Posted on 04/12/2016 12:23:48 PM PDT by Morgana
Weve recently explored the ways college pro-abortion activists are woefully ill-equipped to confront pro-life thought, and now a recent segment on Fox News gives us a glimpse why.
Megyn Kelly recently interviewed Rachel Huebner, a Harvard student and staff writer with the Harvard Crimson, who says she has witnessed open discourse [being] stifled and a lack of freedom of expression, which is occurring at Harvard and campuses nationwide.
She cites a particularly glaring incident involving abortion:
HUEBNER: We were discussing general guidelines for class and specific things that people might find offensive, and this was just one specific instance of a comment that a student contended may be something that could hurt someones feelings.
KELLY: So she didnt want to sit across from somebody who wasnt pro-choice because she couldnt handle the class if she just knew in her head the person was not pro-choice.
HUEBNER: Correct. It was something she deemed offensive.
Huebner elaborated on this incident in an article she wrote for the Crimson, recounting what passed for the students logic: as a woman, she would be unable to sit across from a student who declared that he was strongly against abortion (emphasis added). Not exactly the vision of strength and confidence women are supposed to be getting from feminism.
Worse, her classmates vigorously defended this declaration and the professoryou know, one of the role models ostensibly there to help students grow as thoughtful and well-adjusted human beingsremained silent.
Kelly marveled at the sad spectacle, asking how these students think theyre gonna be able to function in the world with this sort of coddling. But its worse than that as Live Action covered in December, other schools extend this sort of coddling to bias incident reports, so nice officials can see to it that delicate pro-abortion flowers never have to endure the trauma of someone expressing disagreement in their presence.
In her article, Huebner explains how starting college disillusioned her assumption that everyone appreciated Americas tradition of open discourse, that it was understood that without a marketplace of ideas, our society simply could not flourish. Instead, she found a culture where one has to monitor every syllable that is uttered to ensure that it could not under any circumstance offend anyone to the slightest degree.
Of course, its all but impossible to shield one group from offense without offending another group, relegating pro-life perspectives to second-class status. So its not even about any sincere-if-misguided conviction that everyones beliefs must be treated gently; its a front to give the preferred biases protection at all costs.
Thats why this trigger-mania is so cancerous on two levels. The first is that, as we saw in Ben Shapiros exchange with pro-abortion campus zombies, it raises young people to become even more convinced that their support for abortion is morally and intellectually infallible, giving the abortion lobby unearned support that is both more extreme than it would have been and harder to reason with.
The second is that, as Shapiro also showed us, it takes the people we count on to be the next generations parents, voters, community leaders, businessmen, scientists, politicians, etc., and leaves them without real critical thinking or problem-solving skills, or clear principles by which to solve moral quandarieswhile smugly convinced theyve got it all figured out. If youre pro-abortion, that may not bother you right now because youre getting what you want out of the deal. But it should, because those handicaps will inevitably rub off on all the other aspects of life, culture, and politics theyll be influencing.
Finally, Huebner notes a particularly sad irony of this craze:
The rise of safe spaces has also deeply encroached upon open dialogue and free expression. It is ironic that while the origins of the term safe space can be found in the 20th century womens movement, where it implies a certain license to speak and act freely, today the term has come to be associated with precisely the opposite: the inability to speak freely. Journalists have been silenced in the name of safe spaces and debates have been barred. Books have been banned and conversation topics prohibited.
These are not what feminism or higher education were supposed to be. These are not the personal fortitude, confident independence, careful thought, or hunger for knowledge we were supposed to arming future Americans with. Until we stop this insanity, we will continue to fail our kids, both in and out of the womb.
I need to retreat to my safe zone as well because I cannot fathom in my mind that college students could be such an embarrassing, disgusting, pathetic example of human life.
I never realized there was a Professor at Harvard suggesting we eliminate the white race, students calling for white people to kill themselves, and a White Privilege conference for people to attend.
I’m so incensed by these recent discoveries I’m going to have to regroup and realize these are anomalies. Hopefully to be squashed like a bug.
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