Professor gets to keep job despite posts school calls "racist, sexist and homophobic"
Bloomington, Indiana — A professor at Indiana University who defended "racist, sexist, and homophobic" comments that he posted on his social media accounts will keep his job because his views are protected under the Constitution, university officials announced after they were bombarded with demands to fire him.
Eric Rasmusen, a professor of business economics and public policy at the university, tweeted this month a quote from an article that said, "geniuses are overwhelmingly male because they combine outlier IQ with moderately low Agreeableness and Moderately low Conscientiousness." The article, titled, "Are Women Destroying Academia? Probably" was published by The Unz Review, which describes itself as a publication that presents "controversial perspectives largely excluded from the American mainstream media."
"Professor Eric Rasmusen has, for many years, used his private social media accounts to disseminate his racist, sexist, and homophobic views," said university Executive Vice President and Provost Lauren Robel in a letter.
"I condemn, in the strongest terms, Professor Rasmusen's views on race, gender, and sexuality, and I think others should condemn them," adding his views are "stunningly ignorant" and "bigoted."
But Robel said the university can't and won't fire Rasmusen, employed at the university since 1992, for the posts "as vile and stupid as they are, because the First Amendment of the United States Constitution forbids us to do so."
A Twitter account with a large following tweeted the professor's post, which garnered 4,000 retweets and nearly 30,000 likes -- capturing the university's attention.
This isn't the first time the tenured professor posted such rhetoric on his private social media accounts.
Robel said Rasmusen has "slurred" women and said they don't belong in academia. Rasmusen posted that gay men don't belong in academia, either, because they're "promiscuous" and abuse students, according to Robel's letter.
Robel said Rasmusen posted that black students are unqualified to attend elite institutions and are inferior academically to white students.
Rasmusen responded to the university's letter Thursday, doubling down on his views.
He defended his use of the word "slut," stood by his position that gay men shouldn't teach because they prey on students and called affirmative action corrupt.
"The whole idea of affirmative action is that too few black students (would) get in without racial preferences, so we need to lower the standard for them and accept that they will do worse academically," he said.
"Academic freedom should protect me even if I believed all the things the provost attributed to me," he added, according to CBS Indianapolis affiliate WTTV.
Rasmusen told the station he doesn't believe students should be concerned about bias.
"Not at all. I think less in mine, than in most. I try to bend over backwards if students disagree with me politically," he said.
Rasmusen added that he supports women in academia, and pointed out to WTTV that his wife has a doctorate and his daughter might become a philosophy professor.
Robel noted that Rasmusen would be in violation of the university's nondiscrimination policy if he acts upon his views in the workplace.
The university is allowing students to transfer out of his classes and implemented a blind grading system where students can anonymously submit assignments to him. It will also review Rasmusen's courses for influences of bias.
Rasmusen said the university is encouraging bias by cracking down on his opinions and "condemning a dissident professor."