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NYU Commencement Speech Sparks Dispute Over Cancel Culture Critic

A planned commencement address at New York University has sparked a heated campus dispute, placing scholar Jonathan Haidt at the center of a broader conversation about free expression, academic values, and student representation.

The controversy builds ahead of graduation ceremonies scheduled at Yankee Stadium, where Haidt is set to speak.

The situation has drawn attention across student media, national outlets, and academic circles, raising questions about how universities balance differing viewpoints during major public events.

Student Government Pushback

Instagram | nymag | NYU student leaders protested Jonathan Haidt’s selection due to his alleged anti-LGBTQ+ comments.

Tension escalated after members of the NYU student government released a May 5 open letter criticizing Haidt’s selection. The letter described the choice as “deeply unsettling” and raised concerns about past remarks attributed to him. It accused Haidt of “making homophobic remarks in a class and public misconceptions about transgender identity.”

The Executive Committee of the NYU Student Government Assembly also challenged his academic messaging, pointing to what it called “disturbing rhetoric around antiracism, social justice, and diversity, equity and inclusion,” while claiming his views suggested that removing DEI frameworks “may be the only way out of the Leftist ideological capture of American campuses.”

These statements set the tone for growing disagreement within the university community, especially among students expecting a speaker aligned with their views on inclusion and representation.

Student Commentary and Media Reaction

A separate opinion piece published May 6 in the student-run Washington Square News intensified the criticism. Senior student Mehr Kotval referred to Haidt as “an anti-woke author who has consistently patronized student activists.” The article also called his selection a “last parting gift of disrespect” from NYU.

National coverage followed shortly after. The New York Times reported on the controversy, noting both student opposition and university positioning.

Haidt, through a spokesperson, declined direct comment on the backlash. At the same time, he expressed being “deeply humbled” by the invitation to address graduates, according to the report.

Despite the criticism, NYU has not altered its commencement plans. A university spokesperson defended the decision, describing Haidt as “one of the most consequential scholars of the 21st century.”

The ceremony remains scheduled for Thursday, with thousands of graduates expected to attend at Yankee Stadium. The decision signals the university’s intent to proceed despite ongoing disagreement within parts of the student body.

Jonathan Haidt serves as a professor of social psychology at the Stern School of Business. His work often explores moral psychology, political polarization, and cultural shifts in higher education.

Academic Work and Institutional Influence

Instagram | jonathanhaidt | Haidt co-founded Heterodox Academy to promote academic diversity, open inquiry, and constructive disagreement.

Haidt is widely known for co-authoring “The Coddling of the American Mind” alongside Greg Lukianoff, president of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. His other publications include “The Righteous Mind” (2012), “The Happiness Hypothesis” (2020), and “The Anxious Generation” (2024).

He also co-founded Heterodox Academy, a nonprofit focused on open inquiry and academic diversity. The group states its mission centers on “defending and modeling the norms of open inquiry, viewpoint diversity, the free exchange of ideas, and constructive disagreement as cornerstones of academic and intellectual life.”

Alongside his research, Haidt’s recent university initiative, NYU IRL, promotes phone-free spaces and encourages “device-free practices” in teaching environments.

Some students, however, described the program as “reductive and oblivious to far more pressing matters than digital distraction,” arguing that it overlooks broader social concerns affecting graduates.

Cancel Culture Debate and Commentary

Haidt has frequently spoken about cancel culture in public forums. During earlier national discussions involving attempts to pressure ABC over “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” following remarks tied to the death of Charlie Kirk, he posted on X that “Cancel culture is terrible.”

He also stated that he has opposed it for more than a decade, adding that it becomes “even more chilling, and more clearly a violation of the First Amendment, when it is the government doing the intimidation.”

The current NYU dispute reflects that same tension, with differing views on whether academic speakers should align with student expectations or challenge them through opposing perspectives.

The disagreement surrounding NYU’s commencement speaker highlights ongoing friction between student activism and institutional decisions in higher education. With Haidt set to address graduates at Yankee Stadium, the situation underscores how universities continue to grapple with questions of academic freedom, representation, and the role of public intellectuals in campus ceremonies.

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