
The Audio Long Read From the archive: the free speech panic: how the right concocted a crisis
Feb 4, 2026
A dive into how claims of campus censorship became a political weapon. Traces the rise of the “snowflake” narrative and its media amplification. Explores why free speech rhetoric suits conservative cultural anxieties. Examines sensational headlines, platform attention economies, and how panic masks deeper economic and political problems.
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Free Speech Panic Is Overstated
- The media-driven narrative of 'free speech under attack' often exaggerates isolated campus incidents into a widespread crisis.
- William Davies argues speech is generally freer now due to social media and platform proliferation.
Free Speech As Conservative Strategy
- Conservatives promote free speech as a response to losing cultural authority, especially in universities.
- Davies links the panic to a desire to restore traditional cultural order rather than protect open debate.
Misreported Campus Scandal
- The Telegraph falsely reported that a student forced Cambridge to drop white authors, causing racist abuse against Lola Olufemi.
- A correction admitted she only suggested diversifying reading lists, not mandatory removals.








