ReplacementPelican
Member
So, I just saw a friend - an American - share this video of a comedian testifying to someone, or something (looked very official) about how lots of colleges in America have 'safe spaces' and people live in bubbles and, I just found this a bit weird.
My initial reaction was that 'college students' as a monolith was probably a bit generous to the point he was making. Sure enough, after a quick google I found that only 36% of students think they're necessary which seemed a bit odd for something I hear about all the time, even The Simpsons makes jokes about it. Its banded about a 'college campuses, college campuses' when its clearly somewhat of a small minority.
So, I dialed it back a bit. Who did I usually see talking about this? Where did I see this being discussed? And it sort of tended to be comedians. So, that seemed weird, this appeared to be something they seemed to actually care about rather than just being part of a routine. They'd always talk about how, in the old days, you'd just go and play the venue, say your shit and leave but now there's a bubble and too many 'safe spaces' but ultimately this seemed somewhat self-defeating because what he was asking for was a safe space, it seemed he had previously lived in a bubble and was upset now that he could be criticized or shut down for things he said that may offend people.
What I'm trying to discern is whether this rallying against 'college students' for having these ideas of protest is actually an infringement of free speech or an extension of it.
Had these people previously been exercising their free speech without others exercising that right back? Are safe spaces a massive issue?
Also, something I couldn't find numbers for but thought some of the Americans on this board could help me out with; how many Americans only consume from one news source? I found lots of things about safe spaces and people living in bubbles on Fox News but this seemed wholly ironic because I feel like most people who watch Fox News probably do so almost exclusively (after all, the station does seem to attack every other news organisation) but that would mean that those people live in a bubble.
In that sense it feels somewhat that college students are being scapegoated, is this just the new fad? To be so insular that you can criticize free speech for 'stopping' free speech? That we can call colleges 'bubbles' whilst only interacting with others in our sphere or only consuming news media from sources we deem to reflect our ideologies?
Sorry that this may be a bit rambly but I figured I could have a better discussion about this on Gaf than replying to someone on Facebook.
TL;DR:
Are safe spaces a 'thing'?
Are comedians trying to have their cake and eat it too by complaining about the free speech of others?
Are colleges 'liberal bubbles'?
If they are, is this reflective of America as a whole but there's a lack of introspection that goes into that criticism?
My initial reaction was that 'college students' as a monolith was probably a bit generous to the point he was making. Sure enough, after a quick google I found that only 36% of students think they're necessary which seemed a bit odd for something I hear about all the time, even The Simpsons makes jokes about it. Its banded about a 'college campuses, college campuses' when its clearly somewhat of a small minority.
So, I dialed it back a bit. Who did I usually see talking about this? Where did I see this being discussed? And it sort of tended to be comedians. So, that seemed weird, this appeared to be something they seemed to actually care about rather than just being part of a routine. They'd always talk about how, in the old days, you'd just go and play the venue, say your shit and leave but now there's a bubble and too many 'safe spaces' but ultimately this seemed somewhat self-defeating because what he was asking for was a safe space, it seemed he had previously lived in a bubble and was upset now that he could be criticized or shut down for things he said that may offend people.
What I'm trying to discern is whether this rallying against 'college students' for having these ideas of protest is actually an infringement of free speech or an extension of it.
Had these people previously been exercising their free speech without others exercising that right back? Are safe spaces a massive issue?
Also, something I couldn't find numbers for but thought some of the Americans on this board could help me out with; how many Americans only consume from one news source? I found lots of things about safe spaces and people living in bubbles on Fox News but this seemed wholly ironic because I feel like most people who watch Fox News probably do so almost exclusively (after all, the station does seem to attack every other news organisation) but that would mean that those people live in a bubble.
In that sense it feels somewhat that college students are being scapegoated, is this just the new fad? To be so insular that you can criticize free speech for 'stopping' free speech? That we can call colleges 'bubbles' whilst only interacting with others in our sphere or only consuming news media from sources we deem to reflect our ideologies?
Sorry that this may be a bit rambly but I figured I could have a better discussion about this on Gaf than replying to someone on Facebook.
TL;DR:
Are safe spaces a 'thing'?
Are comedians trying to have their cake and eat it too by complaining about the free speech of others?
Are colleges 'liberal bubbles'?
If they are, is this reflective of America as a whole but there's a lack of introspection that goes into that criticism?