This essay investigates the steady erosion of intellectual freedom across North American universities over the past decade. By examining documented instances of institutional censorship and intimidation, it illustrates a systemic shift: the displacement of rational discourse by exclusionary practices that reframe dissent as psychological aggression. The analysis establishes a genealogical link between 20th-century Marxist ideological constraints and contemporary identity-based censorship. Furthermore, it examines the postmodern and neo-Marxist foundations of this phenomenon, alongside the rise of a "culture of fragility" that weaponizes intellectual disagreement. Ultimately, the paper contends that the restoration of academic integrity depends on a return to the Logos—reclaiming it as the essential cornerstone for genuine dialogue, objective truth, and the preservation of liberty. Keywords: intellectual freedom; academic censorship; postmodernism; neo-Marxism; Logos; culture of fragility; epistemology.
Elí Galván (Mon,) studied this question.