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      Princetonians for Free Speech Surpasses 26,000 Email Subscribers, Marking a Historic Milestone for Free Speech at Princeton

      PFS Editorial

      Princetonians for Free Speech Surpasses 26,000 Email Subscribers, Marking a Historic Milestone for Free Speech at Princeton

      Read

      PFS Editorial

      Yale issues a clarion call for change, joining other leading universities. Where is Princeton?

      READ

      Higher education finally admits it has a free speech problem

      Tal Fortgang ‘17

      READ

      The High Cost of Free Speech: A Princeton Student’s Perspective

      By Alexcis Johnson '26

      Read

      Princeton Student Reflections on Free Speech and the March for Life

      By Abigail Readlinger '27

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      Subscribe to join the fight for free speech

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      Princeton Free Speech News & Commentary

      The Room Where It Happened: A Conversation With John Bolton

      The Room Where It Happened: A Conversation With John Bolton

      Lauren Zuravel  May 21, 2026 1 min read

      On April 15, I had the pleasure of hosting, on behalf of the Cliosophic Society, Ambassador John Bolton at Princeton’s Nassau Inn for a discussion entitled “The Room Where It Happened: National Security Decisions Under Pressure.” Bolton’s legacy as a leading professional in American foreign policy offered more than a glimpse behind the diplomatic curtain; it invited a critical examination of the processes and personalities that have shaped recent American engagement with the world.

      Read More
      Princetonians for Free Speech Surpasses 26,000 Email Subscribers, Marking a Historic Milestone for Free Speech at Princeton

      Princetonians for Free Speech Surpasses 26,000 Email Subscribers, Marking a Historic Milestone for Free Speech at Princeton

      PFS Editorial May 19, 2026 2 min read

      Princetonians for Free Speech (PFS) today announced a landmark achievement: its email subscriber list has officially surpassed 26,000 verified subscribers, approximately 80% of which are alumni, representing one of the most significant milestones in the organization's history since its founding in late 2020. This high number represents a highly engaged network of supporters committed to preserving the fundamental value of free speech at Princeton.

      Read More
      Princeton faculty mandate proctoring for in-person exams, upending 133 years of precedent

      Princeton faculty mandate proctoring for in-person exams, upending 133 years of precedent

      Devon Williams May 14, 2026 1 min read

      All in-person examinations at Princeton will be proctored starting July 1, representing the most significant change to the honor system since it was established in 1893. The faculty passed a proposal requiring instructor supervision at Monday’s faculty meeting, with one opposing vote.

      The historic vote was the culmination of months of deliberation within the administration and student governing bodies about how to address increasing concerns over academic integrity violations, including the proliferation of AI usage. The proposal cleared a full faculty vote as the final of three required rounds of approval, having already been passed unanimously by the Committee on Examinations and Standing and the Faculty Advisory Committee on Policy.

      Read More
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      National Free Speech News & Commentary

      How Researcher Homogeneity Distorts Knowledge Production

      How Researcher Homogeneity Distorts Knowledge Production

      Musa al-Gharbi  May 21, 2026 1 min read

      What happens when an entire profession can’t see what’s hiding in plain sight in its own data? That puzzle animated Stony Brook University sociologist Musa al-Gharbi’s keynote at the Heterodox Academy 2026 West Coast Regional Conference, held recently at UC Berkeley.

      The deeper problem, he contends, is not bad-faith activism but a structural one: peer review, editing, and committee deliberation only correct for bias when the people doing the correcting actually differ from one another, and the academy and the press increasingly do not. His full speech is transcribed below.

      Read More
      Students Largely Oppose Punishment for ‘Objectionable Speech,’ Study Finds

      Students Largely Oppose Punishment for ‘Objectionable Speech,’ Study Finds

      Jessica Blake May 21, 2026 1 min read

      Two years after protests over the Israel-Hamas war roiled college campuses, resulting in the arrests of more than 3,000 students and faculty, a new study finds that students generally oppose punishing “objectionable speech,” unless they consider it “highly harmful.”

      The study, conducted by researchers from the Universities of Pennsylvania and Colorado and Stanford and Columbia Universities and published in April in Science Advances, also found that students’ views of objectionable speech depend largely on whom it is targeted at.

      Read More
      Colleges Are at a Breaking Point

      Colleges Are at a Breaking Point

      Adam Harris  May 21, 2026 1 min read

      America’s colleges have had a rough go of it in recent years. After the Great Recession sent students flooding back to campus, schools have faced one evolving crisis after another: COVID, government interference, protests, and the chaos of AI tools in the classroom. Despite some positive enrollment trends, schools are also staring down a very near future where there will simply be fewer 18-year-olds to fill their seats.

      Is the purpose of college just to get a good job, or is there more to it? And though the nation’s colleges and universities have been in rough spots before, is it finally time to start rethinking their entire model? On this week’s Radio Atlantic, the Atlantic contributing writer Ian Bogost and I sift through the fraught landscape of American higher education.

      Read More
      Click Here For More National News

      Newsletter Archive

      April 2026 Newsletter

      April 2026 Newsletter

      May 01, 2026 5 min read

      PFS’s featured editorial this month is Yale Issues clarion call for change, joining other leading universities. Where is Princeton?  We put Yale’s report in the context of the growing consensus amongst a widening circle of University Presidents that President Maurie McGinnis is correct. University leaders must take responsibility for their role in reaching this critical point. President Eisgruber is not among this list of reformers.

      If you want to know more about why Princeton is not leading this movement to restore trust in higher education,link here to a comprehensive Five-Part Review of President Eisgruber’s book, Terms of Respect, How Colleges Get Free Speech Right, written for PFS by Tal Fortgang ‘17.

      March 2026 Newsletter

      March 2026 Newsletter

      April 01, 2026 6 min read

      Can universities be reformed? Princeton’s Professor of Mathematics Sergiu Klainerman is a pessimist. In the absence of powerful external pressures, reform from within is “very close to zero” due to what he sees as the deep corruption of the universities’ core mission.

      Klainerman was born in Romania and graduated from the University of Bucharest in 1974. He earned his PhD in Mathematics at NYU in 1978 and has taught at Princeton since 1987. A MacAurther Fellow (1991) and Guggenheim Fellow (1997) he was awarded the Bôcher Memorial Prize by the American Mathematical Society in 1999 "for his contributions to nonlinear hyperbolic equations."

      Klainerman presented his bleak perspective on the state of higher education in an address at the recent opening of the University of Iowa’s Center for Intellectual Freedom, a new institution dedicated to the study of civics. 


      Princeton FIRE Rankings
      Princeton moves up—but still "fails"—in FIRE's 2026 College Free Speech rankings

      160 out of 257. Princeton moves up—but still "fails" (earning a grade of "F")—in FIRE's 2026 College Free Speech rankings.

      GET FULL REPORT

      Princetonians for Free Speech

      PFS fights for free speech alongside Princeton alumni, staff and students. Princetonians for Free Speech is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit registered in the US under EIN: 85-3710034. Donations are tax deductible to the fullest extent allowable under the law.

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