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Peter Maguire's avatar

“Trigger warnings” made me stop teaching. It is impossible to teach about genocide and war crimes without exposing students to horrific and eye opening material? I feel sorry for today’s college students. When I entered Bard College in 1984, the drinking age was 18, the bookstore sold rolling papers and there were no “speech codes,” “microaggressions,” Title IX star chamber courts, much less “trigger warnings.” I was educated at Bard, not coddled, pandered to, or indoctrinated. The most important parts of my undergraduate education were the tiny classes and full-contact exchanges with intense and intimidating professors. It was impossible to hide in the smoke-filled seminar rooms because we sat around tables. While all of my teachers cared about my education, they did not care about my ego. Back then, students were not treated like customers, and if you complained to administrators they laughed in your face. Instead of inflating me with fraudulent and flatulent “self-esteem,” they hammered me on a Socratic anvil. Over the past two decades, many academics and intellectuals have embraced the lamb’s freedom, and their students have paid the greatest price. Their timid perceptions of comfort and safety are now higher priorities than their education. Colleges and universities should not be self-esteem builders where “student success” is guaranteed. I am thankful that my teachers made me earn my success, because it is meritless if mandated.

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Michelle Martin's avatar

A few years back I read Pattie Boyd’s memoir, Wonderful Tonight, and it was SO good! She is such an interesting person and I also love getting all the behind the scenes of some famous musicians. Highly recommend!

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