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I kind of break them down into two types Vodalus Send a noteboard - 22/10/2017 03:25:04 AM

On the one hand, there are the Hard Feelings militant types. Often people from groups who in the recent past enjoyed such freedoms in theory more so than in practice. And so it's less a matter of suasion giving way to coercion than it is of intolerance breeding intolerance. While on the other hand, I see the faithful of the Temple of Self-Esteem. "Thou shalt not suffer bad feelings of or toward thine self!", being the lone commandment.



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Why Are Millennials Wary of Freedom?

Young Americans seem to be losing faith in freedom. Why?

According to the World Values Survey, only about 30 percent of Americans born after 1980 believe it is absolutely essential to live in a democratic country, compared with 72 percent of Americans born before World War II. In 1995, 16 percent of Americans in their late teens and early adulthood thought democracy was a bad idea; in 2011, the number increased to 24 percent.

Young Americans also are disproportionately skeptical of free speech. A 2015 poll from the Pew Research Center found that 40 percent of millennials (ages 18 to 34) believe the government should be able to regulate certain types of offensive speech. Only 27 percent of Gen-Xers (ages 35 to 50), 20 percent of baby boomers (ages 51 to 69) and 12 percent of the silent generation (ages 70 to 87) share that
opinion.

For many conservative commentators, especially those concerned with attitudes on college campuses, this is merely more evidence of the deleterious influence of the radical left in academia. But while ideology certainly plays a role here, these trends transcend political party affiliation, as a number of recent polls indicate.

A 2016 Gallup survey found that a majority of both Democratic and Republican students believe colleges should be allowed to restrict speech that is purposely offensive to certain groups. A survey of students’ attitudes concerning free speech released on Wednesday by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education found that 66 percent of Democratic and 47 percent of Republican students believe there are times a college should withdraw a campus speaker’s invitation after it has been announced. And a survey published by the Brookings Institution in September found that 20 percent of Democratic and 22 percent of Republican students agreed it was acceptable for student groups to use violence to prevent a person from speaking.

If wariness of democracy and free speech does not represent a political position,what does it represent? What unites so many young Americans in these attitudes? I propose that the answer is fear — the ultimate enemy of freedom.

Parental culture in this country has become increasingly guarded and safety focused, as illustrated by the rise of “helicopter parenting.” The benefits of increased safety are many. But somewhere along the way, protecting children from needless harm became conflated with shielding them from stressors and uncertainties (such as having to solve everyday problems, like getting lost, on one’s own) that are critical
for developing personal independence.

Researchers have linked helicopter parenting to college students’ having a lower degree of self-confidence. Relatedly, a study released last month found that today’s teenagers and young adults are less likely than those of past generations to engage in a range of activities that involve personal independence, such as working for pay, driving, dating and spending time with friends without adult supervision.

Colleges and universities have exacerbated the problem of dependence by
promoting what is sometimes called a culture of victimhood. American college students (who are some of the safest and most privileged people on the planet) are to be protected from, and encouraged to be ever-vigilant about and even report, any behavior that could cause emotional distress. Feelings and experiences that were once considered part of everyday life, such as being offended by someone’s political
views, are now more likely to be treated as detrimental to mental health.

Making the problem worse, victimhood culture is “contagious.” Studies have shown that when one group is accused of causing harm to others, members of the accused group become more inclined to feel that their group is being discriminated against.

There may be some benefits to an increased sensitivity to students’
psychological vulnerabilities. Young people today face unique stressors, such as the ease of harassment presented by social media. But instead of helping, a culture of victimhood worsens the underlying problem.

Fear, in all its forms, is at the heart of these issues — fear of failure, ridicule, discomfort, ostracism, uncertainty. Of course, these fears haunt all of us, regardless of demographics. But that is precisely the point: Our culture isn’t preparing young people to grapple with what are ultimately unavoidable threats. Indeed, despite growing up in a physically safer and kinder society than past generations did, young
Americans today report higher levels of anxiety.

Fear pushes people to adopt a defensive posture. When people feel anxious, they’re less open to diverse ideas and opinions, and less forgiving and tolerant of those they disagree with. When people are afraid, they cling to the certainty of the world they know and avoid taking physical, emotional and intellectual risks. In short, fear causes people to privilege psychological security over liberty.

What can be done? It isn’t enough to criticize young people for being overly sensitive and insufficiently independent. They didn’t engineer our security-focused culture. We must liberate them, let them be free to navigate the social world, make mistakes, fail, experience emotional pain and learn to self-regulate fear and distress. If we want future generations to have faith in freedom, we need to restore our faith
in them.

I added the SOME because clearly its not all Millenials as the statistics show at the beginning. But then the headline wouldn't be so sensational if the NYT had included that extra word. Still, I do see read about some of the things going on college campuses and it depresses the hell out of me. And I worry that these people will then join companies. Companies like mine.

As someone who is gay, I believe people have the right to express their anti-gay views. Am I going to be offended? Sure. Will I debate them? Sure. How else can people have conversation and maybe change their minds? To use something from gay history - "silence = death".

I personally believe the rise of social media has validated a lot of peoples' idiotic views about "hate speech". These people feel emboldened because College/University administrations care about the bottom line = money. And so they will placate these individuals. Twitter is probably scarier to these administrators than anything else out there. And this will lead/has led to that problematic silence. I really wish that the people who feel they can shout down protesters would be expelled. It's one thing to exercise free speech, but when you're preventing debate you are being violent. Be expelled. College acceptance rates are quite low. I am sure there are plenty of other individuals who would love to go to school to learn. To be challenged. To think and try to understand the world from other perspectives. And I sincerely hope that European universities have significantly less issues with this than do American universities.

Maybe I should have inserted a Trigger warning at the beginning. But I was afraid all your WSE points would have been stolen had I done that.



南無阿弥陀仏!
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Why Are [SOME] Millennials Wary of Freedom? - 16/10/2017 07:16:47 PM 2266 Views
Good article. - 16/10/2017 08:05:48 PM 823 Views
Indeed it is a pathology of fear. - 17/10/2017 01:59:24 AM 743 Views
This makes me especially sad. - 17/10/2017 12:47:51 PM 675 Views
never thought of it that way but excellent points *NM* - 17/10/2017 03:31:51 AM 519 Views
Definitely a possibility. - 17/10/2017 12:46:42 PM 679 Views
Do we still have WSE points? I was quite the mogul in the waning days of WoTmania. *NM* - 16/10/2017 11:36:00 PM 471 Views
/me steals your WSE points. *NM* - 17/10/2017 12:48:08 PM 449 Views
Interesting - 16/10/2017 11:46:32 PM 735 Views
Old dude, you make a good point, too. - 17/10/2017 02:01:29 AM 688 Views
Authority for Authority sake is just as Mores-less as No Respect for Authority - 17/10/2017 06:07:15 AM 763 Views
All generations experienced different cultures with different views *NM* - 17/10/2017 11:41:40 AM 432 Views
Agreed but there is a difference in severity between 1997 to 2017 vs 997 to 1017 *NM* - 18/10/2017 05:52:14 AM 444 Views
but less than 1900 vs 1920 - 18/10/2017 02:27:59 PM 652 Views
I still have hope - 17/10/2017 12:50:35 PM 753 Views
I shall endeavor to combine Tom'n'Mookie's theories into one grand theory of... - 17/10/2017 02:15:48 AM 718 Views
This article agrees with your assessment - 17/10/2017 02:30:03 PM 789 Views
I appreciate your amendment. - 17/10/2017 03:14:19 AM 975 Views
no it is just hard to see the problem from the inside - 17/10/2017 11:51:08 AM 690 Views
Re: no it is just hard to see the problem from the inside - uh, yes. - 17/10/2017 01:44:26 PM 709 Views
Most of us are very good at that - 17/10/2017 08:24:50 PM 709 Views
Thanks. - 17/10/2017 01:00:42 PM 640 Views
I disagree with relation to trigger warnings. - 17/10/2017 11:17:45 PM 701 Views
A fair point. - Still, how far will you extend them? - 18/10/2017 12:47:50 AM 674 Views
I don't know, but I'm not entirely sure it's a big deal either way. - 18/10/2017 02:56:09 AM 625 Views
Nods - 18/10/2017 03:17:17 AM 648 Views
And I would posit that no work of literature should have any trigger warnings. - 18/10/2017 01:02:44 PM 825 Views
Re: And I would posit that no work of literature should have any trigger warnings. - 18/10/2017 08:48:01 PM 702 Views
How would you propose such warnings be worded? - 18/10/2017 09:21:02 PM 693 Views
Do you know a lot of people who suffer from PTSD? - 19/10/2017 05:26:06 AM 852 Views
Stop. Now. - 19/10/2017 06:21:13 AM 633 Views
Avoidance isn't the purpose of those warnings, though. - 19/10/2017 06:32:16 AM 672 Views
You would ruin the literature though. And discussions around the literature. - 19/10/2017 01:21:20 PM 700 Views
That's reasonable. - 19/10/2017 11:58:56 PM 666 Views
Well argument settled becuase they already exist - 23/10/2017 01:46:55 PM 599 Views
Fuck you Tom - 19/10/2017 07:06:47 AM 790 Views
Oh come on... - 19/10/2017 05:12:46 PM 691 Views
Oh please - 19/10/2017 02:10:11 PM 769 Views
Re: Oh please - 20/10/2017 12:01:02 AM 723 Views
I'm just gonna put this out there... - 20/10/2017 07:24:55 PM 672 Views
Eh, I don't think that's accurate. - 21/10/2017 07:04:58 AM 606 Views
An unnecessary tool.... - 23/10/2017 05:14:06 PM 616 Views
Why does this reasoning apply to PTSD but not to other diseases? PTSD is a physical issue. - 24/10/2017 12:33:31 AM 627 Views
I would challenge that statment.... - 24/10/2017 05:14:17 PM 800 Views
Do you actually believe those examples are valid? *NM* - 23/10/2017 07:32:59 PM 399 Views
Agreed. - 19/10/2017 06:16:33 AM 779 Views
Interesting article. - 17/10/2017 07:41:34 PM 701 Views
Why are some HUMANS wary of freedom? - 17/10/2017 05:31:04 AM 647 Views
Maybe the victimhood thing is another kind of honor - 17/10/2017 01:02:43 PM 722 Views
Because it's easier to absolve oneself of power sometimes. For those people anyway. - 17/10/2017 01:10:41 PM 655 Views
I apologize before hand - 18/10/2017 01:11:59 AM 654 Views
I haven't read all the comments, so I apologize if I'm doubling up - 17/10/2017 01:06:00 PM 814 Views
Oh those echo chambers. - 17/10/2017 01:16:40 PM 750 Views
I hate blaming things - 17/10/2017 02:04:44 PM 755 Views
I'm not even sure "echo chamber" is the right phrase - 17/10/2017 02:17:07 PM 768 Views
I'm not sure that is the most common choice. - 17/10/2017 05:21:52 PM 815 Views
I get irritated too. But I still keep them in my news feed as well. - 17/10/2017 08:49:45 PM 654 Views
Je ne regrette rien. My memes are both spicy and piquant. *NM* - 17/10/2017 11:20:55 PM 390 Views
I'm of Russian extraction. I like my food bland. Garlic, dill, salt, pepper. It's enough for me. - 18/10/2017 12:52:27 AM 652 Views
You know, I'd not thought about that. - 18/10/2017 03:07:05 AM 695 Views
I find him intriguing as a Captain. - 18/10/2017 01:09:07 PM 636 Views
So now we are at episode 6 - 24/10/2017 12:31:06 PM 569 Views
6 was by far the best episode of the series. *NM* - 24/10/2017 08:07:55 PM 407 Views
Yes - 25/10/2017 12:50:15 PM 657 Views
But are your Memes brothy and fully of Umami? - 18/10/2017 01:17:07 AM 596 Views
Umami is an irritating word *NM* - 18/10/2017 04:59:21 PM 369 Views
Yes, ohdaddy is a much better word. *NM* - 18/10/2017 05:15:48 PM 469 Views
*NM* - 18/10/2017 05:39:12 PM 398 Views
*NM* - 18/10/2017 06:27:31 PM 386 Views
I do think some of this is specifically American and to a lesser extent the rest of the Anglosphere. - 17/10/2017 06:26:33 PM 711 Views
Agreed with all your points. - 17/10/2017 08:53:23 PM 693 Views
The Netherlands, I'm not so sure about. - 17/10/2017 11:43:54 PM 680 Views
My apologies. I see Dutch and don't think of Belgium. - 18/10/2017 12:56:26 AM 681 Views
That's alright. This is a confusing country in many ways. - 18/10/2017 08:58:15 PM 662 Views
America and to a lesser extent the rest of the Anglosphere puts a higher valuer on liberty *NM* - 19/10/2017 01:53:50 PM 422 Views
Yes, in some ways it does. *NM* - 19/10/2017 05:38:41 PM 432 Views
Simple, true fredom is includes the freedom to fail - 20/10/2017 05:43:13 PM 718 Views
Re: Simple, true fredom is/includes the freedom to fail *NM* - 20/10/2017 05:45:51 PM 461 Views
Yes it is the freedom to fail - 20/10/2017 06:36:02 PM 721 Views
This entire thread was so awesome.... - 20/10/2017 07:12:46 PM 756 Views
Jeo I think you in particular will appreciate this - 20/10/2017 09:07:39 PM 674 Views
Interesting.....wisdom from on high.... - 20/10/2017 09:58:36 PM 595 Views
damn it *NM* - 20/10/2017 09:07:39 PM 365 Views
I think a lot of us are thinking about trigger warnings differently. - 21/10/2017 07:07:01 AM 677 Views
Maybe, maybe not... - 23/10/2017 05:18:16 PM 578 Views
Glad you enjoyed it and that it provoked thought. - 23/10/2017 02:32:57 PM 654 Views
I see this as... - 23/10/2017 05:23:54 PM 636 Views
I kind of break them down into two types - 22/10/2017 03:25:04 AM 743 Views
I wonder how much the fall of communism has to do with this? - 24/10/2017 10:20:16 PM 710 Views
Definitely more than a bit. - 25/10/2017 12:51:55 PM 605 Views

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