And Another Balanced Individual
The university became aware of the post Monday morning, Wilson said in his email. The professor, whose identity was not revealed, works in the university’s English department… “The post stated that rather than ‘shouting down’ those with whom we disagree, one would be justified to commit murder to silence them,” Wilson wrote.
According to the educator in question, Steven Shaviro, “It is far more admirable to kill a racist, homophobic or transphobic speaker than it is to shout them down.” What unfailing criteria might be used to determine such things, and how those gorged on indignation might avoid error, prior to any murder attempt, isn’t made clear.
The professor goes on to blame “right wing” student groups for inviting speakers who “provoke” leftist students – who mustn’t be expected to have any kind of self-possession – making them behave in ways that are threatening and delinquent, even sociopathic. Behaviour illustrated here many, many times – as, for instance, at Middlebury College, where the 74-year-old scholar Charles Murray, a contender for the title of World’s Most Polite Man, was physically chased off campus.
Says our educator,
Or put another way, “How dare you try to discredit leftist Mao-lings by even briefly existing in their proximity and thus making them want to murder you.” I paraphrase, of course, but not enormously.
Update, via the comments:
Given sufficient squinting, readers may have noticed the professor’s tiny rhetorical fig leaf. We’re told that he doesn’t advocate breaking the law – by murdering someone for shits and giggles – he merely admires it, a lot. And so, if, for example, a woman says that she doesn’t think a mentally ill man should be using the women’s changing rooms and toilets – and is then murdered for her “transphobia” – this would be a good thing and “far more admirable” than merely ganging up on her and preventing her from speaking.
He’s an intellectual, you know. A terribly caring intellectual.
Update 2:
In the comments, Pete R adds,
No, not really. This, remember, is a man for whom demurral on a wide range of contentious topics is by definition “reprehensible” and, in his mind, could only exist in order to “provoke” the righteous and good-hearted, i.e., people much like himself, who fantasise about menacing and killing those who disagree with them. Note the implication at the end of his post – that after murdering someone – say, someone who doesn’t think that dysmorphic men and autogynephile perverts are actually women – one should be acquitted, as one’s actions would have been “justified.”
These sentiments don’t suggest a detached thought experiment or some devil’s advocacy. More a sociopathic urge. Maybe inside our professor’s head, there’s a loud, relentless buzzing noise.
This shaper of young minds, a self-styled “Kitsch Marxist,” has been suspended with pay.
Previously in the world of totally balanced educators.
Via Tom Joyce.
referring him to the police because of something he said on Twitter is outrageous
A great many states have laws against incitement to violence or uttering threats, and university administrations are not qualified to investigate crimes.
Can’t have it both ways. If you don’t want universities deciding whether Bob and Suzie hooking up while drunk means Bob raped Suzie, then you can’t have universities deciding whether a prof broke state law.
After all his union is “very strong”
Stop pearl-clutching. Faculty unions can and have shut down entire universities over less. As JKS notes, this is an extreme reaction. Referring this to the police is a shot across the bow by the president. According to some legal blogs I follow this is a damp squib, there’s zero chance it’ll go anywhere as a criminal investigation and the president knows this. This is the normal, sane person’s equivalent of “Nice academic career you’ve got here. Shame if anything happened to it.”
the otherwise positive values that people used to hold for their personal self esteem have been denigrated
Bezmenov tried to warn us.
I’m laughing my ass off at right-wing pundits hand-wringing today at the “transgender movement openly targeting Christians” because we’ve all forgotten that Jack Phillips and Fr. Frederick Henry exist, apparently.
Of course it won’t go anywhere, that’s why the “University” referred it to the police.
In the U.S. it’s perfectly legal to express your admiration for murderers or murderous behaviour. And rightly so.
One might have hoped though, that it would be grounds for not being retained as an English professor, but unfortunately there are too many well-meaning people like yourself willing to accept their simpering excuses.
It’s worth noting that when a “University” wants to get rid of someone who’s offended against woke shibboleths it magically doesn’t require a police referral. Just ask Joshua Katz or Jodie Shaw.
Zara Jade: Halifax woman jailed after stabbing and tying up victim
😀
And that Halifax “woman” has a serious criminal record. Surprise.
I wonder whether this absurdity is going to continue indefinitely, stretching into the future, beyond my lifetime. Or will it peter out, like any fad, and then be remembered with some embarrassment?
My vote is for living in the end times.
I think we’ll give that one a post of its own. Comments that-a-way.
Exactly this. The law has long since stopped caring about any reasonable consistency. As I said above regarding logic and reason, but especially in the context of encouraging murder, the ultimate repression of someone’s freedom of speech, the other side does not care about playing by consistent rules. This Marquis of Queensbury stuff is a losing policy.
Generals Curtis LeMay and Bomber Harris were right.