Harvard University, ultra-exclusive dispenser of lifelong privileges, now claims that “privilege and exclusion (are) at odds with our deepest values.” Seriously. Does this mean that Harvard will begin loosening its admission requirements and start offering free tuition to all undergraduates (with the exception, perhaps, of gazillionaire kids)? Of course not. It means that Harvard will punish students who belong to single-sex organizations of which university administrators disapprove — fraternities, sororities, and most of all, male final clubs. Students who dare to join these groups will be barred from “leadership positions in recognized student organizations or athletic teams” and will not be eligible for dean’s endorsement letters for such honors as Rhodes and Marshall fellowships.

It’s a bit like punishing students for private, off campus speech that administrators find offensive.

Harvard’s crusade against these particular exclusionary groups was sparked by concerns about sexual assaults and the misogynist attitudes the final clubs allegedly propagate. But these concerns are not discussed in Harvard Dean Rakesh Khurana’s explanation for the new policy. Instead, with a straight face, he declares, “In their recruitment practices and through their extensive resources and access to networks of power, these organizations propagate exclusionary values that undermine those of the larger Harvard College community.” Dean Rakesh doesn’t explain how the university manages to exploit its “extensive resources and access to networks of power” without promoting “exclusionary values.” Perhaps he thinks the answer is self-evident: Harvard is an “inclusive community,” President Drew Faust asserts, as she excludes from substantial benefits students whose associations she disdains. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) rightly characterizes this new policy as a blacklist of students who don’t share Harvard’s “political preferences.” FIRE vice president Robert Shipley stresses, “I had hoped that universities were past the point of asking people, ‘Are you now, or have you ever been, a member of a group we don’t like?’ Sadly they are not.” There are, of course, numerous single-sex groups at Harvard that students may continue to join with impunity. Indeed, Harvard’s list of official student organizations includes affinity groups based on religion, race and ethnicity, as well as sex or gender, among other demographic categories, from BAGELS: A Queer/Jewish Student Group to the Half Asian People’s Association to the Latino Men’s Collective. Officially recognized groups are supposed to comply with the university’s anti-discrimination policy, which differentiates them from final clubs, sororities and fraternities that formally exclude members partly on the basis of sex. But these male and female only groups are not recognized or affiliated with Harvard: They exist and operate independently, which is why blacklisting students who choose to join them is such an affront to personal liberty. It’s a bit like punishing students for private, off campus speech that administrators find offensive.

Harvard’s punitive anti-association policy should be vigorously opposed, but the greater challenge for civil libertarians is defeating the illiberal authoritarianism that gave rise to it.