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kwassa

(23,340 posts)
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:05 PM Nov 2015

We have Safe Spaces here on DU. They are called Groups.

We also have public spaces on DU. They are called Forums.

For any group to want to have a safe space is not a limitation on freedom of speech, other than in a particular locale at a particular time, but does provide a space for those of like mind or interest to congregate and discuss what is important to them, without interference. This has value in building a community with similar beliefs and interests. It also has value in strengthening minority viewpoints where they can be drowned out by majority viewpoints.

There are plenty of other spaces to have complete freedom of speech about the same topics where all can be challenged. There is great value in both safe spaces and open spaces. Safe spaces are no threat to total freedom of speech, because of the prevalence of open spaces.

DU, on a Meta level, is a safe space. Republican viewpoints are not allowed here. It is not a totally open forum, and that is OK.

55 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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We have Safe Spaces here on DU. They are called Groups. (Original Post) kwassa Nov 2015 OP
Unfortunately, the Balkanization of DU is not a good thing. longship Nov 2015 #1
I don't think DU is Balkanized. kwassa Nov 2015 #4
Please! longship Nov 2015 #5
DU turns into pre-school every primary season. kwassa Nov 2015 #36
Walled off groups are, by definition, Balkanization. longship Nov 2015 #41
Worse than the Balkans, some groups are walled fortresses from which attacks are launched on others. leveymg Nov 2015 #43
I agree with you wholeheartedly. longship Nov 2015 #44
+100 notadmblnd Nov 2015 #51
Oh, it is more than Balkanized. HuckleB Nov 2015 #26
If applied consistently within your context, you imply the Dewey decimal system is balkanized. LanternWaste Nov 2015 #7
Huh? longship Nov 2015 #10
Comparing DU groups to the Dewey Decimal system? cwydro Nov 2015 #11
Conservative viewpoints are common on DU... Fumesucker Nov 2015 #2
A "safe space" on an online forum romanic Nov 2015 #3
The internet bleeds into real life more and more The2ndWheel Nov 2015 #6
I didn't think of that. romanic Nov 2015 #15
So, subject at hand is College Campus are DANGEROUS! Um, why would you go there for a "Safe Space" snooper2 Nov 2015 #17
Your version of safe space is actually an Orwellian inversion of the concept Prism Nov 2015 #8
This could be its own OP. Great post. tritsofme Nov 2015 #12
+ 10^6 lumberjack_jeff Nov 2015 #13
My same thoughts more eloquently stated. Thank you! Throd Nov 2015 #14
Hot damn. romanic Nov 2015 #16
SJW? ismnotwasm Nov 2015 #18
Fortunately, you just illustrated the difference Prism Nov 2015 #24
No, my shock was seeing a term coined by MRA's used in this context ismnotwasm Nov 2015 #34
Except, of course.... opiate69 Nov 2015 #45
It wasn't coined by the MRA's Prism Nov 2015 #53
So there shouldn't be a space where people of color can talk? Goblinmonger Nov 2015 #20
Not in a public space Prism Nov 2015 #27
DU and an academic environment are completely different. Goblinmonger Nov 2015 #35
Yeah, I'm not sure what your argument is Prism Nov 2015 #40
There can be private spaces within a public space. kwassa Nov 2015 #48
Speaking Only RobinA Nov 2015 #28
If it's not your jam, then that's fine. Goblinmonger Nov 2015 #32
I Wish I Could Be RobinA Nov 2015 #23
+1,000,000 ... 000 HuckleB Nov 2015 #29
That's some good posting Bonx Nov 2015 #37
^^^^^+1^^^^^ NaturalHigh Nov 2015 #38
No. you are wrong, and wildly over the top, IMHO. kwassa Nov 2015 #42
Thank you so much for your wise words. n/t tabasco Nov 2015 #47
Precisely. beevul Nov 2015 #49
"Safe place?" The Gungeon group? BWAHAHA! Eleanors38 Nov 2015 #9
safe spaces DustyJoe Nov 2015 #19
Most of the safe havens on DU are about protecting from those of privilege. Goblinmonger Nov 2015 #21
Everyone has some type of privilege. romanic Nov 2015 #25
For the most part, of course they do. Goblinmonger Nov 2015 #30
Yes, everyone is privileged in some way. Act_of_Reparation Nov 2015 #46
My safe-haven group is the Photo Group Blue_In_AK Nov 2015 #55
That's exactly how I imagine DWS FlatBaroque Nov 2015 #22
You've never been to the Sports Group, have you? bluedigger Nov 2015 #31
Censorship groups are destructive of the broader DU community. earthside Nov 2015 #33
there is a difference between safe spaces and demigoddess Nov 2015 #39
DU isn't a public university campus pintobean Nov 2015 #50
You say that, but... Android3.14 Nov 2015 #52
that goes on all over DU demigoddess Nov 2015 #54

longship

(40,416 posts)
1. Unfortunately, the Balkanization of DU is not a good thing.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:26 PM
Nov 2015

These safe havens only promote more bad behavior. IMHO.

Again, the Balkanization of DU promotes the Balkanization of the party. Who in the fuck wants that no matter who one supports?

I find GD.P a disgusting and toxic waste dump.

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
4. I don't think DU is Balkanized.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:37 PM
Nov 2015

Many of the protected groups have very little activity, because apparently many who would belong to that demographic don't feel they need them. Those groups that do have relevance thrive.

Without groups, DU would become the tyranny of the majority viewpoints over minority viewpoints. This will only create homogenization of opinions by sheer numbers, and drive out diversity of viewpoint. There is a tendency for this to happen anyways, in my opinion.

As to GD-P, if it didn't exist, then that toxic waste dump would be here in GD.

longship

(40,416 posts)
5. Please!
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:44 PM
Nov 2015

Hillary group. Bernie group. O'Malley group. All where it is like "Home on the Range", where never is heard a discouraging word, or one gets fucking banned from the group. No reasonable discussion allowed.

Meanwhile, in GD.P, there is no discussion whatsoever other than personal attacks against either the candidates or the poster. Chair throwing rather than discussion. I do not think I have ever seen such utterly despicable behavior here on DU before.

How could anybody reasonably call such a thing anything but Balkanization?

It will be the end of the Democratic Party if we continue such overtly childish antics. And make no mistake, DU has turned into pre-school.

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
36. DU turns into pre-school every primary season.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:56 PM
Nov 2015

I disagree with your analysis, by the way. People who participate in protected groups are the very same people who participate in the open forums, so there is no Balkanization, there are simply different ways of participating. At times, in the open, at times, in more protected areas.

longship

(40,416 posts)
41. Walled off groups are, by definition, Balkanization.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:04 PM
Nov 2015

I rest my case and stand by my post.

See my response #10.

leveymg

(36,418 posts)
43. Worse than the Balkans, some groups are walled fortresses from which attacks are launched on others.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:15 PM
Nov 2015

"Safe places?" - sanctuaries to organize hostile action against "the enemy." "Safe places?" - the only thing that is kept safe are bad ideas and destructive memes, protected from potential criticism during gestation.

The proliferation of "protected groups" have changed DU and makes it a more segregated, mutually hostile place.

longship

(40,416 posts)
44. I agree with you wholeheartedly.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:25 PM
Nov 2015

The current situation makes for division, not unification.

I am beginning to hate DU because of it.

Nevertheless, there are still enough rational people here that make it worthwhile. I try to ignore the mayhem and the chair throwing.

But it makes me very sad for our party.

 

LanternWaste

(37,748 posts)
7. If applied consistently within your context, you imply the Dewey decimal system is balkanized.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:47 PM
Nov 2015

I fail to see how fully accessible groups, freely available for you to join in, whose priorities and interests may differ than yours, is 'balkanization'...

If applied consistently within your context, you imply the Dewey decimal system is balkanized.

longship

(40,416 posts)
10. Huh?
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:54 PM
Nov 2015

Last edited Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:29 PM - Edit history (1)

And cheesecake is Balkanized, too. But I diverge. (As do you.)

The candidate groups here are precisely Balkanization.

Balkanization, or Balkanisation, is a geopolitical term, originally used to describe the process of fragmentation or division of a region or state into smaller regions or states that are often hostile or uncooperative with one another.


I think that fairly describes what is going on here.

Fumesucker

(45,851 posts)
2. Conservative viewpoints are common on DU...
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:27 PM
Nov 2015

I was told recently right here in GD that there are no poor people on the internet.

romanic

(2,841 posts)
3. A "safe space" on an online forum
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:32 PM
Nov 2015

is different from a "safe space" on a college campus or anywhere else in the real world. You can make a TOS for a forum where spaces are made for those who want to discuss without disagreeing viewpoints and not worry about infringing on free speech.

But in the real world, you can't just create a space out of nowhere, censor and silence those who don't agree with what the people in said space say or think. Nor can you sanitize reality to appease those who can't handle it. Face it, there's no such thing as a "safe space" in real life.

The2ndWheel

(7,947 posts)
6. The internet bleeds into real life more and more
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:47 PM
Nov 2015

It's taken some physical stores away. Books, libraries, you don't really need them.

We humans shape the world around us as we see fit. There's an entire generation of people that have grown up with nothing but the internet, and the filtering that's available on/in it.

Up until the point where we're getting our internet connection directly into our brains, I can see this safe space thing taking off. When we are just wi-fied in or whatever all the time, we'll probably be able to mute people we see. Or not even see them, since it'll all be virtual by that time.

 

snooper2

(30,151 posts)
17. So, subject at hand is College Campus are DANGEROUS! Um, why would you go there for a "Safe Space"
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:14 PM
Nov 2015
 

Prism

(5,815 posts)
8. Your version of safe space is actually an Orwellian inversion of the concept
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:50 PM
Nov 2015

Safe spaces are supposed to be places where people can speak without fear of retribution or censorship. On colleges specifically, they were intended as First Amendment zones where a student couldn't get in trouble from professors for their ideas and speech.

They were noble concepts meant to encourage academic inquiry and freedom.

Now, they are zones of ideological fanaticism, sheltering participants from disagreement or challenge with apparent attempts at enforcing that uniformity through verbal and sometimes physical aggression.

Notice yesterday's video of a safe space where people could speak their truth. When an asian woman immigrant said something some of these SJWs didn't like, they went after her.

Safe space, huh? More like "Safe space for me, not for thee. You have to agree with me in this place."

This is so far afield from our concepts of what makes for a healthy, intellectual society, it's appalling.

This isn't liberalism. It's, quite frankly, getting fascistic. But I'm somewhat enjoying watching all these would-be Robespierres eat each other. Who next will get the guillotine? The university administrations that unleashed these Frankensteins are now getting a taste as it turns on them.

This is vastly entertaining. I guess some professors are too busy writing papers about Twilight and 50 Shades of Gray instead of cracking a history book.

tritsofme

(17,370 posts)
12. This could be its own OP. Great post.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:57 PM
Nov 2015

This hostility to free speech and the desire to ban rather than confront is very scary.

Throd

(7,208 posts)
14. My same thoughts more eloquently stated. Thank you!
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:03 PM
Nov 2015

On DU we excoriate the right wingers who listen to nothing but Hannity and Limbaugh as weak minded and afraid of challenging views.

 

Prism

(5,815 posts)
24. Fortunately, you just illustrated the difference
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:33 PM
Nov 2015

A social justice activist would be deeply concerned a woman of color was being bullied and booed for speaking her truth.

A social justice warrior would find some bit of nothing that miffs them and make that the issue, ignoring the far more salient and important problems at hand.

Woman of color being bullied? Unworthy of comment. A term used towards the people doing the bullying? How dare you!

C'mon. Don't make it so easy.

ismnotwasm

(41,965 posts)
34. No, my shock was seeing a term coined by MRA's used in this context
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:49 PM
Nov 2015

On the other hand, I suppose my reaction was out of proportion to my expectations.

 

Prism

(5,815 posts)
53. It wasn't coined by the MRA's
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 06:13 PM
Nov 2015

It's been used on the general internet for years. Again, there's the dynamic at work. Did you address any points in my post?

No, no you did not.

What did you do? You threw out a boogieman "MRAs!" to justify your reprioritizing the problematic situation based on your sensibilities rather than address the much, much bigger problem of a woman of color being bullied.

Activist vs. Warrior.

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
20. So there shouldn't be a space where people of color can talk?
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:20 PM
Nov 2015

Or atheists? Or a specific religion? People in those groups want to be able to talk without those with privilege coming in and telling them how silly they are being or that they just don't get it. How the hell is that Orwellian? And some people want to talk about Sanders without someone coming in to say that Hillary has already been crowned. Why is that bad? If you want to mix it up about the primaries, go to GDP. If you just want to talk about the person you like, go to that place.

And your last line smacks of Republican talking points about the world of academics.

 

Prism

(5,815 posts)
27. Not in a public space
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:38 PM
Nov 2015

in an academic environment that is specifically there for the exchange of ideas and speech.

No. And they certainly shouldn't have the power to ban journalists from that public space in the name of safety.

Wanna rent a rec room somewhere? Go nuts. Don't want to be challenged in the public square? No. Not in a free democracy. Not now, not ever.

Why is it, in democratic societies, the people always wailing about safety are immediately the first people we should be suspicious of? Whether it's the right-wing with their Patriot Acts or the left-wing with their desire for compulsive ideological uniformity. It's such a scary go to concept for authoritarians. "We're reducing freedoms for safety!" Liberals should be a billion fucking times smarter than this. It's like we didn't watch this shit with Republicans from 2001-2008.

As for Republican talking point, that is actually in the news. The professor who threatened a journalist (of color, I might add)? That was what her work was based on. Hilariously ridiculous and unworthy pop culture projects.

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
35. DU and an academic environment are completely different.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:51 PM
Nov 2015

If it is a public university, it needs to be public and about exploring concepts. Private universities can do as they please. Bob Jones University makes me sick, but I don't think they need to be forced to accept an atheist and discuss concepts that go against their philosophy in their classes.

Who made you the judge of what is worthy for academic study. My Master's thesis was on a television cartoon. Is that ridiculous? It was specifically about whether students learn environmental information from said cartoon and focused on Information Process Theory, but I'm sure it would be more fodder for your claims of what an academic should focus on and what they should not.

 

Prism

(5,815 posts)
40. Yeah, I'm not sure what your argument is
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:02 PM
Nov 2015

Right now, in the news, the problem with "safe spaces" in these demonstrations is that they're being thrown down in the public square (and in places specifically built for the exchange of ideas). That's the complaint.

No one cares if a group has a meeting somewhere. Free association and all that.

It's when the public square is commandeered as a zone for one ideology that the problem arises.

We seem to agree on this.

As for that professor. Read her entire CV. It reads like right-wing parody of what they think left-leaning professors are like. I actually thought it was a right-wing parody until I read a news article about it. Her work is ridiculous and ridicule-worthy.

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
48. There can be private spaces within a public space.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 04:31 PM
Nov 2015

There can be private spaces within an academic space, that can be created as subsets.

And in this case, entirely temporary. At Mizzou, this space was created at the camping area for the protestors, where their tents are and where they temporarily live.

and I don't think that impinges on the overall freedom of speech in the university.

RobinA

(9,886 posts)
28. Speaking Only
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:40 PM
Nov 2015

for myself and as an atheist, I can't think of anything less interesting than being surrounded by a bunch of other atheists. What fun is that? Similarly, I have never had any interest in all female groups. Homogeneous groups...kinda zzzzzzzzz.

Anyway, people who want to find a place to talk among themselves should probably find a private place. Internet = non private. Incidentally, private clubs have been more or less run out of town or opened up to all. By liberals. Ask former members of men's clubs. They just wanted to sit around and talk about their similar interests, but nooooooo. Do I see a petard hoisting in there somewhere?

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
32. If it's not your jam, then that's fine.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:48 PM
Nov 2015

So discussion groups on the internet are like men's clubs? You do know you are on a private club right now, yes? People that are not progressives are shown the door. And if you want to know how often that happens, join MIRT. It's a crazy game of whack-a-mole trying to get rid of them.

RobinA

(9,886 posts)
23. I Wish I Could Be
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:24 PM
Nov 2015

entertained. As a liberal, I fear the backlash that is sure to come. This nonsense will strengthen the real racists and prove a recruiting tool. The Second Civil War - started by Halloween costumes and a frat party.

kwassa

(23,340 posts)
42. No. you are wrong, and wildly over the top, IMHO.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 02:15 PM
Nov 2015

Calling them zones of ideological fanaticism is only your own personal projection on to the situation. A safe space is not an open discussion forum, that's all. You want everything to be open to you at all times and in all places. That is not necessary to maintaining a world of free speech.

There is nothing fanatical anywhere in this. There is disagreement, however.

By maintaining a safe space for the participants in that space, the free discussion can happen elsewhere. You apparently missed that part of my OP.

 

beevul

(12,194 posts)
49. Precisely.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 04:33 PM
Nov 2015

I was blocked from one such 'safe space' for a post I made in one of them. It was an accident, and I had no intention of even posting in that group in the first place. The post was was deleted in less than 2 minutes, was posted in the middle of the night, and it had 1 view when I deleted it IIRC. Nobody even read that post, and I wasn't blocked for the content of it, I was blocked because I have the unmitigated gall to be pro-gun.

A safe space created under the guise of being a 'shield', ceases to be seen as a shield, when used very obviously and deliberately as a sword.

 

Eleanors38

(18,318 posts)
9. "Safe place?" The Gungeon group? BWAHAHA!
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 12:53 PM
Nov 2015

Safe to go there and get a hate-fix against Democratic gun-owners. Or just blow it out in GD forum whenever the urge moves you.

DustyJoe

(849 posts)
19. safe spaces
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:19 PM
Nov 2015

The way it appears from the outside, groups clustering running off people that don't look and think like them is nothing but ages old self segregation. I thought the decades old fight to stop segregation was over long ago, now its just self imposed. So who then actually 'won' the de-segregation war of the 60's ?

romanic

(2,841 posts)
25. Everyone has some type of privilege.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:34 PM
Nov 2015

If it's not white privilege, it's male privilege, or heterosexual privilege, or able-body privilege, or American privilege, etc.

There's nothing wrong with having a group of like-minded people with the same interests or beliefs; it's when these groups proclaim themselves to be "safe" and authoritarian against other people is where the problem lies.

 

Goblinmonger

(22,340 posts)
30. For the most part, of course they do.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:42 PM
Nov 2015

I host the Atheists & Agnostics group. Whenever I hear someone that is religious say what you are saying about that group, it just smacks of having one's privilege hurt. Why is it "authoritarian" to not be able to go and push your privilege in a certain area on a group that doesn't have that same privilege?

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
46. Yes, everyone is privileged in some way.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 03:24 PM
Nov 2015

But so fucking what? I'm privileged as a cisgendered heterosexual caucasian male; that doesn't mean I need a bunch of theists godsplaining to me in the atheists and agnostics group, or a bunch of neurotypical armchair psychologists kicking it back in the Mental Health Support group. Heaven forbid we have a little space to ourselves.

Blue_In_AK

(46,436 posts)
55. My safe-haven group is the Photo Group
Thu Nov 19, 2015, 02:53 PM
Nov 2015

It's a bunch of wild-eyed fanatics in there. The rest of you dare not enter.

earthside

(6,960 posts)
33. Censorship groups are destructive of the broader DU community.
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 01:49 PM
Nov 2015

I've been here for a long time ... and I think the creation of these 'safe places' groups are a contributor to the incivility and intolerance that seems to be increasing here.

It is one thing to create a community of discussion for Democrats/liberals/progressives like the broader DU; it is another thing to allow factionalizing, segregating, exclusivity by permitting and encouraging therein groups that censor and exile those with diverse points of view.

 

Android3.14

(5,402 posts)
52. You say that, but...
Fri Nov 13, 2015, 05:30 PM
Nov 2015

Too often those "safe spaces" become little cliquish, almost fascist, enclaves where a select few determine which specific attitudes a person must possess for admittance to the club.

demigoddess

(6,640 posts)
54. that goes on all over DU
Thu Nov 19, 2015, 12:57 PM
Nov 2015

it is getting so you can't even have an opinion without being yelled at and insulted for that opinion.

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