I’m not unsympathetic to the most limited aims of safe-spacers. Some of their moral impulses are perfectly laudable. People who have experienced real trauma — violent crimes, rape, the loss of loved ones in violence — do need special consideration. That a victim of rape would want to avoid a heated discussion on rape statistics is perfectly understandable. Someone who lost a loved one in a war overseas may find themselves distressed by a frank talk about whether that war was justified.

Long-term healing may mean strengthening oneself to face these subjects in the future. We intuitively understand the effects of physical, emotional, or even spiritual trauma.

But it takes the intellectual gymnastics of a collegian to see that thoughts and ideas amount to violence and trauma.

Perhaps the safe-space movement cannot be sustained for long. The political left used to praise fearlessness, non-conformism, and dangerous ideas. It used to embrace the figures of history who were once branded heretics. Maybe that romantic rhetoric is too deeply embedded in our political tradition and culture to let this hysterical, stultifying conformism colonize our institutions and social life.

Then again, if safety-obsessed neighbors now believeagainst all evidence — that children who are not actively surveilled are suffering from neglect, then heaven knows how dangerous the home can be, with all those proles thinking their thoughts in the presence of children. Surely the practice of “reparative therapy,” which could soon be illegal, will be expanded to include any non-medical therapeutic practices that have “denialism” embedded within them.

The safe-space movement offers hysterics real power over their institutions and neighbors. And this is a power that denies itself as power, that grasps by wailing. If America is rapidly becoming more economically and politically unequal, it seems natural enough that the graduates of our elite credentialing institutions should feel the need to control the thought and speech of their inferiors.

Nothing so endangers privilege as the freedom of the masses. I learned that from the left.

Read more at: theweek.com