Dawkins is right, and OP calling him "Dick Dorkins" makes you seem like a five year old drooling illiterate who honestly does not merit a voice.
So you want the OP to be... censored ?
Dawkins is right, and OP calling him "Dick Dorkins" makes you seem like a five year old drooling illiterate who honestly does not merit a voice.
[Edit: For those thinking it's appropriate to give Greer a platform at a university, would you have a similar response to David Duke being given forum in the same venue?
This assumes bigotry is up for debate or reasoned analysis.
This assumes bigotry is up for debate or reasoned analysis.
Oh come on. One of these is not like the other.
One of the main benefits to attending a university is exposure to different thoughts and ideas, no matter how divisive. She isn't promoting the hatred of trans women, just the idea that she doesn't think they are "women" in the biological sense. I'd say that this would be similar to having a pro-life speaker on campus arguing that a fetus is a human being.
Dawkins is absolutely right. A university is not a safe haven for thought in the sense an elementary school is. You're SUPPOSED to challenge yourself and others there. Somebody like David Duke would put it way past the line, as he sells blind, pure hate.
that's a matter of perspective. i'm sure if you asked duke he would say that he isn't promoting the hatred of non-whites, just the idea that he doesn't think they are "people" in the biological sense.
greer's views are openly bigoted to an oppressed minority. the comparison is totally apt.
they're both bigots. her views are transphobic in the same way his are racist.So you're equating Greer's actions and views to that of a Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan?
So you want the OP to be... censored ?
So you're equating Greer's actions and views to that of a Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan?
So you want the OP to be... censored ?
I've argued for the students being very justified to protest her in earlier pages, but I do think it's good to understand her reasoning here too. It's not that she didn't want to be argued against, but it's because she's an old woman and she didn't want to deal with the possibility of things being thrown at her, like has happened before when there was strong opposition.I agree. I don't see the issue here since she made the choice to cancel.
This is problematic.
It's also problematic with this view that the push for complete equality should preclude any kind of debate about gender differences or identity. Eliminating this type of challenging discussion because some perceive it as offensive is counterproductive to eventual understanding and acceptance.
Seems like a lot folks in this thread have a real hard time discerning the difference between criticism and censorship. It's depressing to see so many so-called "progressives" argue for stifling debate.
Dawkins is right, and OP calling him "Dick Dorkins" makes you seem like a five year old drooling illiterate who honestly does not merit a voice.
Oh come now. Greer is a bigot and a transphobe but she's not denying anyone's humanity here. And I sincerely hope that you don't think stifling debate is the right side of history.
There's as much cause to have a debate with TERFs about what gender means as there is to have a debate with white supremacists about race realism. People like Greer aren't open to the idea that they might be wrong. No matter how much scientific observations are found that tell us more about gender, people like Greer are looking to continue to perceive trans women as men.
People who think that there's value to debating the humanity of a people should be mindful of ending up on the wrong side of history.
Dick Dorkins is a long-time, widespread nickname for Dawkins, typically brought out when he displays his ignorance on issues such as race and gender. Were I illiterate, I wouldn't have chosen a name that had time-honored written tradition.
Nice gendered slur.
I sincerely hope that you don't think stifling debate is the right side of history.
Oh come now. Greer is a bigot and a transphobe but she's not denying anyone's humanity here. And I sincerely hope that you don't think stifling debate is the right side of history.
Unless you have evidence that shows that her speech was going to be a debate setting, and that trans people were going to get to stand on the other side of that, this line of thinking ("stifling debate") is intellectually dishonest.
Stifling debate means far more than just a narrow understanding of "stopping a formal debate from occurring". Greer's contribution to the topic of the talk (which wasn't even about trans issues) no longer exists and that's a shame.
There are a lot of dumb, long-lived, widespread things out there that are best just left out of intelligence discussions. Such as Dick Dorkins. His point still stands that using it doesn't make one look good.Dick Dorkins is a long-time, widespread nickname for Dawkins, typically brought out when he displays his ignorance on issues such as race and gender. Were I illiterate, I wouldn't have chosen a name that had time-honored written tradition.
There are a lot of dumb, long-lived, widespread things out there that are best just left out of intelligence discussions. Such as Dick Dorkins. His point still stands that using it doesn't make one look good.
Trans issues are feminist issues, as are race issues, and ethnic issues, and class issues and many others. That has nothing to do with my contention that Greer's invitation should have been protested but not petitioned to be banned. I'm not defending her as a person here. I am not defending any of her ideas. I am defending her invitation to speak at a university. Where she can be challenged and her comments then dissected and analyzed and shown to be harmful and destructive if that is what they are.
Link: I am saying that speech has value and in this instance speaking against the petition to ban Greer from Cardiff is in no way being on the wrong side of history.
Edit: Of course there are limits to free speech. Every society recognizes that. But those limits should be defined by laws and not by mob rule.
Like I said. I support protests. I don't support the ban on Greer speaking at Cardiff.Ah, the old Lawful stance. I suppose that you're fine with UK hate speech laws being mostly comprehensive, but currently skipping over gender? Kind of like when race wasn't a protected class in the US. Of course, those laws won't change if people don't take a stand and make it known that such hate speech is unacceptable... y'know, like the protesters did.
People who think that there's value to debating the humanity of a people should be mindful of ending up on the wrong side of history.
Like I said. I support protests. I don't support the ban on Greer speaking at Cardiff.
Nope. Not what I said at all. How do you get that when I repeatedly make clear that there is nothing wrong at all with Greer getting protested and challenged? I said there was something wrong with a petition calling for her to be banned.It sounds like, in a roundabout way, you'd rather have hate speech than hate speech laws.
Nope. Not what I said at all. How do you get that when I repeatedly make clear that there is nothing wrong at all with Greer getting protested and challenged? I said there was something wrong with a petition calling for her to be banned.
Nope. Not what I said at all. How do you get that when I repeatedly make clear that there is nothing wrong at all with Greer getting protested and challenged? I said there was something wrong with a petition calling for her to be banned.
People would do the same, again, if a noted white supremacist was going to speak on race at a University. And our society is pretty (relatively) neat because of it.
I said I don't agree with mob rule determining who can speak and who can't.You said that you agree with hate speech laws--as long as they're on the books.
It sounds like, in a roundabout way, you'd rather have hate speech than hate speech laws. Or, does your stance only apply to people who are currently considered protected classes under the jurisdiction in which it occurs? If the latter, how do you suggest a marginalized community make it known that speaking out against their very humanity should be considered hate speech, if not making a fuss about those who use every available platform to speak their hate?
I'm pretty sure Vladislav Surkov, someone who encourages and controls far right wing hate groups in Russia has given one or more talks in British universities with no fanfare. Look him up, he's not a very nice guy!Those of you bringing up other people like the Clintons, Coulter and Kissinger, you do realise they would get protested if booked to speak at most British universities (not that they would be able to afford their speaker fees)? They wouldn't be welcome either. You're bringing your American values on free speech into a discussion about another country that would not allow the WBC to exist as it does. Freedom of speech is not freedom from being protested against and nobody is entitled to be paid for theirs.
So hate speech = good
Petitioning that hate speech be banned from a University = bad
Freedom of speech is a government thing. You are not entitled to say whatever you want, wherever you want.
It's my contention that her bigoted bullshit is an extremely small part of her overall contribution, and the idea that she might utter something offensive during the course of her talk does not negate the potential intellectual benefits of the rest of the talk, nor the benefits others might derive from their own intellectual response to whatever she might say, positive or negative.
I say this, btw, despite thinking virtually all second-wave radical feminist authors I've read were mostly dopes, and assuming that Greer is likely similarly flawed. But I don't think intellectual freedom should be delimited by others' sensitivities, especially in college, where the goal of creating a safe space is utterly contrary to the real value colleges potentially offer, which is the development of intellectual muscularity and inner strength of character by being steeped in the ideas, good and bad, of both history and the present moment.
So hate speech = good
Petitioning that hate speech be banned from a University = bad
Freedom of speech is a government thing. You are not entitled to say whatever you want, wherever you want.
I would rather have hate speech than hate speech laws. I am also against hate crime laws. I believe, philosophically, that the American protection of all speech, even the loathsome kind, is the most ethical position.
Freedom of speech is a law, but it's a law that comes with it an implicit responsibility to fight ideas on the ideative plane, rather than trying to stamp them out by fiat.
I'd also disagree that scientifically ignorant speech, like saying trans women are just damaged men, is tantamount to hate speech, because one does not have to hate nor desire the persecution of a group to have incorrect ideas about them, but that's another issue entirely.
Interesting view point.
I would say that this could be a good thread on its own, if we are going to allow bigoted views to take a platform for the sake of combating it, who should provide said platform?
Freedom of speech is a law, but it's a law that comes with it an implicit responsibility to fight ideas on the ideative plane, rather than trying to stamp them out by fiat.
I'd also disagree that scientifically ignorant speech, like saying trans women are just damaged men, is tantamount to hate speech, because one does not have to hate nor desire the persecution of a group to have incorrect ideas about them, but that's another issue entirely.
Historically universities would be that place.
Where climate change denial and anti-vax and anti-GMO talk fit into that is also an interesting thought process. All of these would qualify as scientifically ignorant speech, and anti-GMO is one that is generally considered left of center.
Fundamentally this argument comes down to a question -
Does dissent impede progress in the short term and/or long term?
The answer you believe (and why you believe it) will probably show where you stand on these kinds of issues.
The sticking point for me is who gets to decide what speech should be allowed and what speech shouldn't?
What about laws preventing businesses from denying service based on race?I would rather have hate speech than hate speech laws. I am also against hate crime laws.
A question you likely wouldn't be asking if you were in a group that would be lucky to be treated as a second-class citizen.
I am.
You seem to be ignoring the existence of "power" differences in this analysis. We don't live in this perfect "liberal" world where everyone is on the same playing field.I would rather have hate speech than hate speech laws. I am also against hate crime laws. I believe, philosophically, that the American protection of all speech, even the loathsome kind, is the most ethical position.