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God, I feel stupid talking Muggles and sorcerers but I didn't want to bring anything real into it because it just pollutes the discussion. |
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I usually think that the remedy for offensive speech is more speech. You are not saying that you should have been allowed to speak more. You are saying that you don't like what other people said to you. How, in principle, is your beef different from the academic speech codes that try to ensure that all students feel comfortable by limiting certain kinds of speech likely to be offensive to some? (Not saying I agree with this, BTW.) Those codes try to ensure that everyone is comfortable by telling some to keep it to themselves. You seem to wish the other students had kept it to themselves. The only difference I see is that you are not saying they should have been punished by the school, but the principle is the same. Quote:
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* My mother was junior faculty at a prestigious school that did not tenure women. She left. So I'm down with your family's irritation at the situation. |
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A Unified Theory of PC
Conservatives:
(1) Believe that the academy's major failing is that it permits consequence-free experimental thought that would get "no traction" in the real world, but simultaneously object to the existence of a purely social phenomenon within the academy that is inarguably a precise reflection of outside realities, except that the beat-down that you get for offending someone personally is merely verbal instead of physical, and the sense of community is often such that people will defend someone else, even an absent party, from perceived offense. Conservatives regard the defense of absent parties as dirty pool, because they harbor the belief that the absent party has a 50/50 shot of agreeing with them, but have no opportunity to establish this because it too often defies common sense ("if there were a poor immigrant in this room here at Dartmouth, they would agree they have equal opportunities to me"). (2) Trust that unregulated free markets always produce things that enough people want, except there are inexplicably no first-rate colleges or universities with majority conservative tenured faculty, and no significant mass media with conservative voices. Majorities can be trusted to be a reflection of market demand, except in the highly competitive marketplaces of college selection and media consumption. I invite someone from the other side of the aisle to attempt a fair summary of liberal thought on the above topics. Edit: typos. |
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