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Obama Thinks Students Should Stop Stifling Debate On Campus
He says they shouldn't be "coddled and protected from different points of view."
President Barack Obama wants college students to hear the arguments of people they disagree with, not try to block them from speaking.
During a town hall appearance at North High School in Des Moines, Iowa, on Monday, Obama bemoaned what some critics call the "new political correctness" at colleges and universities.
"I've heard some college campuses where they don't want to have a guest speaker who is too conservative or they don't want to read a book if it has language that is offensive to African-Americans or somehow sends a demeaning signal towards women," Obama said. "I gotta tell you I don't agree with that either. I don't agree that you, when you become students at colleges, have to be coddled and protected from different points of view."
The president said that when he was in school, listening to people he disagreed with helped to test his own assumptions and sometimes led him to change his mind.
"Sometimes I realized maybe I've been too narrow-minded, maybe I didn't take this into account, maybe I should see this person's perspective," Obama said. "That's what college, in part, is all about."
In recent years, students at colleges traditionally considered liberal have protested the mere invitation of speakers they disagreed with or objected to the invited guest's organization. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, a civil liberties group, said that attempts to "uninvite" speakers have increased since 2000.
"You shouldn't silence them by saying, 'You can't come because I'm too sensitive to hear what you have to say,'" Obama said in his town hall. "That's not the way we learn either."
Geoffrey Stone, a First Amendment scholar and a law professor at the University of Chicago, echoed those comments.
"Part of what a college education is for is to be real people, to be citizens – not to protect them from discomforts of life," Stone told The Huffington Post.
FIRE was pleased to hear Obama acknowledge an issue the group has tried to highlight, even as it says the U.S. Department of Education has expanded the kinds of speech that can constitute harassment that colleges are legally obligated to address.
"We're very glad to see that President Obama shares our concerns about the danger of trigger warnings, speaker disinvitations, and campus censorship," Robert Shibley, executive director of FIRE, told HuffPost in a statement Tuesday. "We hope that colleges across the country – and federal agencies like the Department of Education – take his words to heart when they're crafting policies that affect free expression."
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