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Richard Dawkins tells students upset by Germaine Greer to ‘go home and hug a teddy’

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So you would allow a WBC member to speak. That's fine! You're a small minority. People are rightly interested in ostracizing trash like that.

Trash like this gets much more support from moderates who want to sit somewhere in the middle of a human rights debate.
 
Your mistake here is the idea that this was some kind of mandatory lecture that people had to show up for.

Your goal in university is to learn, for sure, but that doesn't mean you have to be forced to listen to all the drivel available out there to listen too. In fact, classes have highly curated curriculum that are controlled by the teacher so it's not like it's a 100% free thought zone of idea exchange.

So, again, this is completely on her for abandoning her "teaching" opportunity simply because student were exercising their right to free speech.

There's a not so fine line between voicing concern over a speaker and actively trying to get someone banned from speaking. If she had dropped out of speaking purely over people saying she didn't have a leg to stand on then then I'd agree with you 100%. But the students were attempting to permanently ban her from speaking at the university.
 
That's ridiculous. There are people in society who would be given no platform no matter what they are talking about. Do you think Shirley Phelps, if she was an economist, would be given a platform at Universities? Would you consider it a travesty that she was not?

Uh, did you read my comment earlier about how I was bothered by someone refusing to share a platform with a MRA on a completely unrelated subject?

Your analogy is quite poor, btw. Phelps is only known BECAUSE of the outrageously bigoted shit she has said. Greer is someone who is well-known for her writing and whose bigotry is mostly incidental to other things that she has said. If Phelps were one of the more prominent economists of the late 20th Century, and had made some comments about how disgusting gay people were but had not made such comments central to her overall notability, I'd not revoke her platform to speak on a completely unrelated economic topic, either.
 
You wouldn't allow people who's goal in coming to the university was to spread hate, or people who refused to listen to facts/debate properly.

She was NOT coming to the university to speak on her views on transphobia.

If a WBC "patron" wanted to come and talk about woodworking as a professional carpenter, they can go right ahead! An anti-vaxxer coming to talk about their experience in a war? Absolutely useful.

Any view she has about women is accompanied by an asterisk that reads "trans women not included."

Therefore, I don't think the students were protesting against something so completely unrelated to the talk.
 
Your mistake here is the idea that this was some kind of mandatory lecture that people had to show up for.

Your goal in university is to learn, for sure, but that doesn't mean you have to be forced to listen to all the drivel available out there to listen too. In fact, classes have highly curated curriculum that are controlled by the teacher so it's not like it's a 100% free thought zone of idea exchange.

So, again, this is completely on her for abandoning her "teaching" opportunity simply because student were exercising their right to free speech.

What drivel are you talking about? She was going to make a speech on "Women and Power: The Lessons of the 20th Century." That isn't drivel and it would come from one of the foremost experts on feminism. She backed out because people would have thrown things at her, like they did in New Zealand. She explicitly said that, I don't know why people keep ignoring it.
 
I disagree entirely with what Dawkins is saying. University funds shouldn't be going towards spreading ignorance. A speaker at a school doesn't come just to have a laugh, they get paid fairly well for their appearances. In that context a group of students has every right to protest a decision like this one.

I'm not sure what the case is here, but very often speakers at universities in the UK and Ireland don't get paid a speaking fee at all.You might be thinking of commencement speakers over in the US. Even if were true that she was being paid, why couldn't you extend this willingness to censor to literally any speaker with controversial viewpoints? A Communist? Someone sympathetic to Radical Islam? Former heads of the IMF? If you take an argument far enough, almost any prominent person can be tarred with the notion that they are 'inciting violence'.
 
I said if she was an economist.

I know. There is a big difference, however, between someone who is not just bigoted, but FAMOUSLY bigoted, and known only for that bigotry, and is so bigoted that they are virtually unable to contribute substantively in any other way because nobody will ever look past that bigotry, and someone who is well-known for their intellectual contributions but who happens to have said some bigoted things. I'm pretty sure that Phelps IS a lawyer, but I'd not invite her to speak at a law conference because, in all likelihood, she doesn't have much to contribute because the only reason anybody has ever heard of her is that she's a bigot. With Greer, her bigotry is like 2% or less of her overall writings and opinions, and excluding the other 98% on the basis of that 2% is pretty much the opposite of the kind of robust intellectual curiosity that makes colleges places of such potential for bettering the world.
 
What drivel are you talking about? She was going to make a speech on "Women and Power: The Lessons of the 20th Century." That isn't drivel and it would come from one of the foremost experts on feminism. She backed out because people would have thrown things at her, like they did in New Zealand. She explicitly said that, I don't know why people keep ignoring it.

She was afraid people would throw things at her, yes. The protesters didn't seem to threaten to throw things at her though, unless I missed that part.

Also, Greer's made her TERF bed and has to sleep in the consequences of it.
 

Is this really from a position of hate, though? I see a scientist making a distinction and then stating he respects women who self identify as such, though "courtesy" is a very Dawkins word and probably isn't the best one to use here.

She was afraid people would throw things at her, yes. The protesters didn't seem to threaten to throw things at her though, unless I missed that part.

Did the protestors who threw things at her specifically pre-warn her about that aspect beforehand? If not, why would she rule out the possibility from that point forward?
 
Is this really from a position of hate, though? I see a scientist making a distinction and then stating he respects women who self identify as such, though "courtesy" is a very Dawkins word and probably isn't the best one to use here.

It's absolutely a position of bigotry. As you point out, he specifically uses the word 'courtesy' in order to condescend.
 
So for you, there's a certain bigotry threshold that makes it unacceptable for someone who is qualified to speak?

If you don't want to hear someone speak then don't go hear them speak. What's so difficult for you to comprehend about that? It's like peoples' whole existence these days is to feel offended and they thrive off that. And if they're getting paid? So you're going to dictate what universities spend every single cent on?
 
I think that there's a difference between simply having some shitty ideas and being defined by shitty ideas, yes. I think that college students should be able to intellectually compartmentalize and weigh each case on its own merits, yes.

And on their merits, just because she is not exclusively about transphobias doesn't erase the fact that she is noted for her horrible hate speech.

If you don't want to hear someone speak then don't go hear them speak. What's so difficult for you to comprehend about that? It's like peoples' whole existence these days is to feel offended and they thrive off that. And if they're getting paid? So you're going to dictate what universities spend every single cent on?

She is a person who has a history of making horrid, dehumanizing comments about trans people. And that seems to be the distinction. Change her to a white supremacist, and the very notion that the targets of her hate should "live and let live" becomes absurd (and rightly so).
 
I know. There is a big difference, however, between someone who is not just bigoted, but FAMOUSLY bigoted, and known only for that bigotry, and is so bigoted that they are virtually unable to contribute substantively in any other way because nobody will ever look past that bigotry, and someone who is well-known for their intellectual contributions but who happens to have said some bigoted things. I'm pretty sure that Phelps IS a lawyer, but I'd not invite her to speak at a law conference because, in all likelihood, she doesn't have much to contribute because the only reason anybody has ever heard of her is that she's a bigot. With Greer, her bigotry is like 2% or less of her overall writings and opinions, and excluding the other 98% on the basis of that 2% is pretty much the opposite of the kind of robust intellectual curiosity that makes colleges places of such potential for bettering the world.

If she was going to give a talk about Women, how is her bigotry on transwomen not 100% relevant? (her talk was titled “Women & Power: The Lessons of the 20th Century.” )

If she was talking about some other issue, like someone said, economy for example, I could see that the bigotry is unrelated. But once the talk becomes "Women in economy", well, her views on transwomen are immediately, completely relevant.
 
So you would allow a WBC member to speak. That's fine! You're a small minority. People are rightly interested in ostracizing trash like that.

Trash like this gets much more support from moderates who want to sit somewhere in the middle of a human rights debate.

And that brings me to the real root of my arguments. ALL information, no matter the source, should be put through your BS filter.

Ignoring people because they might express something, to be completely blunt, hateful does yourself a massive disservice.

Having a persons beliefs unjustly taint information they present is you refusing to accept facts because of your own unfounded beliefs. It means you learn less and will never be able to overcome your own biases.

Classifying someone as "trash" because they say hateful things might seem just, but (in most cases) it fails to encompass even a fraction of what they are as a person and can ultimately waste what potential that person has to offer.

To try and sum it up some, there is no harm in tolerating someone with hateful beliefs provided they don't actively discriminate against people. She should absolutely be condemned for her interviews and statements on trans people and should be held accountable in any situation where she acts on her beliefs, but otherwise should be treated as a human being.

Man, that was a weird thought to fully elucidate.
 
Trust me, we have no shortage of people saying the exact same things about trans people. This kind of hate speech gets all of the exposure it could possibly ask for.

Also, do you really not understand the problem with paying her to speak at a University?

Feel free to correct me, but isn't it common procedure to pay those who you are bringing over to speak? I am not one for picking and choosing "worthy" candidates if that's the procedure, as that's creating another social game of have/have not in terms of how things roll. That game is bad enough as is.

Payment may not be acceptance of the words being spoken, but merely procedure. To infer it implies acceptance would be another issue of colleges policing themselves between what is socially acceptance and what isn't, and that itself is already a mess in a university. It really should not be a safe space where certain ideas are coddled and others averted with fear.

Not to be a devil's advocate, but why should someone who happens to say very vile things be excluded from basic protocol? Because her words, as egocentric and ignorant as they are, do not match a social level of acceptance? The problem here would be the words, and why her vile claims should merely be challenged for what they are, of themselves.
 
Was that really a transphobic statement?

That's why every time I hear GAF call people "Gross" "disgusting" I'm a little skeptical.

a follow up tweet btw:

Richard Dawkins ‏@RichardDawkins Oct 26
@BrookeTLarson OK, that's fine. I only said IF you define "woman" by chromosomes. I never said I did. Did I? No I didn't.
 
The harm of giving a platform to someone with hateful beliefs is that people may subscribe to them, and we already see enough people who already do that.

They will get a platform, even with protests. Like-minded people will be drawn to it anyway, which is why if she were to get a public platform, she can at least be intellectually humiliated for her stone age positions.

Leaving these people to their echo chambers creates Fox News-esque bubbles, which become almost so big reality can't even break them. Glenn Beck and Alex Jones have audiences for these exact reasons as well.
 
And that brings me to the real root of my arguments. ALL information, no matter the source, should be put through your BS filter.

Ignoring people because they might express something, to be completely blunt, hateful does yourself a massive disservice.

Having a persons beliefs unjustly taint information they present is you refusing to accept facts because of your own unfounded beliefs. It means you learn less and will never be able to overcome your own biases.

Do you really need a speaker to come to your school to express transphobia?

Will your education be incomplete if you lack that experience?

It's not like transphobia is a weird, rare, controversial position. It is super widespread, cheap to have. It is not interesting, and people are exposed to it every day.
 
She was afraid people would throw things at her, yes. The protesters didn't seem to threaten to throw things at her though, unless I missed that part.

Also, Greer's made her TERF bed and has to sleep in the consequences of it.

No-one threatened to throw anything at her in New Zealand either but they still did.
 
Any view she has about women is accompanied by an asterisk that reads "trans women not included."

Therefore, I don't think the students were protesting against something so completely unrelated to the talk.

She's not talking about trans woman, which is why I don't have a problem with her speaking in the first place. True it's excluding trans woman, but she's in no position to speak about them regardless.

EDIT:
Do you really need a speaker to come to your school to express transphobia?

Will your education be incomplete if you lack that experience?

It's not like transphobia is a weird, rare, controversial position. It is super widespread, cheap to have. It is not interesting, and people are exposed to it every day.

Maybe you're misunderstanding what I'm saying. She's should be able to talk because she's NOT coming to the school to express transphobia.
 
They will get a platform, even with protests. Like-minded people will be drawn to it anyway, which is why if she were to get a public platform, she can at least be intellectually humiliated for her stone age positions.

Leaving these people to their echo chambers creates Fox News-esque bubbles, which become almost so big reality can't even break them. Glenn Beck and Alex Jone have audiences for these exact reasons as well.

You bring up Fox News, but we don't see far-right figures getting more powerful in society following the consistent push into these ech ochambers. I can't remember when Republicans have been this weak. I'd sooner there be an echo chamber of transphobes rather than a world where people are constantly harassing trans people and it being considered a fair opinion, or to have people ask of trans people to have a healthy debate and to stop avoiding things just because it makes them feel uncomfortable.
 
Yes

I read the rest of your post and it's clear that you have no idea who this woman is. I'm actually relatively sure that a lot of people saying she shouldn't speak haven't known anything about Greer until today, she is not some sort of outwardly multi-phobic bigot who has been at this for years, a lot of people are genuinely surprised that she would say something like this. The idea that we should lobby against someone speaking at a University because they have said one thing that we disagree with out of a 45 year career, it's ridiculous. The comparisons with people like David Duke are absolutely outstandingly ignorant as well.

Anyone ready to jump at me for defending her, my post is the second reply on the first page.
You know what? You're right, at least partly. I didn't really know who she was. I also changed my mind after reading about her and this issue more. More on that at the end of my post.

But the thing I did mostly wonder about in that post you quoted from me, was people just agreeing with Dawkins. As I pointed out in latter posts, I really can't imagine people protesting this because of refusing to feel uncomfortable. It has nothing to do with wanting to be coddled. It has more to do with not wanting to give a platform for a person who is very bigoted in one matter. It can be argued whether that's something worth of protesting the person, but that Dawkins quote is just nasty as it doesn't even try to understand where the protesting is coming from and instead mislabels the protesters weak.

Regarding my view now, this is pretty much it:
Risking sounding like Yoda, it's definitely hate and ignorance brought on by anger. She's an incredibly sharp women who has written some important things, but her strict focus and the righteous anger she uses as fuel clouds her.

I take back what I said earlier after consideration, she shouldn't be denied a platform just because she's said some hateful things. She should be oven a platform and contested by the intelligent, open-minds of a new generation.

Not only to put these new minds to the test, but also for the potential of the debate doing some good for Greer and everyone involved.

I understand the protest, but I think it was short-sighted.
Her opinions on this matter is still pretty bigoted, but she wasn't going to talk about those things and while in many cases I don't think that would correct the situation (because in many cases I wouldn't want to support a person in another thing if the person is hugely bigoted in some thing I consider important), in this situation I think it can be sort of.. not forgiven but ignored (the inviting wise that is, not in general) as she has a tremendous amount of life experience and a lot of relevant things to tell even today. She should be heavily challenged though.

But, I can still understand why someone would want to protest her being given a platform.
 
Holy shit 18 pages. I look at the thread when it first posted and didn't see anything controversial but apparently there is. Welp, have to read through the thread to see what is up.
 
She's not talking about trans woman, which is why I don't have a problem with her speaking in the first place. True it's excluding trans woman, but she's in no position to speak about them regardless.

EDIT:


Maybe you're misunderstanding what I'm saying. She's should be able to talk because she's NOT coming to the school to express transphobia.

How is giving a talk about women while endorsing transphobia not expressing transphobia.
 
I think Dawkins is very, very bad at making his point in situations like this, but the more general point about modern feminism's inability to distinguish between essentially personal problems - like discomfort in a, frankly, pretty ambiguous situation, in which a variety of emotional responses is obviously possible - and objective problems needing correction. The way in which he actually went about addressing that was hyperbolic and made him look like an arrogant ass, but he was essentially right that little "offhand comments" like that (and when you have as large a platform as she did, even "offhand comments" end up with weight), and the more general "the personal is political" mantra that fuels much of modern activism, only dilute feminism and feed into stereotypes.
.

Want a good example of someone using an overly large platform for ill-adviced means?

How about Richard's reaction to Rebecca?
 
You bring up Fox News, but we don't see far-right figures getting more powerful in society following the consistent push into these ech ochambers. I can't remember when Republicans have been this weak. I'd sooner there be an echo chamber of transphobes rather than a world where people are constantly harassing trans people and it being considered a fair opinion, or to have people ask of trans people to have a healthy debate and to stop avoiding things just because it makes them feel uncomfortable.

Are you kidding? Every single Republican candidate is considered far right, and the house and the senate are both Republican controlled. Far-right voters have outfitted our government in this way. It's possible that you live in your own echo chamber, so you're insulated from these facts, but you greatly underestimate the right. The bubble is growing, not shrinking.
 
Are you kidding? Every single Republican candidate is considered far right, and the house and the senate are both Republican controlled. Far-right voters have outfitted our government in this way. It's possible that you live in your own echo chamber, so you're insulated from these facts, but you greatly underestimate the right. The bubble is growing, not shrinking.

Growing? What are you even talking about? Right-wing beliefs have never been less acceptable than they are today. And the fact that Fox News is the only real right-wing media on TV hasn't done anything as far as reducing the frequency of rebuttals to what they say. The people who subscribe to their views would do so no matter if they were on CNN or in their bubble.

I don't see the problem with this. He approached it as a biologist (which he is) and said that he would call the person a 'she' if that's what they want, out of respect.

So you saw a biologist approach not-biology in the context of biology and decided "eh, no problem here"?

Also, a person shouldn't do it out of respect, they should do it. It implies that being called by the proper pronouns is something earned.
 
Holy shit 18 pages. I look at the thread when it first posted and didn't see anything controversial but apparently there is. Welp, have to read through the thread to see what is up.

Short version is:

some people think even someone who has said something bigoted but has had many good contributions elsewhere should get a platform to discuss the good things they've done but still get challenged on the bad things she's said, because universities are about learning for all and challenging ideals and beliefs

Others think if you say something bigoted it invalidates any positive contributions you've ever had on something and should not be given a platform to spout hate

the two opposing sides attempt debate, people on both sides resort to petty insults, picking and choosing quotes to twist arguments and the usual internet ignorance on both sides of the argument

Note: nobody has agreed with Greer, everyone disagrees with her comments, just shades of grey on the rest
 
Short version is:

some people think even someone who has said something bigoted but has had many good contributions elsewhere should get a platform to discuss the good things they've done but still get challenged on the bad things she's said, because universities are about learning for all and challenging ideals and beliefs

Others think if you say something bigoted it invalidates any positive contributions you've ever had on something and should not be given a platform to spout hate

"Say something bigoted" is around the lines of "let a slur slip." She's not simply saying something bigoted - bigotry is a part of her platform. She may not have been planning to speak on trans people here, but her association with her transphobic views is strong enough that it significantly defines her.
 
I don't see the problem with this. He approached it as a biologist (which he is) and said that he would call the person a 'she' if that's what they want, out of respect.

it's maybe how a progressive biologist from the 50s would approach the subject. if he thinks he being scientifically correct he's a bit out of date.
 
Growing? What are you even talking about? Right-wing beliefs have never been less acceptable than they are today. And the fact that Fox News is the only real right-wing media on TV hasn't done anything as far as reducing the frequency of rebuttals to what they say. The people who subscribe to their views would do so no matter if they were on CNN or in their bubble.

The GOP holds 60% of the governorships and almost 70% of state legislature seats. They're not dying.
 
Growing? What are you even talking about? Right-wing beliefs have never been less acceptable than they are today. And the fact that Fox News is the only real right-wing media on TV hasn't done anything as far as reducing the frequency of rebuttals to what they say. The people who subscribe to their views would do so no matter if they were on CNN or in their bubble.



So you saw a biologist approach not-biology in the context of biology and decided "eh, no problem here"?

Also, a person shouldn't do it out of respect, they should do it. It implies that being called by the proper pronouns is something earned.

I think your reading too much into what he says, but if he truly believes you have to earn his respect before he will call you by what you would like, then yes, that is shitty.

Dawkins really isn't a mean guy tho, he is just formal and rubs people the wrong way sometimes. I don't believe he was trying to be condescending in that twitter post.

Anyway, at the topic at hand, we should welcome people to speak even if we don't agree with it.
 
You bring up Fox News, but we don't see far-right figures getting more powerful in society following the consistent push into these ech ochambers. I can't remember when Republicans have been this weak. I'd sooner there be an echo chamber of transphobes rather than a world where people are constantly harassing trans people and it being considered a fair opinion, or to have people ask of trans people to have a healthy debate and to stop avoiding things just because it makes them feel uncomfortable.

Are we in the same universe? Republicans, as politically weak as they may be, are still bringing this country into a race to the bottom with fringe extremism. Consider for a moment there are a good portion of Republicans who have literally implied Obamacare is as bad as slavery, and how the congress and senate are ruled by them. Gerrymandering guarantees this game will continue for the next election, and maybe the one after that, too. They may be smaller in number, yes, but their echo chamber by being left to itself in reality has become so fringe and so distorted that whatever it has power in, it absolutely bombs the earth with. Look at the Planned Parenthood debacle, or how they're anti-science and anti-reason, and how people like that get to be in charge of climate committees. Do normal people feel these things should be the way that they are? No, but who has confronted the least among us representing us? We literally just call them fringe, move on, and fail to realize their position of ascribed power allows their fringe views to be projected on the world on macro scales. They may be weak, but they rule this land at present.

As for "feeling uncomfortable" let's face reality here: there are people with a lot of implausible, factually infuckingcorrect views on this earth that people evocate, which produce suffering. The human being is perhaps the most destructive creature on this earth, for this very reason. These people share this world with you and I, and the only way we'd even be close of cleansing the world of this incorrect social conditioning is to confront it. If you leave the ignorant alone, they'll just pair up with more ignorant people and become a vocal minority, becoming a more concentrated bubble of uncomfortability who are bothered by them.

In this case, it need not be trans or even trans supporters who confront a person like Greer, for it can be anyone who can articulate a viewpoint that tries to match the world instead of stamp claims of right and wrong upon it. She is already on incorrect footing for she's evocating an idea onto the world that's not innate to it, regarding "right" women and all of that bunk, and anyone of reason can powerbomb her on those grounds.
 
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