Title IX for All: Jonathan Taylor

One of the more significant of the unsung heroes of the movement for men and boys has been the USA’s Jonathan Taylor. For nearly 15 years Taylor has been toiling away on what might most simply be described as “advocating for fairness”. With his background in teaching at higher education level, Taylor has always focused on matters pertaining to education. But for a long time now – longer than the last three presidential terms – his focus has been on assisting those accused of sexual misconduct at college via his Title IX for All site. In a brief personal record Taylor summarises its purpose,

“…to make knowledge about the Title IX world more accessible to the general public by talking about what would otherwise only exist in obscure court records, and creating databases to track court cases, regulations, and OCR investigations. That’s also why I decided to be an advisor for accused students, many of whom have no money tree to shake and are in need of affordable options.” (OCR = Office for Civil Rights).

I shall clarify below what Title IX is. It is timely to raise this issue now because of a recent court ruling in the States which is, for once, good news. I’ll come to that. Whilst I focus on allegations against students, Title IX and Title IX for All also cover allegations against faculty.

Readers of this blog will not need me to spell out the egregious nature of the status quo on university campuses as regards the handling of complaints regarding young men’s sexual conduct. The problems of gross gender bias and the flouting of due process are endemic across the “western” world. In the USA these are specifically associated with a piece of Federal legislation, universally referred to as “Title IX”. It is ostensibly about equal opportunities of the sexes in the context of education. The following is the opening of the text of Title IX, which is followed by several exceptions and clarifications:

No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.”

As always, the devil is in the detail – and in the interpretation and implementation of the statute. UK readers will be familiar with how legislation which appears to promote equality (e.g., the 2010 Equality Act) can be very effective in lending legitimacy to the opposite in the hands of activists – and the bias always goes one way. As an example, Title IX became infamous for its impact on men’s  college sports. Huge numbers of closures, or reductions, in men’s sports teams on campuses across the USA arose as a result of Title IX. But it has been in the context of allegations of sexual offences in universities that Title IX has been most destructive.  

The interpretation and implementation of any legislation is everything, and the interpretation and implementation are products of the prevailing culture. As regards sexual offences within an educational context, the dominant sentiment which ran – and still runs – throughout virtually all influential bodies is that “when students suffer sexual assault and harassment, they are deprived of equal and free access to an education”. The prevailing sentiment became manifest in virulent form in April 2011 in the form of the now-infamous “Dear Colleague Letter”, issued by the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights during the Obama administration. It reminded us that “the sexual harassment of students, including sexual violence, interferes with students’ right to receive an education free from discrimination and, in the case of sexual violence, is a crime”.

As always with political policies deploying moral coercion, there is a legitimate issue here – though there may be some overstatement. But what is unacknowledged is that allegations are only allegations. The prevailing ethos was – and still is – to believe the accuser (often referred to immediately as a “victim”). It fails to acknowledge that being thrown out of university on the basis of an unproved allegation also – and rather more directly – “interferes with a student’s right to receive an education”. And here the prevailing culture impacts on political policy which in turn impacts on collegiate policy, namely that their broader obligations to truth and justice can be ignored – for young men.

The “Dear Colleague” letter stated that it is the responsibility of institutions of higher education to “take immediate and effective steps to end sexual harassment and sexual violence” and makes clear that, should an institution fail to fulfil its responsibilities under Title IX, the Department of Education can impose a fine and potentially deny further institutional access to federal funds.

You see how that works? There is no threat of fines or withdrawal of funding if a university expels a young man without due process and without any meaningful examination of the allegations. Emanating from the highest Federal levels, the threats push the college in only one direction. As Taylor’s advisory guide for accused students puts it,

Some accused students think that their situation will work itself out if they just tell the school the truth about what happened because schools generally prioritize truth and fairness. Unfortunately, this is not how Title IX proceedings work. A school’s primary interest is not in determining the truth of what happened but in minimizing its potential liability. This bias exceeds the rest.”

Taylor’s Title IX for All has been active in supporting accused students for over a decade. The site maintains database of nearly 900 lawsuits raised by former students (or faculty) who consider themselves as unfairly dismissed, plus a database of nearly 1,000 resolved OCR Title IX investigations. There is also a database of about 1,800 US attorneys who have assisted accused students and school employees in Title IX grievance proceedings and litigations. The site also hosts a range of valuable relevant information, articles and advice. (My own February 2015 article “Feminism and the Decline of Physics A Level” appears on the site, here, under authorship “John Doe” – presumably they lost the authorship).

And so to the recent developments. The first Trump administration made various changes to Title IX guidelines that were implemented during the Obama administration. These changes shifted the standard of evidence used in Title IX investigations from “preponderance of the evidence” to a “clear and convincing” evidence standard. Trump’s administration sought to limit the scope of Title IX to sex only, excluding gender identity and sexual orientation, and in February 2017 the Departments of Justice and Education  withdrew the guidance on gender identity.  

On 22 September 2017, US Department of Education Secretary Betsy Devos rescinded the Obama-era guidelines which had prodded colleges and universities to more aggressively investigate campus sexual assaults. On 7 May 2020, the U.S. Department of Education released regulations governing campus sexual assault allegations and investigations under Title IX, the first Title IX guidance published by the OCR to go through a formal notice-and-comment process since 1997.

In the area of sports, the first Trump administration’s Department of Education contended that the rights of biological women were being infringed by transgender women and so started to withhold federal funding from schools which “affirmed the identities” of transgender athletes, i.e., allowed them to compete in women’s teams and/or against women.  

Most importantly, the Trump administration imposed due process protections, perhaps the most important change of all to the interpretation under Obama given that the principal method of unfair dismissal was simply to disallow any meaningful investigation or defence.

Contrary to any idea that the Trump era changes to Title IX were legally unsound, they have actually withstood five legal challenges by state attorneys general, women’s groups, and accuser advocacy groups. One is tempted to conclude that the previous (Obama) rules were those that were legally fragile.

Unsurprisingly, the Biden administration which followed Trump’s first term sought to reverse the changes his administration made and to further entrench the authoritarianism, bias and injustice that had been the direction of travel hitherto. Under the Obama administration, Title IX had been interpreted as applicable also to transgender students, so that a self-identified trans women must be treated as a woman and a self-identified trans man must be treated as a man. These interpretations had been reversed under Trump. But in June 2022 the Biden administration issued a proposed rule to reverse the changes made under Trump and to expand coverage regarding gender identity and pregnancy.  

But most seriously, the Biden proposed “Final Rule”, which was due to come into force on 1st August 2024, was to introduce further assaults on due process, such as (paraphrasing Taylor’s own account),

  • Re-institution of the “single-investigator” model in which one person is both the investigator and decision-maker;
  • Denial of accused students’ (or faculty members’) full access to the evidence against them;
  • Expansion of schools’ obligation to investigate misconduct regardless of whether it occurs outside educational programs or activities, in another state, or even another country – indeed, anywhere;
  • Violation of the Constitution on First Amendment grounds by requiring schools to “compel affirmation of a belief” – in this case, the belief of a self-identified gender identity;
  • Adoption of a new definition of harassment that is both vague and overbroad.

But these attempted Biden-era changes have been subject to legal challenge, and the court has now given their ruling. The Plaintiffs were the States of Kentucky, Virginia, West Virginia, Indiana and Tennessee, and the Christian Educators Association International. The court’s memorandum states clearly the complaint and the background,

“…this case concerns the US Department of Education’s attempt to bypass the legislative process and completely transform Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 through sweeping new regulations. On June 17, 2024, this Court granted the plaintiff-States and Intervenor plaintiffs’ motions for a preliminary injunction and stay, which prevented the challenged Final Rule from going into effect with respect to the plaintiffs as planned on August 1, 2024. Now, the Court considers the plaintiffs’ and the Department’s competing motions for summary judgment.”

The outcome of their deliberations is clearly stated,

Because the Final Rule and its corresponding regulations exceed the Department’s authority under Title IX, violate the Constitution, and are the result of arbitrary and capricious agency action, the plaintiffs’ motions for summary judgment will be granted and the Department’s motion for summary judgment will be denied.”

However, the victory as regards due process – the most important matter of all – appears to have been merely incidental because this issue was not mentioned in the judge’s summing-up. Nevertheless, the judge struck down the Biden “Final Rule” in its entirety, for the reasons evident in the above quotes, so what the judge thought of the due process issues is a moot point.

Jonathan Taylor waxes bullish in his write-up of the ruling, suggesting that we are witnessing the beginning of the end of “progressivism”. He writes,

“The bloodthirst and fanaticism of ideologies opposed to due process on the basis of sex—MeToo, extreme feminism, and their various offshoots – are increasingly falling out of favour, meeting harsher and more public opposition, and finding defeat (one way or another) in court.”

He also claims that,

“…companies and educational institutions are scaling back on “DEI,” States are passing laws banning DEI in government institutions…”

and he notes that Trump, “who is more of a reflection of the shifting winds of public opinion than its cause”, has just been re-elected.

I am rarely given to optimism, but I think he may be right.

7 thoughts on “Title IX for All: Jonathan Taylor

  1. Jonathan Taylor

    William, thank you for your generous praise and for covering this issue. You have followed the issue very well! I am glad you share my optimism.

    Thank you for all your support of our work in the past as well, including by contributing articles regarding academic achievement. Yes, the authorship of some articles was lost due to some site changes. I have reverted the authorship of your article on feminism and physics back to you.

    Men’s issues do not often get resounding wins, and Judge Reeves’ order vacating the 2024 regulations was decided neither on the grounds that it discriminated against men nor that it violated due process rights – although adjacent to this, it did address the unconstitutionally broad definition of harassment the 2024 regulations put forth which would doubtlessly snare many innocent men.

    But I think the resounding win here is that, at least for higher ed misconduct proceedings in the United States, the ground has slowly eroded from under the most fanatical opponents of due process. The 2020 regulations have also – gradually but systematically – contributed to turnover of “High Inquisitor” types of administrators in misconduct proceedings and the hiring of more even-handed and sensible replacements. I believe these will substantially contribute to our long-term success here.

    Thank you.

    Jonathan Taylor

    Reply
  2. Logan

    Sadly, I don’t concur with Jonathan (or your) optimism in this regard. The campus feminists haven’t changed in 50 years, and they still control academia, with literally thousands and thousands of paid people all of whom advocate constantly, and a new crop of impressionable young girls each and every year. A pause in a ceaseless advance is not a victory. Nothing has really changed, because societies need to cater to the wants of women will mean feminism just has to start pushing again, and just like before, people will happily give in. Go and look at the website ‘Glamour’ – you’ll see a wall of articles all about how we need ‘more laws’ / ‘new laws’ / ‘more funding’, etc ect – all for women’s rights / groups – and they’re getting them. When Trans has been put back in the box they (feminists) took it out of, they will get back to stripping men of their rights based on their own woozles. There are hundreds of feminists channels on YouTube (all pretending to be something other than political) with hundreds of thousands and sometimes millions of subscribers, and they say the same things the bedroom feminists said decades ago, and their comments sections have thousands and thousands of comments all repeating the same things. Nothing, repeat, nothing has changed. A brief pause in fighting while the enemy redeploys for a new attack as part of a ceaseless advance does not feel like a victory to me. It may be nice to have a pause, but unless we take back academia (which is almost impossible), and rid the institutions of the rot, nothing will ever change.

    Reply
    1. William Collins Post author

      I don’t dispute any of those facts. I am only too well aware of them. But I’ve consciously decided against the counsel of despair. To quote Vaclav Havel, they are never as powerful as they appear. Optimism need not be unrealistic. I have long thought that this progressive-feminist monster would only be defeated via civilizational collapse. This is surely now happening. The way forward lies through small local groups, not the bulk of the public or mainstream events. So, for example, we don’t ‘take back’ academia but let it die and create our own in parallel.

      Reply
      1. Logan

        Oh, I know you’re aware of all of this – probably more aware than almost anyone. I wasn’t implying you didn’t understand. I was just saying – for balance – I sit on the other end of the spectrum when it comes to optimism about these things to you and Jonathan. I know it’s now considered poor form to be ‘Black Pilled’ (‘doing the work of the enemy’, etc). But for me, the worst habits those opposed to the people who would like to dismantle society (label them as you please) have had over the last 30 years, is to grossly underestimate the tenacity of the people doing it, to assume – always incorrectly – that whatever bonkers thing they’re saying is ‘too crazy’ for the public to accept, and perhaps most annoyingly, a willingness to treat every little victory as a ‘turning point’, which they almost never are.
        I would have more faith in local groups and building new institutions, etc, if society wasn’t becoming rapidly physically balkanised, let alone culturally, and with Government passing laws all the time which give it the powers to stamp on anything which isn’t mandated by them, and the mainstream media happily being their standard-bearers, I just don’t see the future looking bright. I maintain the same outlook I have for years at this point: No victory is a victory if you don’t actively occupy the territory the enemy attacked from, and the enemy themselves have to lose power – simply winning and then abandoning the field to them is meaningless. Never underestimate the public’s ability to swallow a nonsense idea. Never underestimate the ability of teenage girls to emote without reason, or societies’ need to placate them. Never underestimate the power of identitarian groups pushing a victim narrative. Never underestimate the ability of the media to control / create a narrative that most people will happily go along with. Never underestimate the complacency of those who are not emotionally-driven identitarians. I see conservatives thinking Radfems are their friends because thy both oppose Trans – they aren’t even aware enough to recognise their ‘protect the women’ narrative and Radfems ‘hate men’ narrative are not even remotely the same.
        To use another clunky metaphor, I said decades ago that some people simply will not see the iceberg or the lack of lifeboats as an issue until the ship hits the iceberg and starts sinking – no matter what you said to them they saw nothing as an issue. The fact that more people have now woken up is great, but it doesn’t change the fact we’ve hit the iceberg and there aren’t enough lifeboats. I think the US has a better chance to fix this than the UK, but even then I’m not too optimistic. It’s hard to be when I just watched three YouTube videos from young feminists, and they’re saying the same things that were being said 25 years ago like nothing has changed – because they’re all too young to know anything about the past, and one of the greatest tricks feminism pulls – and continues to pull, is the the ability to brainwash young girls who readily want to believe they’re poor oppressed victims, and that the yesterday times were bad but now they’re ‘aware’ things are starting to get better. They literally said women can’t consent in society because the Patriarchy brainwashes girls to think they exist to please others – no evidence of course, nothing remotely true about that – but they believe it, and with that believe they will happily see any and all consent arbitrarily removable. This is all because feminists have taught them to believe that, and because the next big push from the fems will be on consent, Jury trials, and the arbitrary removal of men’s right to a fair trial (as you know – they’ve already started on this). Watching the way the world caved in after George Floyd, and the things fems got away with saying after Sarah Everard, I just think society is now permanently one sensationalist story away from a new set of laws being passed in minutes to appease the activists constantly. I wish I had more faith, and I really really hope I’m wrong. I’m one old cynic that is praying for the optimists to be able to say ‘I told you so’ in years to come.
        This turned into a long ramble – my apologies.

        Reply
        1. William Collins Post author

          All true. Perhaps I’m actually more pessimistic than you, because I accepted years ago that this would not be overcome and it would lead to collapse of ‘western’ civilisation. The issue is to build the lifeboats, which is what I mean by small local groups. It will be necessary to ignore unjust and destructive laws, otherwise the increasingly restrictive and authoritarian ‘laws’ will prevent the escape routes being constructed. Sharia law is not the law of this land, but that has not prevented large numbers of Muslims living by it. This must be emulated by those young enough to have their life, and family, ahead of them. The threat of imprisonment must be risked – and perhaps realised. This is a positive approach rather than endlessly reiterating the intransigence of the forces ranged against us. This culture is dying and merely bemoaning the fact is not enough.

          Reply
  3. David Eggins

    Once again, Rick, very many thanks for bringing this piece of ideological fervour to our attention; hopefully it is also reorganising the DEI agenda back to it’s origins of D.I.E. Your blog arrived the day after Bettina Arndt, dressed as Joan of Arc, the maid of Orleans ( a “maid” in German being “a virgin”!) astride her charger, rode equally hopefully into the Australian fray. I jokingly advised her to be careful that she didn’t share Joan’s fate of being burnt at the stake! Apparently “Parity” is entering the fray in efforts to stop Scotland from sleepwalking further into woke, doing this as I understand it , in preparation for learning how to counter the next potential slippage in the English sleep-walk, which would no doubt be aided by Thangham Debonnaire who, as MP, lost her seat in Bristol to a Green ,but who was elevated by Keir to peer.

    Reply
  4. Greg Allan

    Given the noise feminists have made about the witch hunts it’s surprising how little respect they have for the presumption of inoocence.

    Reply

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