Thursday, December 01, 2022

Being Offended

I'm not saying that people should go around intentionally offending others--we have words for such people.  But neither should we walk on eggshells in fear of offending someone.  Somewhere between those two extremes is a reasonable middle:

“Words are violence.” 

That’s a common refrain among far-left campus protestors, like the ones who show up at Matt Walsh’s events or those who recently shut down Ann Coulter’s speech at Cornell University, as reported by Campus Reform.   

Of course, words are not literal violence. At best, what the protestors mean is that words they dislike or disagree with are analogous to violence. Such words are “hurtful,” which is to say their hurt some people’s feelings.   

Simply put, the protesting students are offended. And they seem to believe they not only have a right not to be offended but that right somehow supersedes the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.  

This is abject nonsense. There is no such right, and the sooner young people recognize and accept that fact, the sooner they will grow up and develop the ability to cope and ultimately thrive in this often-unfriendly world...

First, keep in mind that being offended is a choice. Others can say what they want; you have no control over that. What you can control, however, is how you respond.  

As in other parts of life:  the problem isn't usually the problem, the problem is how you react to the problem.

3 comments:

PeggyU said...

Exactly. Offence is taken. You can choose to leave it.

Anonymous said...

From the guy who referred to words as violence not so long ago.
https://rightontheleftcoast.blogspot.com/2008/11/pledge-of-allegiance.html

I guess words are only violence when you disagree with them. Hypocrisy on the Left Coast.

Darren said...

To suggest that people got hot and heated, that their reaction was violent, has a different meaning, a "nuance', if you will, than suggesting that words I don't like are themselves violent.

You went and searched my blog and the best you could come up with is a post from 14 years ago, and you had to twist the meaning of what I wrote.

You, "anonymous", are nuts. It's clear I live rent-free in your head.

Why do you dislike me, "anonymous"? Here, show me on the teddy bear where I hurt you.