Free speech in America is in crisis. Nearly nine in ten Americans say the principle means listening to people we disagree with. Yet almost seven in ten believe the nation is heading in the wrong direction when it comes to protecting that freedom. This gap is more than a polling anomaly; it’s a warning sign that the cornerstone of our democracy is crumbling.

The instinct to silence speech has become bipartisan. On the right, it appears in crusades against “wokeness.” On the left, it emerges in campaigns to de-platform controversial voices. Both sides mistake censorship for progress. But democracy doesn’t collapse because of unpopular ideas; it collapses when we lose the courage to hear them.

Ironically, the very diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives now under political assault are among the strongest safeguards of free expression. Diversity means protecting voices that make us uncomfortable. Equity ensures those voices have a platform. Inclusion allows disagreement to happen without violence. If free speech is to survive, it will be because we defend the voices we dislike as fiercely as those we embrace. That is the paradox, and the promise, of democracy.

The Founders’ Forgotten Diversity

In an age where the word diversity has become a political fault line, we must remember that the same word underpins the very foundation of our republic. From Madison’s explicit praise of diversity in Federalist No. 10, to Jefferson’s notion of “social love,” to Washington’s call for a “spirit of amity,” the founding generation understood democracy and diversity to be inseparable. They believed that the strength of America’s ideas would depend not on conformity, but on the clash and coexistence of differences.

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Our founding documents enshrine this truth. The Constitution, born of rebellion, and the Bill of Rights, born of restraint, were designed to protect the dissenting voice. Together, they created a system in which freedom is not given by power, but guarded from it. Yet somewhere along the way, these texts have been repurposed — not as shields for the individual, but as weapons in a culture war over who counts as “American.”

The Modern Misunderstanding

To understand how we arrived here, consider this: according to PR Daily, 63% of Americans say DEI programs most benefit people with disabilities, followed by Black workers (58%), Hispanic workers (55%), LGBTQ+ individuals (54%), and women (52%). These numbers tell a profound story. The people who rely most on inclusion are the same ones whose voices are most likely to be silenced when DEI is dismantled.

Efforts to abolish or defund diversity programs don’t just threaten representation; they weaken the infrastructure of free expression itself. A democracy that narrows its chorus of voices is one that begins to suffocate. When classrooms, campuses, and workplaces are stripped of difference, dialogue becomes rehearsed, hollow, and safe.

Diversity, in its truest sense, is not a social experiment. It is the immune system of democracy.

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E Pluribus Unum — Out of Many, One

The phrase engraved on our nation’s Great Seal, E pluribus unum, reminds us that from many, we become one. It was never meant to erase difference but to elevate it into harmony. Out of the many races, religions, genders, and geographies, we form a single democratic project. The unity of this project has never depended on sameness; it has always relied on our willingness to coexist through tension.

To abandon diversity now would be to abandon the very principle that pulled thirteen quarrelsome colonies into a single nation. It would mean trading our most enduring strength, plurality, for the false comfort of uniformity.

The North Star of Democracy

We should not be expected to hide our diversity efforts, nor should we anticipate being punished for them. Diversity stands as America’s north star, the light that guided us from revolution to self-governance, from bondage to citizenship, from exclusion to participation. And while some nights may grow foggy, dimming the clarity of that light, the stars above us have not vanished.

They burn still.

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They burn in every classroom that teaches hard history, in every newsroom that uplifts marginalized voices, and in every institution brave enough to affirm that democracy’s survival depends on its diversity.

The truth is simple: free speech is not fading because we have too much diversity, it’s fading because we have too little courage to defend it.

When we stop scanning the skies for the stars of inclusion, that is the moment they truly disappear.


Free speech without diversity isn’t freedom; it’s control. Your support protects the courageous voices that speak when silence feels safer.

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Dr. Bridgeforth enjoys writing as a political columnist who is a passionate advocate for justice and equality whose academic journey reflects a profound commitment to these ideals. With a bachelor’s...

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