If Books Could Kill - The Coddling Of The American Mind
Episode Date: March 9, 2023TRIGGER WARNING: if you're a SNOWFLAKE college professor afraid of how your students are expressing themselves, you might need a SAFE SPACE, because Michael and Peter are discussing "The Cod...dling of The American Mind," a book about campus culture that's light on facts and heavy on cherry-picked anecdotes.CORRECTION: The Socrates quote mentioned at the end of this episode is apocryphal. We thank the listeners who pointed this out for refusing to coddle our American minds.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/IfBooksPodWhere to find us: TwitterPeter's other podcast, 5-4Mike's other podcast, Maintenance PhaseSources:The Miseducation of Free Speech (https://www.virginialawreview.org/articles/miseducation-free-speech/)College and the “Culture War”: Assessing Higher Education’s Influence on Moral Attitudes (https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/00031224211041094)The Myth of the Campus Coddle Crisis (https://academeblog.org/2018/12/28/the-myth-of-the-campus-coddle-crisis-the-coddling-of-the-american-mind/)What ‘Safe Spaces’ Really Look Like on College Campuses (https://www.chronicle.com/article/what-safe-spaces-really-look-like-on-college-campuses/?bc_nonce=peduocnzcslb08jxmt1dlb&cid=reg_wall_signup)Are College Campuses Really in the Thrall of Leftist Censors? (https://slate.com/human-interest/2015/03/hypersensitive-campus-progressives-judith-shulevitz-is-half-right-but-takes-her-criticisms-too-far.html) Speaking Freely: What Students Think about Expression at American Colleges (https://www.thefire.org/research-learn/student-attitudes-free-speech-survey) ‘Not all cultures are created equal’ says Penn Law professor in op-ed (https://www.thedp.com/article/2017/08/amy-wax-penn-law-cultural-values) How Right Wing Media Has Tried to Stifle Student Speech at Evergreen State College (https://psmag.com/education/the-real-free-speech-story-at-evergreen-college)I'm a liberal professor, and my liberal students terrify me (https://www.vox.com/2015/6/3/8706323/college-professor-afraid)In College and Hiding From Scary Ideas (https://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/22/opinion/sunday/judith-shulevitz-hiding-from-scary-ideas.html)Thanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Michael Peter, have you read the Coddling of the American Mind?
I have not because I'm a millennial and I can't handle challenging ideas.
Today we're talking about the Coddling of the American mind, a book about campus culture
by Jonathan Hyte and Greg Lukyanov.
Finally, a couple middle-aged men complaining about what the kids are doing.
The bravery.
When I was doing background research for this book, I ended up becoming kind of fascinated
with the origins of our modern campus culture discourse.
If you go through all the op-eds and think pieces, you can actually sort of see that at some
point during the first half of 2015, there was a wave of writers suddenly talking about the hyper sensitivity of college students.
There is a March 2015 New York Times article about safe spaces at Brown University that gets a ton of attention
and we'll talk about it a bit later.
Vox publishes a piece titled,
I'm a Liberal Professor and my liberal students terrify me. National review publishes a piece
comparing modern campus culture to both McCarthyism and
the Salem witch trials.
Now we're talking. I love a good, the college students are
snowflakes. And that's why they're just like Hitler.
I love that. I hate it when the kids exaggerate. And you
had Jonathan Chate writing a piece about the new political correctness for New
York magazine.
Oh, I don't know that this was caused by anything as much as it's just sort of the momentum
of the discourse, but it's probably worth noting that in January of 2015, the Charlie
Ebto shootings happen.
I don't want to get too aggressive with my causal diagnosis here, but I do wonder whether
a discussion of free expression migrated into the realm of American campuses, and that's
sort of what made really made this takeoff.
Or Peter, the college students are just terrible, and we noticed.
I'm going to send
you a bit from that Vox piece.
The piece is by a professor writing under the pseudonym Edward Schlosser.
He is purportedly hiding his identity due to his fear of retaliation from students.
He writes about an incident where a student complained about a lecture of his in 2009,
and the student called him like a communist, just based on some pretty bland liberal takes
about the recession.
Okay.
And he tells the story of how administration sort of quickly realized that the complaint
was bullshit.
They rolled their eyes a little bit and they disposed of it and that was that. So now you can read this.
Okay, he says in 2015 such a complaint would not be delivered in such a fashion.
Instead of focusing on the rightness or wrongness or even acceptability of the materials we reviewed in class,
the complaint would center solely on how my teaching affected the students'
emotional state, and if I responded in any way other than apologizing and changing the
materials we reviewed in class, professional consequences would likely follow.
I love these, where it's like I've made up something in my head and gotten mad about
it.
My wife has a friend who absorbs a way too much true crime content.
And as a result, it's convinced that there's like a real risk that she's going to get murdered.
This is the academic equivalent of that, right?
Where they are like reading these little anecdotes about students going wild and getting
professors fired and they're like, oh no, I'm going to get fired.
No, probably not.
No, and all of this is probably based on you reading
other articles about people also imagining a multiverse
where they get fired.
Yes.
It's just like a bunch of arch conservatives
like pooping back and forth forever.
So that's a little taste of the discussion that's happening.
This discourse carries on throughout the summer of 2015, enter
our authors, Jonathan Height and Greg Lukyanov. Height is a social psychologist. Lukyanov is
a constitutional lawyer for fire, the foundation for individual rights in education, a group
that's very invested in free speech on campus.
Right. That basically exists to promote this moral panic
and make this seem like a problem worthy
of national concern.
In September 2015, they write a lengthy piece
for the Atlantic titled,
The Coddling of the American Mind,
How Trigger Warnings Are Hearding Mental Health on campus.
Ah!
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!
Do you remember this piece?
I have read sections of this piece over the years.
It's, I can't place it on the timeline where it lands in relation to the Oberlin sandwich story,
which I think is like the totemic example of campus culture bullshit.
But this was after a wave of scare stories and really a lot of these aging middle-aged dudes
grasping around for like ways to substantiate
the feelings that they had.
They couldn't really come up with that many firings,
and they couldn't actually find places where people were
having their speech suppressed, so they landed on trigger warnings.
It's just like something nice that teachers started doing for students like no schools
required them.
This was like the only way they could cast students as totalitarian, and they just like
leaned into it, even though it makes no sense.
Hi, Luke Yanoff, what sets their piece apart is that most of the discourse to this point
has centered around professors. Professors are worried about over sensitive students
getting them fired.
Yeah.
Hayden-Lukionov,
purport to be focusing on the students themselves,
saying that the psychology of modern students
is counterproductive to their own mental health.
Because what we're really in it for
is to help the students be better,
even though we've dedicated our entire careers
Talking about how the students are full of shit and too weak. So that angle
Combined with I think they're a sensible expertise in psychology and free speech law
Lands them a book deal and in 2018 they published this book the coddling of the American mind
How good intentions and bad ideas are setting up a
generation for failure. I wonder if there's anything else that might have set up that generation
for failure. There's any economic trends. The first section of the book is about the bad ideas
that they believe are spreading on college campuses, which they very dramatically call the three great untruths.
So let me, I will send them to you.
Oh, okay.
I guess I knew that the word untruth was a word.
Yeah, if only we had a three letter shorter word
for such a thing, the opposite of truth.
Okay, it says,
one, what doesn't kill you makes you weaker.
Two, always trust your feelings.
And three, life is a battle between good people and evil people.
Yeah. So my question to you, Mike,
is have you ever, in your life, encountered a person
who believes a single one of these things?
I was just about to say, this doesn't sound like it's a list of hegemonic ideas.
This sounds like it's a caricature.
I'm deep in like left-wing weirdos in my life.
Yeah, same.
And I have never met anyone who believes
that you should always trust your feelings
or what doesn't kill you makes you weaker.
Peter, I live in Seattle.
I'm teaching my people.
This is my world.
I have never, in like the deepest, darkest, crystal yoga Instagram comments seen anybody express
anything like this.
You know, the idea that college students are in a bubble,
super prominent, but I don't remember any time in my life where I
was exposed to more different ideas than college, right? And
just sort of by the nature of it, the people who were in bubbles are like the 48-year-olds
watching Fox News every night freaking out about this stuff.
Yeah, yeah, or reading the Atlantic.
Right.
I don't know.
I mean, we talked a couple of weeks ago about how clash of civilizations is still one of the
most commonly assigned books on college syllabi.
Right.
Like, the idea that every kid goes to college
and just immediately goes into like the gender studies program.
Just completely ignores the fact that a ton of people
go to college and go into like STEM fields
or into economics.
That's the thing is like there is so much
right wing ideology in the ideas that are considered
like worth entertaining by the institutions, who they
hire, etc.
I learned from a podcast called Five to Four that law schools are actually quite conservative.
I'm not familiar with that.
Sounds like a cool podcast that people should subscribe to.
With Hansen Kampus.
I mean, to be clear, this is the entire premise of the book, right?
It's built around the thesis that these ideas are spreading on college campuses and that we should all be worried. Every other part of the book
relies on this being true. You know, if the argument is, well, look, I think that modern
college students have a slightly different view of what harm is relative to myself,
that's not a book, right? No one's going to buy that book.
You need that, you need them to believe that what doesn't kill you makes you weaker, right?
And that is the first untruth that they start off with, the untruth of fragility, they call it.
What doesn't kill you makes you weaker. Now, again, no one believes that.
Nor do they provide even one example of anyone saying anything like this.
Oh, really?
No.
They don't even bother.
They just skip straight to the debunking.
Yeah, that's it.
I will say, the thesis here is relatively clear.
They're arguing that sometimes injuries
of various types, physical, mental, emotional,
can actually make you stronger,
and therefore efforts to insulate yourself from
harm can be counterproductive at times.
Sure.
They lead off with an analogy about peanut allergies.
Oh, this fucking thing.
This is like a weird right wing, substack trope that like peanut allergies are fake or
something.
It is.
Yeah.
The prevalence of peanut allergies among children more than
tripled between the mid 90s and 2008. Some research has shown that it was likely because parents
and schools were avoiding nuts in case any children were allergic, which in turn prevented immune
systems from developing resistance, so allergy rates went up. right? So in the analogy, the peanut is racist comments.
And you have to build up your immunity to racist comments.
Otherwise, you'll end up being allergic.
I mean, look, I am not allowed to sit in judgment
of anyone else's dry hard metaphors, must might be judged.
But it's both a totally
assinine metaphor because like human biology does not work the same as like
exposure to ideas. But then also it's kind of a perfect metaphor because if
somebody says, Hey, I'm allergic to peanuts. And you're like, Oh,
somebody didn't get enough as a kid. You're just a huge fucking asshole.
And there's some teenager who's like a member
of a minority group is like, hey, don't say slurs around me.
And you're like, oh, can't handle it, baby.
You're just a prick.
This research on the heritability of IQ
is produced in a facility that also produces racism.
Yeah.
The reason that you know this is a terrible analogy
is because you can easily just craft the opposite analogy, right?
Like, what about seat belts?
seat belt use was promoted and mandated by law, injuries
and fatalities went down.
Right.
If so facto, being cautious is good and effective.
Right.
Nobody's talking about building up their car crash immunity.
It's such a stupid fucking analogy.
I can't even believe it.
That's unbelievable.
What high and lukeana failed a lot of this around
is the idea of cognitive behavioral therapy,
which involves exposure to things that bother you,
that can trigger you, et cetera.
So what they're saying is, look,
the way that we treat a lot of trauma
is by exposing you to things that we treat a lot of trauma is by exposing
you to things that trigger those traumas.
And so children are sort of doing the wrong thing.
They're doing this backwards.
And it's like, okay, I hear you in this narrow sense, but we're talking about controlled
therapy settings, not like the discourse online or whatever the fuck, or like, you know,
the discourse on college campuses.
Right.
If somebody has a racnephobia, you shouldn't just like go and put a
tarantula on them and be like, you're welcome.
The place where the analogy totally breaks down is that being exposed to bad ideas
is not inherently worthwhile, being exposed to like flat earth or like
Sasquatch is real.
That doesn't do anything for you intellectually
because those ideas are fucking wrong.
And because you only have so much time
to entertain so many ideas,
maybe we should narrow it down to some interesting ones, right?
Yeah, yeah.
This entire discourse is based around
stripping all of these concepts of all of their specificity
and saying, just platitudes like being exposed
to challenging ideas is a good thing.
Well, it depends on which ideas they are. So it's like they don't actually believe this.
Conrad to behavioral therapy and their belief in it is sort of a big underlying theme in the book.
It's their basis for the whole coddling concept, right? We're being too soft on the kids. They need to be
exposed to bad, unpleasant things sometimes because that's how you learn to resist them.
The primary example that they use of this type of thing is from Brown University in 2015,
where there was a debate held on campus concerning rape culture.
And some students organized a safe space room on campus with like soothing music, blankets, cookies, coloring books,
play dough, and people trained to handle trauma.
I poked around on this from what I can tell the anecdote is true.
This safe space existed as described.
And some students, at least one student involved made a comment that was sort of like, I needed
to save space because I was being bombarded with a bunch of ideas
that went against my closely held beliefs,
conservative media latches on to that quote,
which is just one kid who was like 19 talking off the cuff to a reporter.
And they're like, look, these kids are literally wrapping themselves in
blankies to avoid ideas they don't like.
But then what's so weird to me is like,
why isn't this a challenging idea
that the conservatives need to be exposed to?
I thought we were into challenging ideas.
That's a challenging idea.
I like once I blank it in Play-Doh and Therapist
for kids that are rigged victims.
The whole point is that these people want to boost
certain conservative ideas.
Right.
But they don't feel super comfortable
defending those ideas directly.
So they shift the discourse into, well, hear them out.
Right.
They don't want to have to get into a conversation about rate culture.
So what do they do?
They move a step away from that conversation and say, well, the real problem is that you
won't engage with the conversation.
It also does overlook the real, very real problem
of sexual assault on college campuses.
Right.
It's very odd to sort of look at the phenomenon of campus rape
and be like, these are the people I'm singling out
for criticism.
I think it's a way of indirectly rolling your eyes
at someone's trauma, right?
Right.
Because maybe it's true that some of those students
or all of those students are not
Processing the trauma in a healthy way by creating a safe space that looks like this. Maybe that's true
I'm I'm not a psychologist. I don't know obviously
Jonathan Hyte thinks that that's true
But that's not the shape that the discourse took right the discourse was sneering right if you sincerely believe that they're
Reacting to trauma right that's not an empathetic response to say at least.
It's focusing more on what is annoying to you personally than what is a problem
societally. I mean, yeah, there are 20 million college students or so in this country.
Right. And if you want to find a handful of examples of them doing something stupid,
you easily can. But it doesn't prove a trend. And when they do try to use actual data to show a trend, you can immediately see that the argument is weak.
They point to a 2017 study where 58% of the students said that they agree with the statement that it's important to be part of a campus community where I am not exposed to intolerant and offensive ideas.
Got them.
That same study found that 92% of students agreed with the following statement.
It is important to be part of a campus community where I am exposed to the ideas and opinions
of other students, even if they are different from my own.
Right.
They don't mention that statistic.
I had to go pull it out of the study,
but keep in mind, they're writing a whole book
about how students are increasingly rejecting the ideals
of the free exchange of ideas.
While the data that they are selectively using
shows that students actually overwhelmingly embrace those ideas.
And they're not giving you any comparison to other societal groups. If this is something about elite liberal colleges, then you should compare to other colleges. overwhelmingly embrace those ideas. That's the problem with these books and these articles is they always present you this data in a vacuum. On to untruth number two, always trust your feelings. This is the Yoda
untruth. Once again, I have to preface this by saying that no one actually believes that you
should always trust your feelings. No one thinks that. I have never witnessed a single person even in
the depths of social media since he really say that. Backstarts don't trust my feelings.
Much of the chapter centers around the supposed epidemic
of campus speakers being disinvited
based on their controversial views.
Love it.
They say that this is the product of students acting emotionally
and they pose the rhetorical question,
should a student saying,
I am offended be sufficient reason to cancel a lecture.
This is such a funny example to use for this,
because this is the opposite of student saying
to trust their feelings.
This is student saying these ideas are intellectually invalid.
Yes, but you only feel that they're invalid, my friend.
Yeah.
You feel based on your review of the literature.
Right, on your reading.
They're sort of like operating out of this framework
that being offended is like inherently irrational
or emotional, right?
Right.
It's reasonable to be offended by Nazis
or by pedophilia or by someone who's killing puppies.
One of the things that changed my mind on this
was I believe it was a New Yorker article
that actually interviewed one of these
oh so scary campus activists who was protesting a speaker.
And what the protesters said was that a lot of these speakers
are invited to give commencement speeches
and other things that are mandatory for students.
There's a huge difference actually
between just like a random person comes to talk on a campus,
on like a Wednesday night, you can go or not go.
Versus to get your diploma, you have to actually sit through a speech by, I think it was
Condoleezza Rice that they were protesting. And like, when college campuses invite speakers to talk,
they are conferring some of their prestige onto the speaker. If somebody says, oh, I'm regularly invited to give talks at Harvard, that is some prestige that that person
is using, right? And it's actually quite reasonable for members of this institution to say,
like, I don't think that our prestige should be shared with this person. This person
does not deserve it. Also, if you're just a 22 year old without access to power, you only
have so many opportunities in your life to scream at condolence or rice. And I think you
got to take a, I've sent you a chart from the book that shows disinvitation attempts
by year. Oh fuck off. I know this chart. I know this chart very well. I love this chart.
God. Tell me what you're seeing. Tell me what you're seeing.
So, okay, this is a chart that tracks
this invitation attempts by year and source of criticism
over time.
So it starts in 2000 and it goes to 2017.
And starting in 2008, you can see the lines diverge
where the left wing, disinvitation attempts,
start spiking, and the right wing,
disinvitation attempts, stay flat.
So what I'm supposed to be learning at a glance
from this chart, is it like, wow, the left,
the left has really gone off the rails.
Look at all these disinvitations.
Well, so the bottom line is that in 2016, there were 42 attempted
disinfections. So if you look at the numbers, that has
approximately doubled in the span of a few years.
Huge.
On the other hand, these numbers are unbelievably insignificant.
It's like you think that the left hand access
is some sort of truncation.
Like it means like 42,000.
Right?
And a 4200 or something.
It's like, no, it's fucking 42.
42, disinvitation attempts.
That's right.
Right.
Who fucking cares?
There are in excess of 4500 degree granting institutions of higher education in the United
States.
If each of them hosted 20 speakers a year, which is an extremely low estimate, that would
mean that for every 2100 or so speaker invitations, you're getting one attempt to disinvite a
speaker.
That's 20 speakers per college per year.
If it's 100, then we're talking about less than one in 10,000.
These are unbelievably minuscule numbers.
This is one of the weirdest things about the quote-unquote data in this book.
If you actually look at it, it doesn't illustrate their point.
It illustrates exactly the opposite. If there's tens of thousands of speakers being invited
to campus every year, a lot of those people probably are really controversial. And a lot of them
probably just give their talks. And everybody goes home. And like maybe there's a tense Q&A,
the mismatch between left-wing dissertationsvitations and right-wing disinvitations, the most obvious explanation for that
is that there is now a huge media apparatus
that exists almost exclusively to freak out
about left-wing disinvitations.
So, of course, you're going to have more reports
of disinvitation attempts
because there's like hotlines and shit.
Not just that, but this is a time in which this sort of, oh, liberal college kids are trying
to cancel speakers, that discourse picks up.
What that results in is conservative student groups trying to troll liberal students by
engaging with speakers who they know are going to cause a shit story.
Yeah, yeah, that's a good point.
By the way, did you catch the last sentence in a little paragraph describing the chart?
Oh, God.
Asterisk's show where the solid line would have been had mylo-ianopolis been removed from
the data set.
This data set is so small that they had to control
for my low-enomalous.
For the protest against someone who's genuinely
extremely odious and deserves to be protested.
So, all of these things are feeding into one another
to drive these numbers up.
And you still only get to 42.
It is very funny to me how much time conservative
spend whining about the marketplace of ideas
behaving like a market.
Did I tell you that I was disinvited from speaking at a school?
Because of your tweets, Peter, I would disinvite the shittity of my sire tweets.
No, the 5-4 crew was once invited by a student group to speak at a law school.
And I will, at the request of the student who thought he would get into trouble. I will not name the law school. We were invited. And then the
student came back in a panic saying, I raised this to administration for approval. And
not only did they say, no, but I might be in trouble here for even suggesting it.
Oh, wow. Okay. So this is like hard. No, like really no. So, you know, just to sort of
like circle back on some recent developments in my life,
disinvited from campus, fired from my job,
all for speech related things,
where is my fucking Tucker Carlson,
no, two minutes, right?
But then this to me, this is like so revealing
of the entire thing, is that no one actually cares
about people being disinvited from fucking campus talks.
No offense, but like you have a podcast that goes to tens of thousands of people.
Your views are widely accessible.
Like, this is a minuscule component of whether or not speech is free, especially now at
a time when like anyone can set up a social media account, anyone can set up a media account, anyone can self-publish a book.
Speech has never been freer in literally human history.
So it's like, I care so much about free speech
that I've made it my entire career
as these guys basically have,
but I also care so little about it
that I only care about this extremely narrow slice
of quote unquote censorship.
They've chosen the one place that conservatives can claim oppression.
I just remembered that I was also once invited to speak at a law school on the
condition that we not make fun of any professors. And we had like no plans to,
but we just said no as a matter of principle.
Yeah, I think that's fair.
I think that's fair.
Um, all right, let's, let's move on to untruth.
Number three, life is a battle between good people and evil people.
Something you hear all the time.
That's something I learned at a drag branch.
This one is about what heightened Luki Anofse is students tendency to place people in one
of two categories, either good or evil, and then act accordingly.
And that is sort of their framework for a discussion of identity politics.
The kids are too into their groups.
This is one of the weakest parts of the book.
It lacks both anecdotes and data.
And they say that there are two types of identity politics.
Shared Humanity Identity Politics, which appealed to shared morality and use unifying language,
and were embraced by Martin Luther King Jr. and Common Enemy Identity Politics,
which involved mobilizing one group against another and we're embraced
by Adolf Hitler.
Again, this chapter is a critique of some of those who supposedly act like everyone is
either good or evil.
And the authors are like, okay, so you have two types of identity politics.
The Martin Luther King, Jr. kind and the Hitler kind.
There's two kinds of 19-year-olds.
The two genders, Martin Luther King Jr. and Hitler.
Like do we really need to invent cute subcategories of identity politics to distinguish between
MLK and Hitler?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Isn't the operative distinction that one was against oppression on the basis of identity and one was for it isn't this also
The argument against social change throughout history was that like you're doing it wrong right?
I would be fine with this if you ask me. Oh my god. It's John Gray
It's like if you ask me could you not be racist?
But like that is not how social progress works at any point in history.
It's hard to parse this and engage with it seriously because you're pointing out that it's un-serious, right?
Now there are parts of this chapter that I think are relatively inoffensive.
They talk about the dangers of a group think and tribalism
and how mentally categorizing someone as a member of the out group can lead to unfairly
characterizing their actions and their intentions, but what they do not do is
provide any data or research showing that this is like a
demonstrable problem among college students in particular, right? You know, obviously like tribal thinking
pretty prevalent across society. So given the thesis of the book,
the obvious question is whether the younger generation is more susceptible to this stuff,
they don't even try to address that.
It's also very funny to criticize 19 year olds for being too fragile and then immediately be like,
when you call me racist, you're being like Hitler.
You guys are totally Hitler right now.
The last thing I want to add in this section is that like a lot of what when you call me racist, you're being like Hitler. You guys are totally Hitler right now.
The last thing I want to add in this section
is that a lot of what they are ascribing
to a new desire among young people
to punish their opponents.
Frankly, I don't see a lot of evidence
that it's not basically 100% social media.
Yeah, yeah. A, the ability of some college kid I don't see a lot of evidence that it's not basically 100% social media.
A, the ability of some college kid to like cause a ruckus on campus is now way higher than it was when I was in college.
B, someone who is on the right is being constantly exposed to the excesses of the left
because social media accounts are taking
that content, filtering it, boiling it down and throwing it at their face.
Peter, imagine if there was social media when we were in college.
One thing that I think the younger generation doesn't understand is how often our generation
talks about how glad they are that social media didn't exist when we were young.
No shit, dude.
Oh my God. This is something I think about all the time.
My libertarian phase has been lost to history.
Yeah.
When you said your libertarian phase,
I like flash back to like one month in law school.
Yeah, and then you met other libertarians,
that's basically what happened to me.
Yeah, go away.
Oh, no.
Oh, it's aiba-Felia?
Oh, interesting.
Giba.
You know, like when you first are exposed to libertarianism, coming from a left-ish perspective,
you're like, maybe I can do libertarianism without the racism.
And then you like absorb the literature a bit and you're like, no.
You're like, no, that's their whole thing.
That's actually.
You actually can't. That's, they're coming at us from the other direction there.
They're only trying to do the racism.
Maybe that's a good segue into the next portion of this book.
The first section, again, was sort of the untruths.
And this is, this next section is the bad ideas in action,
the untruths in action.
And they lead off with intimidation and violence.
Oh! In some ways not the most objectionable part of the book, but there are some pretty dark
sides to this chapter. They describe a series of violence or semi-violent reactions to campus
speakers all occurring in 2017. They talk about the UC Berkeley protests that
related to mylo-ianopolis, which started off with a group of
peaceful protesters and then devolved when a smaller group of
mostly non-students turned violent. There's only anecdotal
evidence that any of those people were students and the author is
sort of harp on that anecdotal evidence, which mostly consists
of some tweets.
They describe the Middlebury College protest of Charles Murray, the bell curve author,
and Professor Alison Stanger, who was there to moderate. That occurred in March 2017.
There were a bunch of students that showed up to disrupt the speech. When Murray and Stanger left, they were accosted by activists.
Her hair was aggressively pulled and the car that they were in was pounded on
until officials cleared a path for them to leave.
So I don't want to downplay these incidents, but it is worth noting that in both
cases, the evidence shows the violence was driven by outside groups,
organized anti-fascist activists, not students themselves.
So the authors attempt to characterize the violence as like reflective of
student ideology does not feel honest.
They also talk about Heather McDonald, an anti-black lives matter writer who
spoke at Claremont McKenna College in April of 2017.
In that one, protesters attempted to shut it down from what I could tell, no actual
violence occurred.
So maybe they were running low on spicy anecdotes here.
Right.
And then they get to Charlottesville.
Oh, what?
So in August 2017, the United the Right Rally in Charlottesville attracts a bunch of neo-nazis
and other alt-right types, right?
There's peaceful protests of the rally and there are also outbursts of violence.
Most notably, a right-winger drove his car into a crowd of peaceful left-wing protesters
killing a woman named Heather Hire. They do condemn the violence that killed Heather Hire,
but what's very telling is that the authors do not use this as an example of the rights intolerance towards alternate viewpoints and peaceful protests.
Instead, they quickly pivot to saying that the left used Charlottesville as an excuse to shut down speech from the right, and they spend the rest of the chapter talking about that. Oh my fucking god. You have this entire book committed to the idea
that liberals especially are engaged
in an unprecedented level of sensorious conduct on campus.
And then they glaze right over the fact
that in all of the modern campus culture wars,
the only person to be killed was a peaceful left-wing protester.
Right.
I thought that this was the moral low point of the book.
This is the thing with these kinds of books is that they want to cast one kind of random anecdote
as indicative of a larger culture and another kind of anecdote as just a random lone wolf
event with no further significance. But they're doing it exactly wrong because if you look at the incidents
where left wing protesters went too far, those incidents are almost unanimously denounced by
the left. Right. Right. You have presidents of universities, you have heads of student unions
saying, Hey, don't send death threats to this person. Don't throw bottles at this person.
Like we condemn what happened, right? And then when you have these outbursts of right wing violence, you have them celebrated by right wing leaders, right?
Like Kyle Rittenhouse is a fucking celebrity on the right. Trump rather famously did not
particularly denounce what happened to Heather Hayer.
Right. So that's the Trump comments they even mentioned critically. This is when Trump
famously said they were very fine people on both sides.
So the authors talk about that briefly without acknowledging that what they're saying is
that from the very top of the conservative political establishment is implicit endorsement of
this violence, you have absolutely nothing like that on the left, nothing.
They just have no argument that this represents any kind of culture.
They mentioned a report from fire, the organization that Luke Yana for X for X for X for X.
They gloss right over this and try to hand wave it away, but very few students report that
they might actually participate in violent actions like this.
Two percent said that they would be willing to disrupt a guest speaker event by making noise
during the event.
One percent said they'd be willing to use violent action to disrupt it.
It's like, whoa, whoa, whoa.
What you're saying is that there's a violence problem
and one percent of people are willing to engage even theoretically in violence.
Right. This is such a classic pattern of the other articles about this that I've read
where they cite this overwhelming culture
of violence that is like taken over the left and you know they're about to install authoritarianism
and all the slippery slope stuff. And then once you boil it down, what we've basically
got here is two anecdotes in which people who are not college students behaved in an indefensible
way. Yeah. One anecdote where violence almost happened,
another anecdote of right-wing violence that is far more severe than anything the left-wing
people did, and a public opinion poll that shows 1% of college students say that they're okay with
violence. Right. Which brings us to the next section, the next chapter titled Witch Hunts,
and they cite the sociologist Albert Bergerson
as saying that Witch Hunts have three different characteristics.
One, they arise quickly and dramatically.
Two, they charge the target with crimes against the collective.
And three, the charges are often trivial or fabricated.
I guess it never quite hit them that this book and the broader reaction against campus culture elective, and three, the charges are often trivial or fabricated.
I guess it never quite hit them that this book and the broader reaction against campus
culture kind of fits this description pretty nicely.
Literally, which hunt?
Yep.
Yeah.
Going after 19 year olds of blue hair, but fine.
Yeah, they kick it off by comparing atrocities in Mao's China to modern day campus culture
warship.
Oh, fuck off.
So this is a quote. As historical events, the two
movements are radically different, most notably in that the red guards were responding to the call
of a totalitarian dictator who encouraged them to use violence while the American college students
have been self-organized and almost entirely non-violent. Uh, yet there are similarities too.
For instance, both were movements initiated by idealistic young college students fighting
for what seemed to be a noble ideal.
The fact that one of them was top down and killed hella people and the other one is bottom
up and didn't do anything.
Yeah, there are some differences.
One is a massive totalitarian nation state,
and the other is a small group of non-violent student activists.
This is like me comparing you to Ted Bundy.
I mean, like, well, Peter didn't kill anybody,
and Ted Bundy did, but there are similarities.
Look, I have brown hair too.
I get it, I get it, I get the comparison.
It's time for a little case study.
As I've mentioned, nearly the entire book,
a collection of anecdotes, many characterized in ways
that feel flagrantly dishonest.
One of those is about University of Pennsylvania Law
School Professor Amy Wax.
I thought it would be worth exploring this one
because I happened to know a good amount
about the controversy.
And part of that is because I took a class with Amy Wax
when I was in law school at the University of Pennsylvania.
No way, really?
I do consider myself a bit of a subject matter expert on this fucking lady.
So, in August 2017, Wax and another law professor wrote an opinion piece
for the Philadelphia Inquirer titled,
Paying the Price for the Breakdown of the country's bourgeois culture.
How, yeah?
The piece argued that many modern social problems
could be traced to the decline of bourgeois values,
such as hard work, and getting married before having kids.
The most controversial line was,
all cultures are not equal,
or at least they are not equal in preparing people
to be productive in an advanced economy. She claimed that this was about culture and
not race, but many people read it as a pretty clear racist dog whistle. The story that
Hight and Luke Yonov tell is that the next week, a collection of students, alumni, and
pen law faculty condemn the peace. They characterize this as a witch hunt and argue that none of
these people addressed the substance of Wax's claims. But what they inexplicably leave out is that
almost immediately after the op-ed was published, Wax did an interview with the Daily Pennsylvania,
the Penn student newspaper, where she touted the superiority of Anglo-Protestin culture
and said, quote, I don't shrink from the word superior and everyone wants to go to countries
ruled by white Europeans.
Whoa, holy shit.
So the dog whistle is just like a whistle.
Yeah, I didn't look young off.
Leave this out of the book.
I presume to make it look like waxes colleagues
where maybe unfairly assuming that her statements were racist.
When in fact, she was openly endorsing the idea
that white European culture is superior.
All she did was say that one race was superior to another.
And these kids...
Is that what racism is these days, folks?
They also left out some controversial portions of the original essay like she claims that the birth control pill has contributed to social decline
You know, they omit that presumably so that the reader does not have to do a double-take
Right and think a little bit about who they're defending a good sign when you're drawing attention to a real societal problem
Is when you have to constantly lie to get people
work up about it.
They're claimed that no one
substantively addressed her arguments is also just an outright lie.
Several of her pen law colleagues provided detailed rebuttals to her statements about like a measurable impact of cultural values,
which height knows because one of them, Professor Jonah Galbach, engaged height in a blog debate
on the subject shortly after it happens,
they even quietly drop a citation to his rebuttal
at the end of the very sentence
that claims waxes colleagues never rebutted
the substance of her claims.
Trends apparently dishonest.
As someone who was very familiar with this whole situation,
I was like, no fucking way.
So were you one of the campus activists at the time, Peter?
No, no.
When I was at Penn, racism was allowed and okay.
I will say this about Amy Wax at Penn.
First, she is one of those nightmare professors
that everyone fears because she genuinely
revels in making students uncomfortable. If a student was doing poorly during like a line
of questioning from her, she would be far more likely to stick with that student. Most professors
move on because they want productive discussion. If she got the sense that someone was out of their depth,
she would just hammer them continuously.
She loved it.
At the time, although unbeknownst to administration,
she was engaging in debates on a couple of blogs about race.
She was having these really weird conversations that basically were about how she believed
having these really weird conversations that basically were about how she believed that black students in her classes and in her children's classes when they were growing up tended to be more
disruptive, lower performers, etc. As this this whole sort of debacle unfolded in 2017, she made the
claim that no black student has ever finished in the top of her class and that she was unfamiliar with any black student at Penn finishing in the top 25% of the class,
something like that, and like the dean immediately put out a statement being
like, that's just not true. That's just not true.
It is very funny to me in these books about the campus kids are so terrible,
whatever. All of the anecdotes are basically like this.
This person who is famously a piece of shit,
experienced consequences.
First, they came for the pieces of shit.
When I first read that like she was embroiled in controversy,
it just felt so affirming.
I was like, you mean the fucking worst person I've ever met?
All right.
Case study number two, evergreen state college.
Oh, fuck off.
This, this is close to home for me.
I know many people who went to evergreen.
And I'm vaguely familiar with this.
Isn't this the like, it was like a white day of silence?
Yes.
Something.
All right. So small progressive college in Washington state, students don't receive grades,
but instead narrative evaluations of their work, they don't have majors, but design their own
course of study.
This has become like such a trope on the right like this.
They love shitting on this college.
And like every time I want to defend it, I do remember the person who I know who majored in outdoor recreation.
And I was like, okay. Well, look, that that is a bullshit major, but I majored in political
science. So are they out of control? Perhaps, but are majors real? No. Yeah, exactly.
You can't tell me that majors are real.
There is an annual Evergreen State College tradition
called the Day of Absence, where students of color
would stay off campus to raise awareness
about their contributions to campus life.
In 2017, it was proposed that the tradition be inverted
and white students and faculty
be asked to remain away from campus.
A reportedly well respected and progressive at the time, Professor Brett Weinstein harshly
criticizes this idea.
He speaks out and says that there is a difference between students of color voluntarily removing
themselves and then asking another group to go away, which
he describes as, quote, a show of force and an act of oppression in and of itself.
Now according to Height and Lukianaf, the day of absence comes and goes without incident,
but a couple months later, students protest outside of Professor Weinstein's classroom,
many shouting him down and calling him racist.
They then march on the administrative buildings and confront the university president and some
others.
The confrontation is aggressive, there's video of it, the students are being pretty hostile
toward the president, making weird demands like that he not use his hands while speaking.
Students are purposefully blocking off the exits
so faculty can't leave.
Professor Weinstein goes on Tucker Carlson,
the voice is concerns, and things escalate.
Right wing media goes ballistic.
Conservative groups are coming to the college to protest.
Tensions exploding all around.
I love how in these stories,
like the structure of these stories,
is like he was accused of being racist. in a later op-it for Stormfront. Now if you
listen to that story closely and that's the story that the authors here tell,
you might have noticed a slightly weird little fact. I said there were two
months between the initial comments he made and the student protest. That is not
how angry mobs tend to work, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So what happened here?
What happened is that his comments were made in March
and there were no protests or anything like that.
But in May, there was a cafeteria altercation
that involved two black students and a white student.
The two black students were removed from their dorms
and detained by police in the middle
of the night, while the white student was not.
A group of students marched through the halls in protest, Weinstein exited his classroom
to confront them.
Contentious exchange ensues, the students then proceeded to march to confront the school
president as I described.
So, Hyde and Lukionov are narrating a story
where these students are angrily protesting Weinstein's comments.
That's the whole point they're making, right?
That these students are responding to mere disagreement
with aggressive protest.
But that is just not true.
What they're protesting is what they believe
to be the mistreatment of black students
by police and campus administration.
Right. Sort of circling back. This book is about ideas and how students are so coddled that they can't even tolerate different ideas.
But when those ideas are directly wrapped up in material differential treatment, right?
Are students not allowed to protest that?
Are they not allowed to say,
hey, I think that's racist?
Right.
What are you saying these students are doing wrong here?
Right.
I don't know how you can see it any other way,
other than Hayden-Lukionov are saying
that there are certain opinions that students
should not be able to voice freely.
Right. Right. Right.
That's all there is to their position.
Didn't Weinstein like get, did he get fired or something?
There was something like lawsuit eventually, right?
He became like this huge martyr.
He and his wife, it was also a professor there sued and they settled and resigned.
Again, they get a big payout.
It's like, what's the actual fucking like downside here?
Right.
Nothing, if you're a conservative or a quote unquote progressive, making a conservative turn, the absolute best thing
that can happen to you is to become embroiled in a campus
controversy like dollar signs in your eyes as soon as it starts
to happen. Yeah. Book deal podcast. Yeah.
All right. The next section of the book is about the social and
political circumstances that have brought us to this point,
and they start off with political polarization.
I actually think their discussion on this
is pretty unobjectionable other than being derivative.
What I do want to talk about is one piece of the chapter
subtitled Outrage from the Off-Campus Right,
which chronicles some of the ways
in which these stories about left-wing campus outrage
get fed into the right
wing media ecosystem and then turn into right wing outrage. So they returned to Evergreen State
College, where the comments by Brett Weinstein supposedly sparked outrage. Again, he was on Tucker
and there was backlash from the right, but here is where they actually describe some of that backlash.
Swastika's show up on campus.
Multiple students are docs by right wingers online, their identities and contact information,
spread across right wing social media.
Hundreds of threats of violence are received by students, including by like text messages,
by like literally dozens and dozens and dozens of text messages, messages from random numbers being received by individuals.
The neo-Nazi group, Adam Waffen division posted video
of themselves walking around campus at night,
putting up posters that say,
join your local Nazis and black lives don't matter.
Holy shit.
You might notice that this is considerably more severe than anything you've heard about
students from this either this ordeal or any other ordeal they described, but it is tucked
away within a subsection of a single chapter in the middle of the book.
Just bizarre in frustrating how much right wing violence directed at left wing speech is
treated like a side plot here,
given that like every time it's described,
it's far more serious than any of the anecdotes
about the conduct of the left.
The right wing stuff seems like organized
and like kind of top down too.
Like this would all be coming from Tucker
and various other right wing websites,
none of whom presumably are like condemning this
after the fact.
Right, I mean, and they, what they seem to just categorize it as like, well, this is not
stemming from campus. So it's not what our books about. I guess in a total vacuum that might make
sense. They're like, well, we're writing about campus culture. But when they're just talking about
how like these students were mean to the university president, and then it's like Nazis with masks,
put up signs around
campus and like, you know, spray painted swastikos and shit. Are you really just like pretending
that the first thing is worse than the second thing? It's like if they're just saying that
like, oh, it's in a different category. It's like, well, then you should have written
about that fucking category. Yeah, absolutely. And yeah, maybe now is a good time to sort
of question the overarching narrative here.
And in the campus culture debates generally, which is that the left in particular is trying to press speech
that it does not like on campus.
Jeffrey Sachs, a political scientist, tracked instances of professors in the US being fired due to political speech from 2015 through 2017, and found that more professors were fired
for a liberal speech than conservative speech
by a factor of about three to one.
Holy shit.
Now, I will float out the possibility
that there are just more liberal professors.
It might be that that's not in and of itself indicative
of like a three to one bias, right?
But the media watchdog fairness and accuracy in reporting,
fair, found that the New York Times dedicated
seven times as much space to stories about the suppression of conservative speech when compared to
stories about the suppression of liberal speech. So the next few chapters of the book and we're sort of
we're rounding the bend here describe an increase in depression and anxiety among young people, as well as the increase in recent decades of
overprotective parenting styles and the decline in unsupervised play by children.
Oh, I'm gonna have to agree with them on that, aren't I? Oh, that bugs me. Yes.
I this is
This section was sort of often interesting a little more directly in Heights Lane in terms of his expertise.
Right. Now, obviously they are trying to create a link in your mind
between these phenomena, which are pretty demonstrably real
and supported by data and the phenomena
that they are describing on campuses, which are not,
but I did feel like I was learning something
for the first time in the book.
I mean, I feel like the percentage of kids
who walk or bike to school has gone from roughly 50% to roughly 10%
in the last 50 years.
And like I think that's a genuine like American tragedy.
Yeah.
But then there's no real like generational argument
to make because that has much more to do with like
suburbanization, the design of roads,
the way that policing has become like much more aggressive
on unaccompanied minors.
Like there's sort of specific things there,
and you can't just be like,
this generation's too coddled.
Yeah, it's very useful to them to have some,
to be able to point to something
for which there is actual data.
Yeah, yeah.
You can say, well, look, this is an actual phenomenon,
and so maybe it's related to what's happening on campuses.
They need something that's a little more legitimate in the scientific
community to hang their hat on here.
Also, some of these chapters are just sort of like miscellaneous complaints that they couldn't
fit into other parts of the book.
They complain about Title IX gender equity requirements from the 90s for a bit.
Are we just airing out whatever grievances about social justice initiatives that we haven't
touched on before. Yeah. The last section of the book is called Wising Up, and it's about the things that we can do
at the individual and societal level to address the pressing issues that they have raised throughout
the book. Am I supposed to just say slurs to like 17 roles in this industry? Like it's like peanuts,
kids, just eat some peanuts.
They list out six principles for raising, why is your children? Half of which are practical little tips and
half of which are bizarrely abstract conceptual principles.
Okay. One is limit and refine device time. Cool.
I'm sure. Another is the line dividing good and evil cuts
through the heart of every human being
I love that it's just like they've made up this fake thing that kids can't appreciate nuance anymore
And they're like give your kids nuance
Jesus Christ. Oh, man
It's just very telling how half baked the prescriptive argument here is.
Right.
The one thing that they give as a prescription, although it's vague, but I think I should
address it because it's the best faith argument they make, is that they think that administration
is sort of facilitating students to do this or allowing them.
And they basically want universities to put their foot down, which at least makes
sense in the context of their argument and the context of their broader case here.
I don't think that they actually lay out how that would work.
Yeah, because the only thing administrators could do is things like banning protests of
speakers, which is like far more worrying than the students protesting the speakers themselves.
What they do is they portray universities as like, limply collapsing under the weight
of every student protest, right?
Like, students made these outrageous demands
and the university immediately caved
and basically they don't want universities
to caved to those demands, right?
And then if you end up looking into it,
the demands were like relatively reasonable stuff
about, you know, about like police presence on campus, et cetera, right?
But I think that's what they want.
They want universities to take a hard line.
Whenever students make an ask of the university,
the university says, go fuck yourself.
You bunch of fucking hippies.
But this is like, this is what's so weird
about the contradiction at the heart of these arguments
because it's like you want all of this,
you know, free exchange of ideas,
but you don't want anyone to act on it.
What if you invite a campus speaker,
and that speaker has like Holocaust denial publications
in their past, you would actually change your tech,
in that case, right?
You've received new information.
Right.
But it's like to them, they've established this invitations
of campus speakers as some sort of like fucking front line of like American free speech.
inherently bad. right, but it's like sometimes that's appropriate. you know, I thought about what about like
sandbackman freed or Elizabeth Holmes right? like what happens when they get busted for fraud and you have
a pending invitation? are you supposed to hear them out? Right. The idea that discourse is just inherently valuable
in every situation.
It's obviously bullshit.
No one believes it, but it's like the fundamental principle
that under, that undergirds a lot of their arguments.
And they don't actually ever really defend it.
It's just something that like,
you're supposed to believe in your heart, right?
Oh, free speech is the core of our of a free society, right? Yeah. Big picture. I feel like I was
kind of disappointed in this book because like, are you pretending you went in with high expectations?
It's not that I had high expectations, but I guess like I was sort of interested in the
prospect of guys with like real expertise in psychology and law, trying to like lay out the case to the best of their ability.
And, you know, I guess my takeaway was if this is the best the other side can do,
a book built on a foundation of straw man arguments, reliant almost exclusively on strings of anecdotes
rather than days. And then frequently misrepresenting the anecdotes,
there's nothing here, right?
There can't be anything here.
The idea that there's an epidemic
of student-led suppression of speech
is just a media-created fiction.
And there's no data that shows anything other
than a tiny handful of incidents per year,
whether it's speakers being disinvited
or protested or professors being fired.
And if that's all there is,
then what the fuck are we talking about?
Why do you think it's caught on so much?
Because this is, I mean,
this book is really the tip of a fucking iceberg.
And like every month there's a new Atlantic article
or some cover story somewhere about those stuff.
So like, what do you think is actually going on?
Let me, let me read you a quote.
Tell me if you know who this is from.
The children now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority.
They show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise.
Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households.
They no longer rise when elders enter the room. They contradict their parents,
chatter before company, gobble up dainty at the table, contradict their parents, chatter before company,
gobble up dainty at the table,
cross their legs, and tyrannize their teachers.
You know who said that?
You want me to say Hitler,
but I think it's Martin Luther King.
It's Socrates.
No.
About 2,400 years ago, Socrates was complaining
about the kids.
Yeah.
And I think that that is fundamentally
what's happening here, right?
Old folks complaining about the misgivings of younger generations is a tale as old as time.
And as you get older, there is some part of your brain that gravitates towards this.
I can't explain it entirely, but like watching the younger generation fumble their way
through a part of life that we all struggled with to some degree.
It conjures up these complicated emotions and your soul just wants to say,
fuck those kids, man, they just don't get it.
But you don't really hate those kids.
You hate the younger version of yourself that you see in those kids for not having
absorbed the wisdom that you have now.
And you resent God for not letting you replay that moment.
Yeah.
And if you can't process all of this, you might just have to write an entire book about campus culture.
I just turned 41, so I'm looking forward to this happening to me, and eventually telling Tucker Curls and all about it. you