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In February, Williams College President Adam Falk unilaterally disinvited controversial writer John Derbyshire from the school鈥檚 student-run 鈥溾 speaker series. The reason, according to President Falk, was that Derbyshire鈥檚 views鈥攚hich have 鈥攎ade people too uncomfortable.

In short, Adam Falk missed the point.

Uncomfortable Learning鈥檚 president, Williams sophomore Zach Wood, wrote an op-ed for FIREcriticizing what was then the second such disinvitation .

Wood recently sat down with FIREto talk about the importance of combating bad ideas with good ones, and how he experienced backlash for encouraging that difficult-but-necessary dialogue.

鈥淭here were students who were saying, 鈥榋ach Wood is causing literal harm, literal violence, on campus. Social violence, psychological violence, and physical violence,鈥欌 Wood remembered. 鈥淚t was on Yik Yak, it was on Facebook, it was all over social media.鈥 Wood even had notes slipped under his door.

But Wood looks to history for lessons on why the battle for free speech is one that鈥檚 well worth fighting.

鈥淯ltimately, when I think about the figures that I admire most, I remember they鈥檝e stood up for things when it was difficult to stand up for things that they believed in,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 Martin Luther King, that is our Founding Fathers. And, for me, that gives me strength.鈥

Wood says that when it comes to learning, being uncomfortable is one of the surest ways to achieve not just intellectual growth, but a deeper appreciation of the benefits of free expression.

鈥淚f we challenge ourselves to consider the possibility that we might be wrong on the things that we feel the deepest conviction about, it鈥檚 not necessarily about your views changing, it鈥檚 about gaining a deeper understanding,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 feel like that is the best way forward.鈥

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