necessarily want courts deciding what controversial statements are true or false; however, it seems like having a purpose other than discrimination would be a valid reason to say things that have the collateral effect of being hurtful to some groups. If you're having a calm, rational, data-driven debate on affirmative action on Saturday at 7 pm, that's not going to create the same level of hostility that "blacks aren't good at math!" would if shouted in calculus lecture after a black student gives the wrong answer to a question.
So what is your favorite coffee? (reading your display name)
Chocolate - dark.
Coffee - bourbon barrel roasted dark.
I'll have to look for that coffee.
Why should the truth of the statement matter?
"a plaintiff must show harassment that is so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive, and that so undermines and detracts from the victims' educational experience, that the victims are effectively denied equal access to an institution's resources and opportunities."
Presumably harassment can reach this level even if the underlying facts are true.
Bernard,
I agree with you. It is easy to imagine taunting that just repeats a true statement.
However it is also possible to imagine repetitions that may be regarded by some as "harassment" but could not reasonably be banned, consistent with any plausible idea of free speech.
Thus, in a case like this, if Artemis Langford, and others, repeatedly state that "Artemis Langford is a woman" - then someone of the contrary view cannot reasonably be expected to remain silent after their first couple of refutations of the claim, if the claim keeps on being made.
It is, to be sure, very vexing to be contradicted, but such is life.
Is it typical for such cases to be settled with a public consent order rather than a confidential agreement?
I've never seen it before
L, as they say, OL
Correct response is for students to set up a table next to Schmidt with a large poster describing him as a malignant bigot.
As long as they don't use his name?
I think what "Artemis" is doing is pretty malignant...
That makes you the Volokh Conspiracy's preferred kind of bigot.
Disaffected. Stale. Right-wing. Doomed to irrelevance as America progresses.
Dammit Jerry!
I knew you'd have something to say about this,
I was busy saving lives,
Speaking of Irreverence, what's the deal with your Commutation??
S-S-S-S-S-S-tutterin J-J-J-J-ohn Fetterman's almost been in Orifice a year, I know, the "Stroke" the "Depression" and then that Mitch McConnell meany made him wear Big Boy Clothes on the Senate floor, but C'mon Man! how much Sphincter function do you have left at this point???
Wow, I just asked Jerry Sandusky about his Sphincter function, I'm an MD (Mentally Deranged) that's what we do, ask peoples about their Sphincter function
Frank "Mine's tight"
Why does Prof. Volokh censor references to conservatives as "sl_ck-j_wed" and "p_ussies," citing ostensible civility standards, but not these references to Sen. Fetterman?
Other than the partisan hypocrisy and cowardice, I mean.
IT's pretty bad if in an inept and substandard civil servant is not OBVIOUS. I mean, that is your approach all the time -- except on this post !!!
He doesn't.
Prof. Volokh not only admitted it . . . he publicly boasted about it.
Maybe you couldn't see it, with your nose buried up his ass.
Is your nose headed north with him?
Even if you weren't just making all of this up, which you are, you've been claiming it for 15 years now. Verb tenses: how do they work?
Did she force her way into the sorority?
NO, that makes the argument about everything but the facts. If Hitler liked spaghetti I don’t have to give up spaghetti.
Better to show someone is a fool than to show they are a bigot. Bigots are sometimes right.
In Praise of Prejudice: The Necessity of Preconceived Ideas by Theodore Dalrymple ” English psychiatrist and writer Theodore Dalrymple shows that freeing the mind from prejudice is not only impossible, but entails intellectual, moral and emotional dishonesty. The attempt to eradicate prejudice has several dire consequences for the individual and society as a whole.”
Your solution is like winning an argument by someone shooting a gun-control advocate.
There is only male and female. Dylan Mulvaney is a sick perverted male. Everybody who isn't sick SEES this.
Just because your point on prejudice may be right doesn't make every prejudice you have right. Your prejudice may be based on intentional ignorance, for example.
When you say there is only male and female, are we talking by genotype, phenotype or cerebrotype?
By sex.
Which is to say by reproductive type.
Reproductive type being part of the phenotype - that part which represents the primary reproductive organs, to wit, the gonads. The gonads being the organs which manufacture the gametes, which are the fundamental distinguishing features of the two sexes.
There are many interesting biological mechanisms which determine (ie cause the development of) sex differentiation, and innumerable disorders, accidents and happenstances which prevent, or deform or otherwise make non functional those reproductive organs (and indeed very rare disorders which prevent the formation of those organs at all.) All of which is interesting, and in some cases, tragic, but none of which affects the binary differentiation of sex.
For the avoidance of doubt, the binary differentiation of sex is a feature of anisogamous organisms, not all organisms, and the binary refers to there being only two sexes. It does not insist that all species be strictly gonochoric / dioecious. It does not prevent the possibility that an organism may have both of the two sexes, or in unfortunate cases, neither. But if the organism has a sex , it has one or the other or both. Never a third kind and never some kind of hybrid inbetween sex. (Of course biology may choose to throw us a third sex sometime, but so far it hasn't and there are good mathematical reasons to think that it would be very unlikely.)
The names of the two sexes, which refer to gamete type (and thus reproductive type) are male and female, but this is quite arbitrary. They could be called anything. But there would still be just the two of them.
PS the application of the term “cerebrotype” to sexual dimorphism in the human brain is, shall we say, a little premature.
Identifing the sex of a human either by brain structure or by neural patterns is, if not in its infancy, then not beyond 5th grade. The most expert experts in this area do no better than 80-90% accuracy. And it’s not as if there’s a check off list where if you have items A,D,G, H, M and P they can reliably pop you in the male box.
And that’s for distinguishing male and female. Identifying sexual orientation is much chancier and as for trans folks it’s not significantly different from a ouija board. (One difficulty with studies claiming to have identified trans folks with one brain region or another “matching” their gender with the sex they are not, is that these brain regions are significantly altered by anxiety. So the resuts are confounded by the strong correlation between a trans gender identity and anxiety.)
This is not to say that “cerebrotype” science may not advance, one day, to High School graduation and even college. It’s just that at the moment, it isn’t really a thing. More of a wish.
And bear in mind only FOUR years ago, Gina Rippon was lauded round the world, and invited onto every chat show there is, for “debunking” the idea that there was any distinction between male and female brains. So the “wish” can adjust to political needs with dizzying speed.
And bear in mind only FOUR years ago, Gina Rippon was lauded round the world, and invited onto every chat show there is, for “debunking” the idea that there was any distinction between male and female brains. So the “wish” can adjust to political needs with dizzying speed.
Careful, Lee.
That cuts both ways.
True, but I don’t have a preferred “way” on these matters, so I’m pretty safe. I can await the results of new and better analytic techniques with equanimity.
My expectation is that experts will be able to distinguish males and females from their brains with greater reliability ( the un-Rippon view) and that better than random identification of gays and trans folk may be achieved.
But I will not be alarmed at contrary findings.
No. Separate them.
Everyone will have a nicer day.
Bigoted, antisocial, gullible, ready-for-replacement right-wing culture war casualties have rights, too.
What kind of asshole would associate with Laramie Faith Community Church? Backwater, half-educated, conservative assholes.
Not surprisingly, Prof. Volokh likes this belligerent wingnut as much as he likes the boorish anti-abortioners who harass women for kicks.
"Nearly 70% of women with a history of abortion describe their abortions as inconsistent with their own values and preferences, with one in four describing their abortions as unwanted or coerced, according to the study published in the medical journal Cureus."
Rev is now being tortured for years of support for full-term babies found in DC trashcans.
"‘Soul-Crushing’ Barbarity Uncovered in D.C. "
Here, Rev, an atheist and Democrat disgracing your position
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cs_Cr407E-o
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cureus
the speed and the quality of this peer review process, as well as the article-level metric "Scholarly Impact Quotient" (SIQ) used by Cureus has attracted the criticism of librarians[6] and scientists who worry that the SIQ could be gamed.[7]
A study conducted by librarians of the Emory University found that Cureus was in the top 2 of institutional publications deemed predatory or untrustworthy.[8]
David Reardon, lead author of the polemical document cited, is an electrical engineer, an anti-abortion activist, and a discredited, superstitious asshole.
Electrical engineers, even those whom you don't like, are good at math. They have to be -- and if we are talking critique of a mathematical model, on the basis of the math involved, then it really doesn't matter what the critic things about anything.
Either his math is right or it isn't -- and that's a binary thing -- and if it is right, then even Kirkland would come to the same conclusions, if Kirkland (a) understood math and (b) was honest.
Electrical engineers, even those whom you don’t like, are good at math. They have to be — and if we are talking critique of a mathematical model, on the basis of the math involved, then it really doesn’t matter what the critic things about anything.
Either his math is right or it isn’t — and that’s a binary thing — and if it is right, then even Kirkland would come to the same conclusions, if Kirkland (a) understood math and (b) was honest.
You're a moron.
It's not a question of math. Nobody is claiming he can't count.
Apparently, this was a survey of some sort. If the survey is poorly designed then all the math in the world isn't going to make the results correct.
And if the designer of the survey, and its methodology, is a dishonest fanatic on the issue being surveyed, you can bet it was badly designed, assuming it was looking for honest responses.
One can not reason with childish superstition, old-timey bigotry, or belligerent ignorance, bernard11.
"Not surprisingly, Prof. Volokh likes this belligerent wingnut..."
His longstanding research interests have related to *censorship* and viewpoint *coercion* (whether he "likes" the people involved or not).
Race and gender issues happen to be current areas in which many with cultural and other power are seeking to do those things; so, he naturally writes about cases involving them.
Let's hope the university puts this uncouth ambassador for nonsense on a half-inch leash. It erred by excusing his earlier misconduct.
Sucks when the shoe is on the other foot, Arthur. I understand.
Do you support the described conduct?
If so, what the fuck is wrong with you?
Typical of you NOT to wait for his answer to whether he does support such conduct.
I didn't expect him to answer . . . and so far I have been right.
Yes, Ladies and Germs, Arch Criminal Mastermind Sex Offender Jerry Sandusky slamming someone for "Misconduct"
The granting of Schmidt's preliminary injunction does not diminish the University's ability to sanction possible future misbehavior by Schmidt, such as continuing to engage with students who do not wish to speak with him
I found this line interesting. I don't disagree at all with the spirit of it, but it seems quite hard to police in practice.
I should have thought a large percentage of protests and demos that a college would wish to permit would involve quite a lot of "continuing to engage" with people who don't wish to be engaged with.
Being known (especially among younger, educated Americans in successful, modern communities) mostly for bigotry and ignorance seems to be a poor recruitment campaign for organized superstition.
Which is great! Carry on, clingers.
You continue to exhibit more hate and bigotry, against those with traditional views, than most of them ever do against anyone.
A generation ago it was the radical right seeking to impose their views; now it's the radical left. Thankfully, reasonable Americans reject fanaticism and coercion in *both* directions.
those with traditional views
I do not enable bigots to hide behind euphemisms such as “traditional views,” “conservative values,” “religious values,” or “family values.”
Instead, I call a bigot — whether a right-wing racist or a superstitious gay-hater, a Republican xenophobe or a chanting antisemite, a conservative misogynist or a half-educated Islamophobe — a bigot.
Superstition never improves bigotry nor transforms bigotry into anything other than bigotry.
If Republicans and conservatives don’t want to be known as bigots, they should ditch the bigotry that animates them.
People who let bigots avoid accountability by hiding behind misleading euphemisms are just lousy people.
That's question-begging. The thing that *makes* it bigotry is if it's being *imposed* on people.
Whatever values/lifestyle/etc. you support or oppose becomes "bigoted" only if and when you're intolerant of those who view it differently (in EITHER direction).
Shaming someone for being gay/trans/whatever is equally wrong as shaming someone for being an adherent Catholic (for example).
against those with traditional views,
There are all kinds of "traditional views." Some are worthy of respect, or tolerance. Other aren't.
Dislike of gays is a "traditional view." Yet you yourself describe it as "wrong."
Racism is a "traditional view." Is it wrong to dislike racists, to consider them assholes? I don't think so.
"Dislike of gays is a 'traditional view.' Yet you yourself describe it as 'wrong.'"
Yes indeed, "dislike of" any person for something that doesn't actively harm others is wrong - and bigoted.
But mere disagreement - without any coercion/imposition whatsoever - is not bigotry.
Divorce, birth control, premarital sex, LGBT+ stuff, etc. can be things people have all sorts of religious/moral disagreements about in all directions. None of it becomes bigotry unless/until *imposed* on others who don't agree.
“Schmidt does not misgender Langford to denigrate her, but to debate a public issue.”
Actually, the court should probably have recognized that part of the public debate is whether or not it even constitutes “misgendering” in the first place (although the rest of the court’s analysis does seem to indicate that it recognizes it’s a legitimately debatable matter…).
Relatedly, it's hard to even know what pronoun(s?) the court should use so as to maintain its own neutrality...
Prof. Volokh’s trans fetish is beginning to overtake his other bizarre fixations (Muslims, white grievance, drag queens, Black crime, racial slurs, etc.).
Is the transgender community more vibrant in Palo Alto than in Los Angeles?