"My Fellow Delicate Little Americans..."
This is how all presidential speeches should start from now on. Because we are a land of fragile little things, as evidenced by the culture of "trigger warnings" on campus. From a piece in The Atlantic, "The Coddling of the American Mind," by Greg Lukianoff and Jonathan Haidt:
The current movement is largely about emotional well-being. More than the last, it presumes an extraordinary fragility of the collegiate psyche, and therefore elevates the goal of protecting students from psychological harm. The ultimate aim, it seems, is to turn campuses into "safe spaces" where young adults are shielded from words and ideas that make some uncomfortable. And more than the last, this movement seeks to punish anyone who interferes with that aim, even accidentally. You might call this impulse vindictive protectiveness. It is creating a culture in which everyone must think twice before speaking up, lest they face charges of insensitivity, aggression, or worse.We have been studying this development for a while now, with rising alarm. (Greg Lukianoff is a constitutional lawyer and the president and CEO of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which defends free speech and academic freedom on campus, and has advocated for students and faculty involved in many of the incidents this article describes; Jonathan Haidt is a social psychologist who studies the American culture wars. The stories of how we each came to this subject can be read here.) The dangers that these trends pose to scholarship and to the quality of American universities are significant; we could write a whole essay detailing them. But in this essay we focus on a different question: What are the effects of this new protectiveness on the students themselves? Does it benefit the people it is supposed to help? What exactly are students learning when they spend four years or more in a community that polices unintentional slights, places warning labels on works of classic literature, and in many other ways conveys the sense that words can be forms of violence that require strict control by campus authorities, who are expected to act as both protectors and prosecutors?
There's a saying common in education circles: Don't teach students what to think; teach them how to think. The idea goes back at least as far as Socrates. Today, what we call the Socratic method is a way of teaching that fosters critical thinking, in part by encouraging students to question their own unexamined beliefs, as well as the received wisdom of those around them. Such questioning sometimes leads to discomfort, and even to anger, on the way to understanding.
But vindictive protectiveness teaches students to think in a very different way. It prepares them poorly for professional life, which often demands intellectual engagement with people and ideas one might find uncongenial or wrong. The harm may be more immediate, too. A campus culture devoted to policing speech and punishing speakers is likely to engender patterns of thought that are surprisingly similar to those long identified by cognitive behavioral therapists as causes of depression and anxiety. The new protectiveness may be teaching students to think pathologically.
They suggest cognitive behavioral therapy (the rationally corrective thought that comes from it) as one solution. Also, they mention the fallacy that avoiding thoughts that cause trauma is healthy:
According to the most-basic tenets of psychology, the very idea of helping people with anxiety disorders avoid the things they fear is misguided. A person who is trapped in an elevator during a power outage may panic and think she is going to die. That frightening experience can change neural connections in her amygdala, leading to an elevator phobia. If you want this woman to retain her fear for life, you should help her avoid elevators.But if you want to help her return to normalcy, you should take your cues from Ivan Pavlov and guide her through a process known as exposure therapy. You might start by asking the woman to merely look at an elevator from a distance--standing in a building lobby, perhaps--until her apprehension begins to subside. If nothing bad happens while she's standing in the lobby--if the fear is not "reinforced"--then she will begin to learn a new association: elevators are not dangerous. (This reduction in fear during exposure is called habituation.) Then, on subsequent days, you might ask her to get closer, and on later days to push the call button, and eventually to step in and go up one floor. This is how the amygdala can get rewired again to associate a previously feared situation with safety or normalcy.
...Rather than trying to protect students from words and ideas that they will inevitably encounter, colleges should do all they can to equip students to thrive in a world full of words and ideas that they cannot control. One of the great truths taught by Buddhism (and Stoicism, Hinduism, and many other traditions) is that you can never achieve happiness by making the world conform to your desires. But you can master your desires and habits of thought. This, of course, is the goal of cognitive behavioral therapy. With this in mind, here are some steps that might help reverse the tide of bad thinking on campus.
The biggest single step in the right direction does not involve faculty or university administrators, but rather the federal government, which should release universities from their fear of unreasonable investigation and sanctions by the Department of Education. Congress should define peer-on-peer harassment according to the Supreme Court's definition in the 1999 case Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education. The Davis standard holds that a single comment or thoughtless remark by a student does not equal harassment; harassment requires a pattern of objectively offensive behavior by one student that interferes with another student's access to education. Establishing the Davis standard would help eliminate universities' impulse to police their students' speech so carefully.
Colleges need to abandon their current mission of making students feel comfortable at all cost and return to their prior mission of free inquiry -- a mission which cannot thrive without free speech.








Instapundit gives us some knowledge:
I R A Darth Aggie at August 12, 2015 6:06 AM
I've said the same thing. You don't demand that colleges change for the wounded; if you're wounded, you go get help and come back when you're ready for the mainstream.
Amy Alkon at August 12, 2015 6:42 AM
I'm not convinced that treating it as a phobia is the right approach. It might be part of an approach. But there's a level of emotional immaturity that isn't present in simple phobias. Most people who have phobias are, to some extent or another, ashmed of them. If they can't overcome the phobia, they might go so far as to arrange their own lives to avoid the thing that they have the phobia of. But they almost never demand that the entire world rearrange itself to accommodate their phobia. I've never heard of a person with an elevator phobia demandind that elevators be banned.
Cousin Dave at August 12, 2015 7:34 AM
This goes hand-in-hand with the ongoing protests.
No one (other than us clueless white privileged old guys) can bring themselves to say "STUPID!".
Protest after dark so 'bad guys bored guys clueless guys' can use the cover of darkness to loot and be all bad. (Go South baby and we'll let God sort it out if you go near our favorite BBQ restaurant. We bait bear/hogs down here and you aren't that big and bad.)
NOPE! It's their RIGHT to protest. Ya da. Ya da. Ya da. Have some decency and protest in the light of day so business owners can keep their business in YOUR neighborhood. STUPID!
Protest Bernie Sanders????????????????????
Do some homework. He was on your side before YOU WERE BORN! STUPID!!!!
Gotta laugh at 'em. Useless pieces of crap EXCEPT somebody is finding them useful. Somebody is paying protestors to travel around the country. Right-wingers? Doubt it. But ...
Bob in Texas at August 12, 2015 9:53 AM
Well I think we need to forma committee to find a new phrase.
"Trigger" refers to a gun, and warning has the word "war" in it. Both of which conjure images of white heteronormative patriarchal power.
So obviously the first thing to do is to find a less harsh system to to apprise them that they are about to be mind raped by facts, logic, and objective reality to fail to conform to their preconceived notions
lujlp at August 12, 2015 4:11 PM
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