Changes for page Quarry Lane Karavadi Neg
on 2017/03/09 06:08
on 2017/03/09 06:09
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... ... @@ -1,0 +1,16 @@ 1 +=Trigger Warnings DA= 2 +==1NC== 3 +====~~Miltimore 16~~ Universities are pushing back against trigger warnings now. Miltimore 16==== 4 +~~Jon Miltimore is the senior editor for intellectual takeout, 8-23-2016, "University to 2020 Class: Don't Expect 'Safe Spaces' or 'Trigger Warnings' Here," Intellectual Takeout, http://www.intellectualtakeout.org/blog/univ-chicago-pushes-back-trigger-warnings-safe-spaces~~ 5 +Similarly, many universities are creating "safe spaces" where students can relax free 6 +AND 7 +students "to retreat from ideas and perspectives at odds with their own." 8 + 9 + 10 +==== ~~Garcia 16~~ The Aff gets rid of restrictions of free speech. People can choose not to place trigger warnings on their speech. This causes psychological violence. Garcia 16==== 11 +~~Amy Garcia, Johns Hopkins University, 11-15-2016, "Should Campus Protests Have Trigger Warnings Too?," Study Breaks, http://studybreaks.com/2016/11/15/should-campus-protests-have-trigger-warnings-too/~~ 12 +If you have no psychological triggers, then you are correct in assuming that you probably do not need warnings. Yet one must not conflate a lack of utility for oneself with a lack of utility. Most students do not need handicap entrances, yet who would argue that they are useless? Most students do not have serious food allergies, yet who would argue that a list of ingredients is frivolous? Though psychological trauma endangers only a small percentage of students, who would argue that their well-being should be ignored? Even on college campuses, the tyranny of the majority looms. Consider the Voice for Life protest at Hopkins. According to Planned Parenthood, approximately 578,681 abortions were administered last year, and nearly half were on women younger than 24. Given the distressing nature of abortion, and the odds that one or more of those nearly 262,722 women might be on campus, might it be the university’s responsibility to warn students of the potentially harmful demonstration? No one is asking that peaceful protests be eliminated or even censored. There is, though, ample precedent for imposing restrictions on the "time, place, and manner" of protests, provided constitutional safeguards are met. It simply stands that if warnings make sense when engaging with potential triggers in the words or letters of professors and books, they also make sense when engaging with potentially triggering actions. 13 + 14 +==== ~~Pickett 16~~ Thus, the Aff harms marginalized groups by creating psychological violence for them. Pickett 16==== 15 +~~Raeann Pickett, Aug 31, 2016, "Trigger Warnings and Safe Spaces Are Necessary," TIME, http://time.com/4471806/trigger-warnings-safe-spaces/~~ 16 +The University of Chicago recently decided to put an end to trigger warnings—advance notice of subject material that might upset students—and safe spaces—places where students can avoid those subjects. The university’s reasoning for ending these voluntary practices was a "commitment to academic freedom." In reality, this policy puts many students in the uncomfortable position of entering spaces that may or may not be safe for them to learn, interact and share in—and puts the onus on them to leave or to endure the situation. The decision doesn’t take students wants or needs into account. As the National Coalition Against Censorship notes: "In many cases, the request for trigger warnings comes from students themselves." And safe spaces can have powerful therapeutic purposes for those who enter them. In fact, the university’s new policy does the exact opposite of what it is purported to do: instead of fostering academic freedom, it could foster mistrust and negatively affect survivors of trauma, including people of color. If students cannot trust that spaces they enter are going to keep them safe, they are less able to feel secure enough to learn. Safe spaces and trigger warnings can help support victims of assault, PTSD and violence. Organizations like Slut Walk and Take Back The Night have made great strides in ending stigma for sexual assault survivors and have called for increasing trigger warnings for sensitive content. A lack of safe spaces can also compound the mental toll of racism, even subtle racism. Past experience with bullying plays a role here: Of the 160,000 children bullied every day, 31 are multiracial, according to Clemson University’s "Status of Bullying in School" 2013 report. Racial bullying often goes unnoticed or unreported due to how teachers perceive interethnic relationships. Psychologist Morris Rosenberg found that African-Americans showed surprisingly high rates of self-esteem when they compared themselves with other African-Americans, but when they compared themselves to white peers, self-esteem levels dropped. Safe spaces can help minorities feel empowered to speak up. - EntryDate
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