Chief Justice John Roberts wrote the lone dissenting opinion in a Supreme Court campus free speech case, saying that a former college student whose lawsuit reached the high court didn’t have standing. Chike Uzuegbunam, a former student at Georgia Gwinnett College, was seeking nominal damages over an incident when the school prevented him from preaching. An 8-1 majority in the case, led by Justice Clarence Thomas, favored the student. Roberts said the case was moot because Uzuegbunam was no longer enrolled in the college and the school had changed its rules when he complained. “By insisting that judges be able to provide meaningful redress to litigants, Article III ensures that federal courts exercise their authority only ‘as a necessity in the determination of real, earnest and vital controversy between individuals,'” Roberts wrote. He warned that the Supreme Court’s decision would put at risk future cases where judges will be forced to weigh in …