90% 的大学生认为“言语可以是暴力”;调查显示。
9 In 10 College Students Think 'Words Can Be Violence'; Survey

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/9-10-college-students-think-words-can-be-violence-survey

一项由个人权利与表达基金会(FIRE)的新调查显示,很大一部分大学生——90%——在某种程度上认为“言语可以是暴力”,其中47%完全或大部分同意。近60%的人也认为“沉默是暴力”。FIRE警告说,这种心态可能为对言论的暴力回应辩护。 该调查在查理·柯克在犹他谷大学遭枪击后进行,突显了日益扩大的意识形态分歧。适度和保守派学生对有争议的演讲者越来越持接受态度,对破坏性策略的支持越来越少,而自由派学生则保持或增加了他们的反对意见。 值得注意的是,现在有一半的学生不太愿意参加或举办有争议的活动,并且相当一部分学生报告说,由于安全问题,在课堂上或在政治上发表意见时感到不自在。对2028名本科生的调查强调了大学生对言论自由日益增长的担忧。

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原文

Authored by Gabrielle Temaat via The College Fix,

Nine out of ten undergraduate students think that “words can be violence” at least “somewhat,” according to a new Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression survey. 

The poll also showed that ideological gaps between left-leaning and right-leaning students are widening.

When respondents were asked how much the statement “words can be violence” describes their thoughts, 47 percent answered with “completely” or “mostly.” Twenty-eight percent said it describes their thoughts “somewhat,” and 15 percent said “slightly.”

Additionally, around 59 percent of students said “silence is violence” describes their views at least “somewhat,” though only 28 percent said it describes their thoughts “completely” or “mostly.” 

“When people start thinking that words can be violence, violence becomes an acceptable response to words,” FIRE Chief Research Advisor Sean Stevens said in a news release following the poll. 

“Even after the murder of Charlie Kirk at a speaking event, college students think that someone’s words can be a threat. This is antithetical to a free and open society, where words are the best alternative to political violence,” Stevens said. 

The poll also showed that moderate and conservative students have grown less supportive of disruptive or violent tactics to stop campus speakers, while liberal students’ support for those tactics has stayed the same or risen slightly compared to the spring. 

At the same time, moderate and conservative students have become more open to allowing controversial speakers, while liberal students have maintained or increased their opposition to those speakers.

In particular, opposition among liberal students “increased considerably” to a speaker who previously said “The police are just as racist as the Ku Klux Klan” and “Children should be allowed to transition without parental consent,” according to the survey report

FIRE conducted the survey in collaboration with College Pulse to evaluate campus free speech after Charlie Kirk’s Sept. 10 assassination at Utah Valley University. The poll contained 21 questions and was given to 2,028 undergrads to gauge their comfort with a range of sensitive topics.

Half of the students surveyed said Kirk’s assassination has made them less willing to attend or host controversial events on campus, and about 20 percent reported feeling less comfortable even going to class.

A majority of students said the incident made no difference in their willingness to speak up on controversial political topics in class. However, 19 percent said they felt a “great deal” less comfortable 26 percent said they felt “slightly” less comfortable.

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