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Because, among other reasons, Title IX requires it, or so the theory goes. Allowing speech (including speech by other students) which is discriminatory as to
gendersex is said to violate Title IX's guarantee:I have no idea if the theory has been put forth that baldly and directly tested in court, but there's a lot of lawyers, administrators, and regulators who believe it.
And of course, once you've opened the door to speech regulation, there's always more that can be added.
This feels like a stretch.
Central examples of being subject to discrimination on the basis of sex would be:
Someone who happens to be on campus saying someone mean about people who share the sex of a student seems like as non-central as you can possibly get.
Sure it's a stretch. But the people administering these regulations want to make that stretch, so they do, and there's no one to gainsay them.
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