Why Are College Kids Terrified?
Rikki Schlott and Greg Lukianoff discuss their new book, The Canceling of the American Mind.
HD Download"We've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up."
That was journalist Rikki Schlott speaking before a sold-out crowd on Monday night at a live taping of The Reason Interview with Nick Gillespie podcast in New York City. Schlott, 23, teamed up with Greg Lukianoff to co-write The Canceling of the American Mind.
Lukianoff, 49, is the president of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) and co-author with Jonathan Haidt of the bestselling The Coddling of the American Mind (2018). Schlott is a fellow at FIRE, a New York Post columnist, and a co-host of the Lost Debate podcast.
Cancel culture, they argue, constitutes a serious threat to free speech and open inquiry in academia and the workplace, and is best understood as a battle for power, status, and dominance.
Watch the video of the full event, and find a condensed transcript below.
Reason: What's the elevator pitch for this book? Why is it relevant now?
Rikki Schlott: Well, I think it's twofold. On the first front, people are still saying that cancel culture does not exist, which is absolutely crazy and defies all statistics fundamentally. But also, cancel culture is not just about the people that are torn down, it's about the epistemic crisis that it creates and the devastation of the body of common knowledge that we all share, and also the undermining of trust between people.
And for me as a young person, the undermining of being able to grow up and have the freedom to fumble and make mistakes as well. So I think it's important on a ton of different levels.
Reason: What is the working definition of cancel culture?
Greg Lukianoff: Basically, we're trying to give the historical era that we're in a name. I'm a First Amendment lawyer. I'm big on the history of freedom of speech. And a lot of what we call mass censorship events have names. So Alien Sedition 1798, the Red Scare One in the 1920s, Red Scare Two, also known as McCarthyism, the Comic Book Scare, etc.
So basically we're proposing more or less that this be a historical definition of a unique and weird period where there's been a lot of people losing their jobs because of their opinion. That's really one of the things we're trying to show, is that this is on par with any of these previous moments of mass censorship, and actually exceeds them in terms of the numbers of professors fired.
Reason: Can you elaborate more on the number of firings you are referring to?
Lukianoff: So real quick through the stats. Our definition is: the uptick of campaigns beginning around 2014 to get people fired, de-platformed, expelled, and the culture of fear that resulted from that. And I think it's always important to root numbers in comparisons.
When I started at FIRE, I actually landed in Philadelphia at 9:10 in the morning on 9/11. All of my first cases were involving people who said jerky or insensitive things about the attacks or people who said, "Let's go get those terrorists." So it was a bad period for academic freedom. There was a moral panic, and it actually followed the normal M.O. of mass censorship events in history. There was a national security crisis. That's usually the way it goes—it's either a national security crisis or a large-scale war that you have these mass censorship events. And 17 professors were targeted for being canceled, as we would say, which basically means punished for their speech. There were more students as well, but we were pretty small at the time, so we know that we probably only know a fraction of the students who got in trouble. Three professors were fired. That's really, really bad historically. All three of those professors, by the way, were justified under things that weren't related to speech.
For the cancel culture era, we're talking over 1,000 attempts to get professors fired or punished in some way. About two-thirds of them resulted in someone being punished. About one-fifth of them, so about 200, resulted in them losing their jobs. During McCarthyism, the number of people who lost their jobs due to being a communist is about 63. They count other people who lost their opinions in this massive study that they did right towards the end of McCarthyism, and there were about 90 fired for their opinion overall, which is usually rounded up to 100.
We now think that they're probably somewhere between 100 and 150 fired from 2014 to mid-last year, July. We know this is a crazy undercount as well. According to our survey, one in six professors say that they've either been threatened with investigation or investigated for their academic freedom. That means the numbers are absolutely colossal. Students, about 9 percent of them, say that they've actually faced sanctions for their speech. That's an insanely huge number. And about one-third of professors say that they've been told to avoid controversial research. So we know that we're only seeing a portion of it.
Reason: The first case study in your book is at Hamline University. Can you remind us what happened there and why it exemplifies cancel culture?
Schlott: There was a professor named Erica López Prater who decided to show an image of the prophet Muhammad in one of her courses, which is considered sacrilegious by some people who follow Islam. And so she said in her syllabus that that was going to be in a class. She told people that you could get an excuse from class if it's untenable for you to see that. She warned them multiple times ahead of time. She gave ample warning in every way, shape, and form, and also just told everyone that, "The only reason I'm showing you this is because there are some sects of Islam that do not find this offensive. This is a piece of art that was commissioned by a Muslim king."
She ended up being squeezed out of her job for doing that because one student did show up to that class and decided afterward that she was offended. And the president of the university came out and said, "This is beyond freedom of speech, this is just offensive." And it was a perfect example of cancel culture just defying common sense, defying just pluralism and democracy on a very fundamental level. And so that's why we decided to call this one out as our opener because pretty much everyone condemned it in the end. It was unbelievable. And Hamline did have to reverse course.
Reason: The happy ending there is that the university president kind of got pushed out. What was the reaction of other academics?
Lukianoff: This was a positive case in the sense that people really came to her defense. The idea that she wasn't rehired in the face of it is really stunning. Penn America was involved, of course, FIRE was involved, the American Association of University Professors came out and condemned it. So it was a moment of some amount of unanimity, but it somehow wasn't enough at the same time.
Reason: What role do psychotherapists play in cancel culture?
Lukianoff: This is near and dear to my heart because my experience with Coddling of the American Mind started with me being hospitalized for depression back in the Belmont Center in Philadelphia back in 2007. The idea that you would actually have psychotherapists who think they should intervene if you have wrongthink in your mind when you're talking one-on-one with them is about as horrifying as I can imagine. It's no exaggeration to say I'm not sure I'd still be here if I actually had a psychotherapist who corrected me.
As far as a chapter that we could easily expand into its own book, and maybe we should, the psychotherapy stuff scares the living hell out of us. I know we talked to a number of practitioners. In terms of what I've heard from the existing clinical psychology programs is that they will pain over the nightmare scenario of, "What if it turns out the person I'm treating is a Trump supporter or a Republican?" And of course, the answer is, "Then you treat them compassionately," not, "You have to drop out."
Reason: Rikki, you were coming of age in the era that you guys are writing about. Have you experienced the mindset of "If you are a bad person, you have bad ideas"?
Schlott: Well, for me personally, I was in high school in the lead-up to the 2016 election and we just had a scourge of cancel culture explode even though we were still teenagers. I, at the time, was more worried about boys and acne than Trump, but I saw that en masse scale for the first time. It was really frightening to me. And frankly, as a result, I self-censored for a while, and by the time I got to NYU, I knew I was in an ideological minority as a right-leaning libertarian here in New York City. I actually started hiding books under my bed when I moved in because I was a new freshman and trying to make friends. Thomas Sowell and Jordan Peterson were under the bed—banished.
I think it's so important to realize that there is a crisis of authenticity with young people who are growing up, who were supposed to explore different ideas and be an anarchist one day and a communist the next day and figure it out in the end, but we've taught young people that any of their missteps or any of their heterodox opinions are grounds to tear them down. That's no way to grow up. You cannot be a young person and grow up in a graceless society.
I think it's important to realize that there are a whole host of young people who did not come from this squeaky wheel, the tyranny of the minority group of people who do show up in institutions and scare the life out of everyone. But the fact of the matter is, whether it's young people or American people at large, 80 percent of Americans think political correctness has gone too far. The vast majority of people do not want to live in a world where they're tripping over tripwires at every turn or censoring their speech or biting their tongue for fear that someone will give them the worst possible interpretation of what they said. This is a tyranny of the minority, and courage is contagious, and there is strength in numbers, and I think that we really can fight back with that knowledge
Reason: Can you explain what the Woodward Report was?
Lukianoff: It was so terrific, and Yale specifically disavowed it in court. The Woodward Report was this wonderful report that came out in the 1970s. It was a stirring defense of the importance of freedom of speech, even for speech that we find deeply offensive. It was supposed to be kind of one of the things that really set Yale apart, and they haven't been living up to it for a long time. But one thing that was kind of sobering to see is them actually going to court in a case where actually it was more of an attack on the right, that they were in a litigation against this one professor, and they specifically disowned the Woodward Report, basically saying in court that, "That's just puffery. We didn't really mean any of that."
Reason: What is the right wing version of cancel culture?
Schlott: Yeah, actually, it surprises most people to hear that about a third of attempts to get professors censored or fired are coming from the right and are attacks on professors to the left of the students. That tends to happen less in the really shiny institutions that garner the headlines and more at smaller schools, but it's still meaningful.
There's intergroup cancel culture in a way that I think is really frightening on the right. We talk about David French, for example, who's maligned for having some different views about Trump and conservatism. I think, especially in the post-MAGA era, there's a reflexive response to anyone who might be critical of Trump or to doubt Trump to cancel them or to squeeze them out. We talk about Megyn Kelly as an example of that, who gave me my first job in media, and was squeezed out from the right and then from the left—a demonstration of how one person who is or at the time was in pretty much the center right area could be canceled by both sides.
Reason: Where does right-wing cancel culture come from?
Schlott: I mean, I would say as someone who is right-leaning, and who grew up in a context where I now realize I wrongfully associated illiberalism with liberalism just because of the context of the years that I grew up in. I've realized that the left completely left freedom of speech, which used to be a fundamental principle of theirs, up for grabs. And anyone could grab that mantle and say, "Here's the restorative, pluralistic democratic vision to move forward." But instead, I think that we've seen quite a lot of people on the right just fight illiberalism with illiberalism and fists with fists in a way that is just so infuriating.
Reason: How has cancel culture erupted in the last few weeks in response to the war between Israel and Hamas? Do you think that Harvard students should lose their jobs over their opinions on Israelis and Palestinians?
Lukianoff: It is still cancel culture. I mean just the fact that it's cancel culture that many people agree with doesn't make it not cancel culture and I don't like blacklists. I like to actually deal with people individually, find out what they really think about something, and give the benefit of the doubt.
Now to be clear, do companies have the legal right to hire who they want? Yes, and I oppose laws actually saying that they have to hire, but I do want people to take a deep breath, take some distance and say to themselves, "What if we live in a country where every company was also not just a widget shop, but also a political shop, and the boss's politics decided who got to keep their job?" And it's not that fanciful because that's what it started to look like in 2020 and 2021 where people were getting fired for just having mildly critical Black Lives Matter statements. So I want people to consider what the world would look like if essentially you have a First Amendment, but you can't have a job if you actually honestly say your political opinion.
I will give one caveat though to the Harvard students. I think that a big part of the problem we have as a country is that we too reflexively hire elite college graduates. I think this creates serious problems. I think you should try to find out when you're hiring from elite college campuses by asking, "Okay, no, I understand you have a view that I find abhorrent. Can you work with people who disagree with you?"
Reason: Universities love to shoot their mouths off about all kinds of things. In your perfect universe, would universities never talk about anything other than higher education? Is the problem that they're making too many statements, or that they are not making the right statements, or that they're just hypocritical?
Lukianoff: In my perfect universe, every university would adopt a 1967 University of Chicago C Report, which is a very strong admonition not to take political positions. We are not the speakers, we are the forum for the speakers and the thinkers, which I think is the right attitude to have about higher education.
Reason: What can we do about cancel culture?
Schlott: Yeah, this is the conclusion of our book where we really make the case that we all need to buy into this free speech culture. That the only way we can supplant cancel culture is by going back to the old idioms that so many Americans were raised with, like, "to each their own." This is a free country, everyone's entitled to their own opinion. Because I think we've underestimated just how far we've drifted away from that. Parents have not realized that they need to be aggressively mindful in instilling those values into a generation of young people who've been taught the absolute opposite, whether it was in K-12 or on college campuses, that words can wound and always trust your feelings, and that you can insulate yourself. You need safe spaces and trigger warnings.
We all need to buy-in to fight back against this tyranny of the minority of people who want to tear other people down to exercise cheap ad hominem attacks and dodge actual meaningful conversation. Because that's the only way, if we actually want to move forward in a diverse and pluralistic society, we need to be able to have civil conversation and dialogue about the touchiest and most contentious issues. And unless we actually, mindfully fight back against cancel culture, we are just going to slump down into dangerous and illiberal tendencies.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
- Video Editor: Adam Czarnecki
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Schlott can't even boaf sidez! the issue ... maybe take a hint?
Objective people who point to both sides do recognize the occasional one-sided issue. It doesn't happen often, but it happens.
Though it is rather funny how when the right is the one-side, those who attack by mockingly saying "Boaf sidez!" get all butthurt and claim "But, but, but it really is both sides! For real! Look!"
Today's example comes from Zeroheads--pay no attention to those prohibition laws behind the crashes--nooz: EXTRA! Boaf looter sides lie through their teeth! Looka dis example from the non-Trumpanzee press...
Lukianoff's definition if Cancel Culture is one of the most vague Left-Social word salads obfuscations I've read in recent history and to cap it off with "in terms of numbers of college professors fired" is just perfect icing on the the FIREtard cake.
Lukianoff: The definition of Cancel Culture is an event or an Era.
I don't think you know what the words "working definition" mean.
Forbidding people from being fired for having a difference of opinion with their employer, especially from a State-funded job is worse for free speech, free association, and the taxpayers than the latter. Dumbfuck.
Lukianoff, to the best of my estimation, is one of those nominally center-left creatures that has, to his credit, realized there is a pretty awful problem that can't be ignored, but he still lives and operates within the NPR totebag crowd, and you get a strong feeling of "tip-toeing"... being very careful because "he still has friends in this town".
He reminds me a bit of Jonathan Haidt. Another reasonably smart person who couldn't help but notice something very, very wrong, but is incredibly careful to remain "equitable" in his criticism and seems to be very careful to not go too far or offend the wrong people.
What's funny, is no one need be a Trump supporter, MAGA cultist, staunch Republican etc. to realize that something is very, very wrong in the culture, and most of it stems from the establishment left.
There may be reasonable diagnoses of this problem that might lead one to realize that like Neocons, it's a kind of cancer that attaches itself to whatever political movement is the most efficient to accelerate its ideology... but that's a longer discussion.
Yet no mention of the root cause? Is nobody gonna point out the elephant in the room? The gd IC runs the media for the last 75 years at least. Recently they’ve completely commandeered it with propaganda and censorship. Anyone noticing cancel culture can’t help but notice the sole progenitors and propagators of it are transparently the IC controlled media. So why tip toe around it as if it doesn’t exist or matter?
Ah soooo. Trumpanzee no rika Eye See...
Reason: Can you elaborate more on the number of firings you are referring to?
I’m assuming this question was rhetorical from the interviewers standpoint, as a mechanism to allow the interviewee to chronicle specific notable events for the benefit of some uninitiated listeners… because I damn well know that if the intervewER has been paying attention, he’d know *checks interview transcript with Brendan O’Neill* EXACTLY “what the stakes are here, man”.
My mind is still being blown by the idea that the proper way to quantize free speech oppression is by the number of firings of State Professors.
All the Brendan Eichs, James Damores, Nick Sandmanns, Julian Assanges, Edward Snowdens, John Paul Mac Isaacs, Aziz Ansaris, Barrington Accord Signatories… not (necessarily/specifically) college professors, don’t count.
tenure, it's not just the conditions under which land or buildings are held or occupied.
Yeah, the case I like to think of when someone demands a ‘cancel culture’ example that doesn’t touch inside-academia-baseball is Rosie Kay.
WHO?!!
Exactly.
Rosie Kay was a dance choreographer that got swiftly fired from her own dance company because, during a dinner party someone told her that for their upcoming show that “she must cast a trans person for this role” and her response was literally* “Well, we haven’t made any decisions yet so I can’t speak to that”.
The next thing she knew, she was standing on the front steps with a cardboard box of her things, locked out of her own building, wondering what the hell just happened.
The reason Rosie Kay is so interesting is not only was she canceled for merely demurring to hire a trans person for a dance role– she didn’t say she wouldn’t– she just said she wasn’t sure how it would be cast as it was early in the process– and that was enough to get her accused of “literally killing trans people”.
Then… THEN, as if that wasn’t enough, when she went public with her firing, the very people that got her fired now claim they are the victim, because she went public. I’m not kidding you. It’s the closest case of ‘the person with defensive knife wounds on her hands is the problem’:
Dancers who accused a leading choreographer of transphobia have claimed she has jeopardised their safety by publicising her resignation.
So I agree, keeping a short list of college professors doesn’t begin to touch on the problem.
Lukianoff should be glad he didn’t have a chapter titled “Her Penis” because Gillespie never would have gotten past that collection of words and syllables.
*she didn't "literally" say what I put in quotes, but it was "literally" something to the effect of "Thanks for you input, let's wait and see"
Bro the topic was academia
Are you trying to look retarded?
So, moron, if the FedGov ruled academia with an Iron Fist and completely dictated from the President's mouth what professors taught and what students learned you would regard that as a 1A utopia as long as no professors got fired?
If the topic was academia then his response of "Cancel culture is an event, an era" to the question of "What is the working definition of cancel culture?" is even more retarded and less workable. An event or era where students, admins, or both get professors fired? Seems like if admins *and* students are "getting" professors fired, it's an era of shitty, unpopular, or activist professors.
If that's not what his/your definition meant, in academia, maybe learn what the term(s) "workable definition (in academia)" mean(s).
Even more pointedly retarded and hilarious to your stupidity. FIRE *used* to stand for “Foundation for Individual Rights *in Education*”. In 2022, they rebranded to “Foundation for Individual Rights *and Expression*”.
The dude cites the Alien and Sedition Act and McCarthyism. If the topic is education (focused) rather than free speech, he certainly doesn’t seem to give a shit about education or limiting the scope of the discussion except to say “MUH PROFESSORZ GAHT FEYEURD!”
In fairness, this could be some sort of canned interview from a while ago that the editors are trying to splice and shoehorn into coherence or relevance but, again, given Lukianoff’s wild swing from Alien and Sedition to professors, it seems more like him than the editing.
How is this an example of cancel culture?
It's not, it's an attempt to point out that anyone who proffers criticism of a public figure is engaging in bad-faith free speech.
I didn't even see that lol. Defend the French!
Universities should start off from the position that a heckler’s veto is a bad idea, and that there is no right not to be offended.
I am not sure that I agree that Cancel Culture is just another moral panic. I think it’s more insidious and Orwellian, nay Soviet, because it’s not restricted to a single subject, and because its advocates want to redefine morality broadly so that any disagreement is immoral and so not permitted. This includes meta- issues where even discussion of a subject of cancellation becomes “wrong”.
In the old days, there was a notorious question, if God is omnipotent why did he need 6 days to create the world? and the consequences of even considering this question were regarded as so grave that to ask the question itself was deemed heretical. In some cases. It seems to me that there are analogous cases in CC.
In the old days, there was a notorious question, if God is omnipotent why did he need 6 days to create the world? and the consequences of even considering this question were regarded as so grave that to ask the question itself was deemed heretical.
Even nowadays, it'll get you Gish Galloped to death by exhaustion if you let the believers get away with it. Always be ready to cut them off whenever that happens.
Izzis the same God that only speaks to mohammedan jihadists and berserker Trumpanzee gunmen? (Asking for a friend...)
Gotta agree with the Guv'na here.
I'd also add the idea of a 'micro-aggression' fuels the same, always burning fire of easy offense.
Can we go back to the sticks and stones idea of resiliency?
Emotional stability and resiliency, aka maturity and self-reliance, are white patriarchal colonization, dude.
Gotta agree with the Guv’na here.
Thank you, squire!
Universities should start off from the position that a heckler’s veto is a bad idea, and that there is no right not to be offended.
That's only gone in one direction since "Repressive Tolerance" was published.
Defend the French!
This being St Crispin's Day, might I suggest that your call is perhaps a little late? Oh, wrong French, sorry!
But if it be a sin to covet honour, I am the most offending soul alive.
Indeed!
I prefer Olivier's rendition above all others, but find to my surprise that many people prefer Branagh's.
Though, just replaying it, I find that Olivier doesn't deliver that line - there was some editing (and the changing of "vile" to "base").
I did enjoy Dead Again but ya, Olivier wins.
Let the French defend themselves! After all, they have a big bunch of World War II-era rifles, never fired and dropped only once!
🙂
😉
You may recall the joke, why did the French plant trees on the boulevards of Paris? So that the Germans could march in the shade.
Vichy French traded the "Liberté Fraternité Egalité" Jefferson kinda liked for the "Travail, Famille, Patrie" so popular among today's MAGA 'Murrican christianofascists. What's the big deal?
When your definition of culture is, like, the modern era we're living in and, like, the event that is the collective now, how is it *not* an example of cancel culture and the corrosion of free speech? Duh.
Cancel culture is at least partially possible because of modern technology: omnipresent cell phone recording devices, instant sharing worldwide and multimedia internet platforms. In previous "panics" there was no instant gratification from sharing your outrage over someone's opinion and much less opportunity to even get exposed to the opinions of others, let alone build mass outrage. The public image of employers which much less at stake - either actually or perceptually previously.
Cancel culture thrives because it means assholes can shut someone down not for what they said today, but for what they said years ago. Don't like someone? Dig through their past and come up with a gotcha! Spread it around to get others riled up, and what they say or do now doesn't matter because of something that happened in the past.
Why does that seem familiar?
It was what the right is trying to do to the leading proponent of free speech, inquiry, and open society today.
We're isolated into closed societies (tribes) that don't allow debate.
In the closed society, claims to certain knowledge and ultimate truth lead to the attempted imposition of one version of reality. Such a society is closed to freedom of thought. In contrast, in an open society each citizen needs to engage in critical thinking, which requires freedom of thought and expression and the cultural and legal institutions that can facilitate this
Soros.
The progressive tribe is at war with the conservative tribe. No critical thinking allowed by either.
We’re isolated into closed societies (tribes) that don’t allow debate.
Cites Soros.
Blames the right.
Ha!
That's what he meant when he said "No critical thinking allowed by either."
Yep. That's what blaming one side looks like.
Read the first line. I bolded it for you to help with comprehension.
It was what the right is trying to do to the leading proponent of free speech, inquiry, and open society today.
Your native American name should be 'He who looks for an argument with everyone.'
Your native American name should be ‘He who looks for an argument with everyone.’
Touche, and that put a smile on my face. Thanks. I think.
Blames the right
Soros is the foremost advocate of free speech/press in the world.
And that is why your brethren in Russia/Hungary and other totalitarian states want to ban him.
No, they want to ban him because he's a subversive, rootless cosmopolitan with a god complex, who also happens to be pro-criminal.
they want to ban him because he’s a subversive, rootless cosmopolitan
Yup - both Russians and Hungarians aren't known for their lack of anti-Semitism.
When did banning people become a libertarian virtue?
Shitlibs sure do love their false dichotomies.
My band Metric made a song about that.
Doubt you'll like it, but someone might.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fxAIn2OOpwI
Seen them three times now, though never at Red Rocks.
You're not fooling anyone Buttface. There's only one way Soros' New One World Order could come to pass, and that's global tyranny. And you know it. And if you don't you're dumber than your comments.
It sounds familiar up to the point where those "others" that are "riled up" include banks and social media companies that, at the behest of the government, ban/cancel the account of the target in question.
Wait justa goddam minit! Didn't the infallible pope of Torquemada issue Joan of Arc a pardon for youthful indiscretions? Didn't they admit that burning at the stake was "excessive"?
I recall that one person who was fired for making a tweet from an airplane, and was fire before she had even landed at her destination. While her tweet was cringy, it was still grossly misinterpreted. And she went from a literal nobody to the most hated person of the week in over a single tweet.
The speed at which cancel mobs will strike is frightening.
And it drives me fucking nuts when the defense of this is, "It's not cancel culture, there's no such thing as cancel culture, and she really should have been fired!"
She should be glad she wasn't a teenage girl going to prom in an "Asian Style Dress".
Daum has said that the gesture was actually a reference to a pose done by a popular YouTube comedian named Ethan Klein
Uh… yeah, given the dumpster fire that Ethan Klein has become, probably should’ve just stuck with “I’m not going to apologize to anyone complaining about how their entire culture is caught up in a piece of women’s clothing I found in a thrift store.”
I'd say "What a mind fuck to have the world, as personified by at least one Asian male, trash your prom dress like that." but Millennials created and Gen Z were born into this insanity.
https://twitter.com/JackPosobiec/status/1717229047728820690?t=rNtQZsEEMsi4hap4CnuSVQ&s=19
BREAKING: The federal government has ordered Owen Shroyer into solitary confinement immediately upon reporting to prison
https://twitter.com/feelsdesperate/status/1717220047901388901?t=M8ia3qP5Qiv0zjeSMYaRNg&s=19
Universities and colleges routinely de-recognize conservative groups, or refuse to recognize them.
FIRE is once again standing up for low-level bureaucratic control, not free expression.
[Link]
Again, the underlying notion that the very home of free speech is America’s subsidized adult indoctrination centers is utterly bizarre.
"Schlott: Yeah, actually, it surprises most people to hear that about a third of attempts to get professors censored or fired are coming from the right and are attacks on professors to the left of the students."
Um, how far to the left? Does a professor who proclaims hatred for white people or for any form of free society deserve protection from cancellation?
We, with Robby, went through this bullshit with the UCR and various selection/affirmation biases for actual, no-shit violent crimes within the actual, no-shit justice system.
The generous interpretation of her statement is that it’s utter bullshit. The less generous but more analytical interpretation is that 2/3 of attempts are coming from the left and are attacks on professors to the right of the students and with fewer right-leaning professors in general, they’re more generally oppressed and successfully silenced, generally by retards saying “People are surprised to learn that one third of attempts to get professors censored or fired are coming from the right.”
So a center left professor being attacked by a virulently far-left student is an attack by the right? Sounds about correct for modern discourse.
Why are college kids terrified?
participation trophies
helicopter parents
school admission anxiety (starting with preschool)
delayed maturity
fear-mongering society
critical theory
unionized activist K-12 teachers
emotional dependency conditioning
Marxist professors
aversion to work
it's what all the cool kids are doing
It’s just the infancy of global communication from the internet. We will get thru this, the pendulum will swing back. But in order to do so, we must shun the IC, propaganda, and gov coercion of the media.
The kids are terrified because they have heard that someone, somewhere, just might not agree with them.
It’s because they were falsely trained to believe that A) they’re entitled to things they’re not; and B) actions don’t and shouldn’t have consequences. And now they’re learning the hard way just how untrue that is. The problem is that they think having social media means that everything they say should be respected and tolerated, and thus never learned basic social graces (like, say, the three subjects you just don't talk about in mixed company).
School of Hard Knocks, guys. It’s the only one giving out degrees these days.
Why are these 'poor, suffering students" terrified? Because they are finally getting a dose of what they and their fascist professors have dished out for decades, Cancel culture. They have attacked and cancelled executives, race car drivers (for comments made by his father) and anyone else who "triggers" their wrath, including a friend of mine.
He was cancelled by an undoubtedly drug soaked computer programmer from the Mile HIGH state of Colorado for a humorous comment. His employer, a government receiving Federal funding which means they are bound by each and every word of the CONSTITUTION gave him a four minute hearing, two on one with no counsel allowed then fired him - 1st Amendment. No attorney would help him and he was destroyed.
The Lefties want us to back off. Here are the terms - Reparations for each and every individual cancelled paid from either the government or the individual/s responsible for the cancellation to the amount of money they have lost with interest at the prevailing credit card rate.
And an apology from our addled President to each and every one of them.
Then we can talk about backing off. Until then, we take out every Antifa, BLM and Hamas loving leftie and send THEM to the unemployment line.
harmo
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Good: Not all Palestinians are militant Hamas terrorists. In fact, most Palestinians (even those who voted-in Hamas politicians in 2006) are victims of Hamas policies and the resulting crossfire vs Israel -- including being used as "human shields". Because of this dichotomy, we (Americans, "The West" etc.) should support Palestinian victims even as we support Israel's war against Hamas.
Bad: Callow college students celebrating Hamas' mass murder, terror and kidnapping.
Worse: Bigoted, anti-Jew threats/actions hearkening back to Nazi Germany and/or reminding us of Kristallnacht.
I may disagree with Jewish theology, but I will defend to the death their right to express it.
The question is: Why are students terrified?
Um... Kent State? Tuition an order of magnitude higher? No want ads seeking poetry appreciation, socialist smugma, Christian Revelations or gender studies PhDs?