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Offended? Overreact!

The campaign against offense continues. IvyGate that on Monday, The Dartmouth student newspaper ran a drawn by freshman Drew Lerman. The cartoon depicts Friedrich Nietzsche conversing with a male college student about whether the student should take advantage of a drunken college female. As seen in the last panel of the cartoon, the joke pokes fun at 鈥渓iberal academic revisionism,鈥 and the punch line is 鈥渕an, I am so beyond good and evil right now.鈥

In response to the cartoon, IvyGate reports, 鈥淎 few readers concluded that the cartoon advocates rape and proceeded to burn copies of The Dartmouth outside the paper鈥檚 offices.鈥 Also in response, an alumna wrote an , run in The Dartmouth, expressing her disgust with the cartoon and the paper鈥檚 Editorial Board, and the Student Assembly concerning the integrity of The Dartmouth.

While the uproar caused by this cartoon is miniscule in comparison to the sometimes violent global response to the Mohammed cartoons, critics of both cartoons proceed under the same premises: the drawings are too offensive; they belittle and disrespect ideas that we should treat with only deference; and they鈥檙e too gross to be funny or thought-provoking.

The Dartmouth Editorial Board on Monday stating, 鈥渁s an independent medium for free discourse and exchange of information, we place a strong priority on the protection of free speech.鈥 Also, the editorial clarifies the point of the joke, asserts the paper鈥檚 independence, and further states, 鈥淸a]s a Board, however, we decided that offensiveness does not always call for censorship.鈥

The Editorial Board also apologized for the cartoon and, echoing Amy Gutmann鈥檚 statement last week, admitted the cartoon offended them too. And to state the obvious and dispel any unreasonable doubt, they wrote, 鈥渢he Dartmouth strongly and unequivocally condemns sexual assault.鈥

I am both encouraged and discouraged by the incident. The burning of newspapers, like newspaper theft, acts as a heckler鈥檚 veto and adds nothing to the campus conversation.  On the other hand, the alumna who wrote the op-ed, though I disagree with almost everything she wrote, commented civilly on the cartoon, and The Dartmouth responded in turn. As for the Student Senate, their assumption that The Dartmouth reports to them scares me, though their statement thankfully does not put any 鈥渙fficial demands鈥 on the Editorial Board.

Too many minor incidents鈥Halloween costumes, Halloween , or single comic strips鈥攈ave become controversies on campus because certain groups of students assume that nothing they see, hear, or read should offend them. These incidents are a symptom of a campus culture which too often values utopian visions of comfort and respect over rigorous, and sometimes uncomfortable and offensive, conversation.

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