In the
United States, the
Supreme Court has not issued a direct ruling on whether speech codes are unconstitutional, but has ruled against their implementation within
public universities. However, the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan has struck down a speech code at the
University of Michigan, indicating that broad speech codes seeking to prohibit
hate speech probably violate the
First Amendment (
Doe v. University of Michigan, 1989). Subsequent challenges against such language as part of harassment policies,
diversity mandates, and so forth instead of being self-identified as speech codes have generally succeeded to date.
Nadine Strossen writes that in the 1980s, when the ACLU sued on the matter, "hate speech" codes were invariably struck down as unduly vague and overbroad (a key constitutional criterion), and all subsequent codes directed against specific viewpoints would fail under the same standard. One web site describes behavior that speech codes are meant to prevent: :Discriminatory harassment includes conduct (oral, written, graphic or physical) directed against any person or, group of persons because of their race, color, national origin, religion, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability, or veteran's status and that has the purpose or reasonably foreseeable effect of creating an offensive, demeaning, intimidating, or hostile environment for that person or group of persons.). One particular case, the University of Pennsylvania
"Water Buffalo" case, highlighted reasons for and against speech codes and is typical of such cases. In the
University of Pennsylvania case, a freshman faced expulsion from that private school when he called African-American sorority members who were making substantial amounts of noise and disturbing his sleep during the middle of the night "water buffalo" (the charged student claimed not to intend discrimination, as the individual in question spoke the modern
Hebrew language, and the term "water buffalo", or "behema", in modern Hebrew, is slang for a rude or an insulting person; moreover,
water buffalo are native to Asia rather than Africa). Some saw the statement as racist while others simply saw it as a general insult. Questions were raised about how far was too far when interpreting and punishing statements like the one in question. The college eventually dropped the charges amid national criticism. == Purposes ==