https://www.frontpagemag.com/fpm/2022/03/new-stasi-central-connecticut-state-university-jay-bergman/
Last month, in a statement issued by its Office of Equity and Inclusion, Central Connecticut State University established a new policy designating faculty, administrators, and nearly all other employees as “mandated reporters.” In that capacity, they are required to report to this office any information they come across pertaining to “gender-based discrimination.” Infractions indicative of such discrimination range from “sexual misconduct” – a capacious concept that at other universities has included jokes told within earshot of persons who consider them sexist – to “dating violence, domestic violence, and stalking.” And to ensure that every instance of discrimination is rooted out, persons reporting it can do so anonymously.
The statement establishing this policy raises more questions than it answers. First, and most obviously, it fails to include any definition of “gender-based discrimination,” or any indication of its limits. Can such discrimination manifest itself in speech as well as in action? If it did, could any punishment by the university be reconciled with its stated commitment to academic freedom, and to the right to free expression guaranteed in the First Amendment to the United States Constitution, and in Article I, Section 5 of the Connecticut State Constitution?
Other aspects of this new policy are no less problematic.