A chilling study shows how hostile college students are toward free speech - The Washington Post [View all]
A chilling study shows how hostile college students are toward free speech - The Washington Post
A chilling study shows how hostile college students are toward free speech
By Catherine Rampell Opinion writer September 18
Heres the problem with suggesting that upsetting speech warrants safe spaces, or otherwise
conflating mere words with physical assault: If speech is violence, then violence becomes a justifiable response to speech. ... Just ask college students. A fifth of undergrads now say its acceptable to use physical force to silence a speaker who makes offensive and hurtful statements.
Thats one finding from a disturbing
new survey of students conducted by John Villasenor, a Brookings Institution senior fellow and University of California at Los Angeles professor.
In August, motivated by concerns about the narrowing window of permissible topics for discussion on campuses, Villasenor conducted a nationwide survey of 1,500 undergraduate students at four-year colleges. Financial support for the survey was provided by the Charles Koch Foundation, which Villasenor said had no involvement in designing, administering or analyzing the questionnaire; as of this writing, the foundation had also not seen his results.
Many of Villasenors questions were designed to gauge students understanding of the First Amendment. Colleges, after all, pay a lot of
lip service to freedom of speech, despite high-profile examples of civil-liberty-squelching on campus. The survey suggests that this might not be due to hypocrisy so much as a misunderstanding of what the First Amendment actually entails.
....
Results based on online survey of 1,500 undergraduate students at U.S. four-year colleges and universities, all U.S. citizens, conducted Aug. 17-31. For a confidence level of 95 percent, the margin of error is between approximately 2 percent and 6 percent, depending on the group.
....
Catherine Rampell is an opinion columnist at The Washington Post. Follow @crampell
This comment says it all:
in4mation
9/19/2017 7:49 PM EDT
"Heres the problem with suggesting that upsetting speech warrants safe spaces, or otherwise conflating mere words with physical assault: If speech is violence, then violence becomes a justifiable response to speech."
You summed it up in just two sentences.