Of course Dan doesn't ask this question, he instead frames it as being wrongfully "cancelled" and having religious freedoms taken away.DCP wrote:Will religious universities continue to be permitted to set their own behavioral standards for students (and, for that matter, for faculty and administrators) if those standards conflict with Western society’s rising orthodoxy on gender and sexuality? Should they be permitted to do so? New York City’s Yeshiva University, an Orthodox Jewish institution, has recently become a battleground for different viewpoints on that question.
A Catholic perspective: “Religious Liberty Must Prevail for Yeshiva University”
Forward (implicitly taking a rather different position, a Jewish publication mentions Brigham Young University): “As Pride club takes on Yeshiva University, LGBTQ students at other religious colleges take notice: Two other LGBTQ discrimination lawsuits are moving through the courts”
Deseret News: “The religion cases to watch in the Supreme Court’s new term: How many religion-related cases will the Supreme Court end up hearing this term?”
National Review: “Federal Court Rules for Catholic School That Fired Teacher in Same-Sex Union”
On a possibly related matter, here’s a recent ten-minute video-news segment that you might find of interest:
“Is LDS Culture Under Attack? From a recent chant at a BYU away game to several documentaries to various news articles in recent times, there tends to be a lot of negativity surrounding the word “Mormon” these days”
One is, in our great country, free to be as bigoted as they like. But institutions like the federal government and NCAA do not have an obligation to engage with it and support it. And I would argue they have a strong moral obligation to disconnect themselves from it.