Rommie wrote:Believe it or not there was a column in the NYT a day or two ago on it. W my folks this weekend so no time to dig it up though.
Might I suggest though that I don't think it's fair at all to generalize one or even a few stories like this to say this is a large problem at ALL colleges or even more than a fringe of them, any more than I think BYU and Liberty U are indicative of problems of free speech for banning religious related things they disagree with. I say this as someone who spends a lot of time on college campuses and knows many others who do, and never run into crazies like this. Closest I can think of is my colleague who is in the physics dept at Oberlin College... but Oberlin was always fucking weird, and everyone knew it, when I was at CWRU.
SciFiFisher wrote:The comments following the video are "interesting". I agree with Rommie that many of the more violent actions seem to be perpetrated by members of groups who are not college students. We just recently had a kerfuffle involving Berkeley and Ann Coulter. A conservative student group invited her to speak. The protests were so extreme that the college cancelled her speech. It sort of reminds me of the communist movements and how they gained traction in various countries. Apparently, college students are prime recruiting material for various ideologies.
Sigma_Orionis wrote: Because in that case politics will be left to the nutjobs. And THAT is unacceptable.
vendic wrote:Sigma_Orionis wrote: Because in that case politics will be left to the nutjobs. And THAT is unacceptable.
Have you watched the news lately! lol
It's like standing in 4 feet of water in your living room and saying, "if it keeps raining things will be bad".
Parrothead wrote:Been some time since I was in uni, but apparently these days "safe zones", to protect students from hearing "offensive viewpoints" have been adopted up here too.
SciFiFisher wrote:An interesting interpretation of what I said. In re-reading it I can see where you might believe that I was endorsing the baptism by trauma culture. Apparently the emoji was not sufficient to convey my snark about the efficacy of those norms. While they did produce a type of success they were not always the best way. My statement about the younger generation being different was not intended to imply that different was not a valid way of doing things.
Also allow to me to observe that hazing for the purpose of shaping someone to conform to a group norm is NOT the same as refusing to believe that someone belongs in your group for any reason. And insisting on setting impossible goals to meet to prove that person does not belong in the group.
What Rommie was subjected to was not hazing. It was destructive and intended to drive her out of the group.
An example of a hazing incident intended to teach group norms:
Example #1
Basic Trainee forgets his left from his right while marching.
Drill Sergeant makes Basic Trainee carry a rock in his left hand for an entire day every where he goes. Including to the latrine.
At the age of 96 with dementia the former basic still can't forget his left from his right.
Hazing has gotten a bad name because people who are sadistic and vicious pretend that what they are doing is hazing. It's abuse. There is a world of difference between abuse and hazing.
Not picking sides in the overall discussion, but this statement. In some occupations, one mistake or one step out of line can easily be life threatening for yourself or your team. The "tiger team" over in accounting will be able to recover from or survive an 80% success rate. That number needs to be a little higher for rocket engineers/astronauts, a sniper team, or oil rig workers.Rommie wrote: dude does one step out of line, so I don't see why that necessarily requires breaking someone.
Rommie wrote:My point (and I think squ1d's) is we do know that stuff like hazing passes the line pretty easily to more serious things. So why the hell do we need it? I'm not a huge fan of your army example because I'm sure someone will chime in saying I don't know army stuff, but frankly the example you just listed sounds stupid- dude does one step out of line, so I don't see why that necessarily requires breaking someone. I certainly don't think that's appropriate in a normal job.
But then, if you're in agreement with me, I'm not sure just what your post has to do in the context of the original comments, so maybe that's what's confusing me.
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