The large banners on display in the hall underscored the message. My favorite: “Canceling free speech doesn’t make us China, but it’s a red flag.” The lineup of speakers included Ilya Shapiro, the conservative legal scholar forced out of Georgetown University Law Center over a tweet arguing that then-Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson was a “lesser” candidate picked because of her race and sex, and Michael Render, aka Killer Mike, the Black rap artist and activist who has been an outspoken critic of government attempts to use rap and hip-hop lyrics as evidence of criminality. Killer Mike’s electrifying keynote address brought down the house.
Over the 20-plus years of its existence, the Foundation has been most often associated with campus wars over “politically correct” speech restrictions based on sensitivities about race, gender and sexuality; because of this, its critics have often portrayed it as a stealth right-wing group peddling the myth that overzealous college activists are the biggest free-speech threat in America. But in fact, it is an increasingly rare entity in our polarized world: a genuinely nonpartisan group.