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Wendy Kaminer on āThe Danger of Playing It Safe with Ideasā
Fresh from being accused of committing āan explicit act of racial violenceā by openly discussing the word āniggerā during a panel discussion on free speech at Smith College, lawyer and FIREBoard of Advisors member Wendy Kaminer examines the mindset of her critics (and too many students like them) in an article for today.
Discussing several incidents that will sound familiar to Torch readers, Kaminer observes that students frequently cite the rationale of āsafetyā in calling for censorship of protected speechābut what they seek is emotional and intellectual, not physical, safety. As she writes, this leads to a grave result:
Censorship is anathema to education.ā How do you ensure your safety when you feel āattacked by viewpoints?ā You shut down or avoid debates about controversial subjects that feature perspectives you donāt share. You demand enforcement of expansive speech and civility codes. You befriend or associate with only those people who share your ideology and sensibilities. You learn nothing apart from the āfactā that youāre always entirely and self-evidently right, while everyone else is entirely and self-evidently wrong.
Kaminer also articulates the other side of studentsā demands for emotional safety:
If we have a right not to be offended, then we have no right to give offense. That means we have no reliable, predictable right to speak, because in diverse societies there are no universal opinions or beliefs that are universally inoffensive. If we have a legal right to feel emotionally safe and un-offended, we have a legal obligation to keep silent, which we violate at our peril. Emotionally safe societies are dangerous places for people who speak.
Read the rest of at Cognoscenti.
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