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One can see the absurdity/horror of particular incidents (like that of Evergreen, and others) without believing such absurdities apply to or influence the bulk of the US’s 20 million college students. I agree recent events are problematic, but the worry seems overblown.
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I only said it *seems* overblown to me, considering people like Rubin, Peterson, etc are treating it like it’s the defining problem of our era. I’m open to having my mind changed with sufficient evidence.
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It’s a problem, for sure, but ‘the problem of our time’ seems hyperbolic. How many students does this problem entangle? And how much power do they have overall? How much will their current ideologies temper with age? (Probably a lot.)
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These students are wrong and misinformed, no doubt, but let’s not forget that, in the US, Fox News is the most watched news source, there are 300 million guns, and oligarchy is creeping. These are massive problems, just to name a few.
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Strongly agree that it's overblown compared with the standard right-wing public personality take on it. But, without caring to back Peterson or Rubin (nor their interpretations), it *is* still a massive problem - and fighting sophistry with sophistry as pr. Vox is bad.
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Well, agreed. Radical leftists of the campus-dwelling variety *in particular* - that is, people more interested in controlling discourse than making political changes - have drenched the entire thing with gasoline. The reactionaries are just throwing matches at this point.
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The problem is definitely real (I mean, Jesus, the Evergreen situation was so fucked and completely derailed Bret Weinstein’s career), but what I want to know is how widespread it is and is there evidence that it is spreading in a significant way.
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There is a certain consilience from the sheer amount of different sources. Anecdotes are anecdotes, but you have evidence of speech prohibition in the US and Canada, and the UK has had problems with censorious student bodies for at least a decade now - it's easy to fact check.
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