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There are 9 comments on POV: Let Haters Speak. Then Disagree with Them.

  1. Couldn’t agree more. Sadly I feel that this is not a common feeling on campus. Although I disagree with 99% of what Milo Yiannopoulos preaches, I have to give it to him that he’s right on one thing-free speech. He said it best on Bill Maher, “if you don’t show up to a debate, you lose.”

  2. If you looked into Milo Yiannopoulos’s past talks you would see that one could only expect hate speech at his UC Berkeley engagement. We have a moral obligation to protest hate speech; it is not free speech. Condemning Yiannopoulos only after his sympathies for pedophilia were unveiled was too little too late, your character has been revealed.

    The author of this poorly thought out article also said that they would have liked Yiannopoulos to speak at UC Berkeley, but when Yiannopoulos spoke at another university he attacked a transgendered student in the audience, destroying that person’s life on campus and encouraging hate against any transgendered person. Continuing with his speech at Berkeley would have given him the opportunity to do this again.

    You have something to learn from Luvvie: http://www.awesomelyluvvie. com/2017/02/milo-yiannopoulos-trash.html

    1. Freedom of speech is not to protect speech you like – it’s to protect speech you hate. One thing you can be certain of – someone out there hates your point of view – not matter what it is – and would like to silence you.

  3. Thanks for your article, Ann! I just wanted to point out a small error you may not have seen: While protesters who were unaffiliated with the the school were about of the riot, students of even some teachers of UC Berkeley were as well. It was originally several student groups from the university who called on the protests after failing to get Yiannoloulos’s original invitation revoked. Hope this helps!

  4. I agree with some of your assertions and the need for true dialogue; however, I disagree strongly with your defense of UC Berkeley and the false equivalency between sore spots from oppression and blind spots from privilege. Milo, for example, is the antithesis of dialog – he spouts rhetoric that is dangerous as many who hear him do not hear dissenters or consider perspectives of protesters. In a era of unthinkable hate crimes, giving a platform for this rhetoric, sanctioned by an institution, is unethical. I hope you reconsider your position on this. As for sore spots and blind spots – I agree in principle, and I do think that our sore spots can cause us to react when they are triggered in ways that shut down dialogue. However, the current discourses DO allow blind spots AND sore spots. Privilege induced blind spots cause the sufferer to believe themselves oppressed when they hit on sore spots of others and cause deep-seated reactions. We need nuance AND to find a way to stem the tide of hate. Silencing it does not work, but neither does giving it free range. In peace.

  5. Great opinion piece Ana! As a liberal myself, I am ashamed at the current trend of the “liberal movement” protesting and employing the same sort of intimidation tactics that were used by more conservative factions in times past. The only reason some of the biases and prejudices that were seen only a few generations ago have abated to the extent they have was through the courage of the educational establishments to invite dialogue from parties that were definitely not mainstream or indeed popular at the time. If we choose to forever live in these so called “safe spaces” and not confront views that are different than our own then we are falling into the same trap as the people that we see as intolerant. Ridiculing and refusing to hear people present their world viewpoint based on their percieved “ignorance” or presumed “biases” is in itself ignorant and biased and the antithesis of what liberalism espouses. And as a reminder Henri, the world is immensely less violent/hateful and greatly more open than it has been any time prior in the human existence- I encourage you to consult your history books should you doubt this. Until fairly recent times genocide, cultural intolerance and blatant racism was the norm rather than the exception.

  6. What’s odd here is that by prejudging conservatives expressing their views as haters – and then not actually using the term in the article??? – it’s not really dialogue. I mean, if you “then disagree with them,” you weren’t listening to begin with. This is not healing divisions, it’s just paying lip service to the idea of open exchange of ideas. Do we really want to start protests first, when a person visiting the University gives us a chance to hear that person out? And unfortunately by using terms like racist, sexist, and especially “homophobic,” Dean Cudd is blocking the sort of direct debate which she quotes Mill as being a benefit of free speech. It’s all “have you stopped beating your wife?” Before a conservative can express any opinion, she first needs to disprove the prejudicial assumptions of racism, sexism, homophobia, anti-semitism, and Islamaphobia, not to mention the recurring claim that any words spoken are simply cover for underlying fascist scheming. It may not be clear on the liberal side just how raw are such intimidation tactics are against those holding traditional views, especially on sexual morality. Beliefs considered right and healthy 50 years ago can barely be uttered because of the spectacle of conservatives suffering personal attacks, job firings, and worse. Is this what liberalism means today?

  7. I find it depressing to see nowadays how many commenters all around the internet seem not to understand the first amendment. There is no moral responsibility to protest speech I don’t like as long as it isn’t directly provoking violence and insurrection. My opinions may be wrong and the speaker’s correct. I also find it curious that some persons may “know” what a speaker will say before she/he says it. Even more curious the determination beforehand that it will be “hate speech” and must therefore be protested and prevented. Such anti-social behaviour needs to be discouraged; if necessary by Universities separating identified ringleaders of campus violent protests permanently from the University. In my day you didn’t have to go to the extent of smashing windows and burning cars to get “sent down”. University administrations need to define and enforce codes of behaviour that apply to all students. But as long as students are seen as cashcows to be milked dry of their student loan money and then discarded nothing much will change no matter how many deans publicly wring their hands while privately condoning and extending the problem.

  8. As a conservative slightly to the right of Attila the Hun I can say most conservatives I now consider Milo to be somewhat of a nutter – but guilty of Hate Speech? I don’t think so. The term Hate Speech seems most appropriate when it is self referential. It’s actual meaning, I think, is speech with which someone does not agree. Free Speech contains no guarantee of an audience. Don’t listen if you don’t like it, but rioting is never an appropriate response. Nor is car overturning, window breaking or BOOK BURNING.

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