Smith College Paper Considers the Word ‘Crazy’ an ‘Ableist Slur’

VoldemortThe campus far-left: Ruining
the English language for all of us.
This story
—an argument between the Foundation for Individual
Rights in Education and Smith College, a women’s liberal arts
school—is as insane an example of the zeal for self-censorship at
college campuses as any.

Here’s
what happened
: Wendy Kaminer, a First Amendment expert and
member of FIRE’s board of advisors, participated in a discussion
about free speech at Smith College in September. Kaminer was
unafraid to use the words n*gger and c*nt—instead of their frequent
replacements, “the n-word” and “the c-word”—reasoning that saying
the words aloud should be perfectly acceptable in an academic
context. Hurling insults is one thing; addressing a taboo word in
an intellectual setting is quite another, she said.

The usual outrage ensued. Kaminer was accused of committing “an
explicit act of racial violence” by a student
with a poor grasp
of what violence entails. Smith College
President Kathleen McCartney was criticized for not denouncing
Kaminer—presumably, the muzzlers would have wanted her to yell
“shush!” at the first sign of controversy.

But perhaps the most incredible facet of the debacle was the
Smith College student newspaper’s
transcript
of the Kaminer discussion, which was prefaced by the
mother of all trigger warnings:

Racism/racial slurs, ableist slurs, antisemitic language,
anti-Muslim/Islamophobic language, anti-immigrant language,
sexist/misogynistic slurs, references to race-based violence,
references to antisemitic violence.

You would be forgiven for thinking all this is absolutely crazy.
Of course, if you expressed that sentiment at Smith College, you
would be censored. Indeed, the word crazy was also
deemed offensive. In that very same paper, the transcriber replaced
all utterance of the word “crazy” with [ableist slur].
According to FIRE
:

This censored transcript is therefore itself an excellent
example of how censorship hurts dialogue. All instances of “nigger”
are written as “[n-word].” Kaminer’s use of the word “cunt”—which
she used one time, to clarify a student’s reference to “the
c-word,” was written as “[c-word],” resulting in this line in the
transcript:

WK: And by, “the c-word,” you mean the word [c-word]?

Clarification was evidently needed, considering that another
c-word was also censored from the transcript:

Kathleen McCartney: … We’re just wild and [ableist slur], aren’t
we?

That’s right, wild and crazy. It took my
colleagues and me a moment to figure that one out (it is audible in
the audio
recording
 of the panel). Despite this word apparently
being too offensive to reproduce in the transcript, it was spoken
by all three of the other panelists besides Kaminer, in addition to
President McCartney.

It’s impossible to overstate the sickly condition of the free
exchange of ideas at the modern college campus. Harvey Silverglate,
chairman of FIRE’s board, diagnosed the problem excellently in a
recent Wall Street Journal op-ed
titled
“Liberals Are Killing the Liberal Arts.” Silverglate
used a metaphor of which I am also fond: Campus censors are like
the cowardly wizards of the Harry Potter universe who are too
afraid to speak the name of the dark lord, Voldemort, instead
referring to him as He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named or You-Know-Who. Harry
Potter and some of his allies, however, are unafraid to utter his
name. They correctly reason that making a word unsayable gives it
undue power over their emotions.

If only college students were half as wise.

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