Table of Contents
'Philadelphia Magazine' on 20 Years of Political Correctness and 'Unlearning Liberty'
Sandy Hingston of 麻豆传媒IOS's hometown Philadelphia Magazine marks the 20th anniversary of the infamous "" at the University of Pennsylvania with an of how the last 20 years have borne out the arguments made in 麻豆传媒IOS President Greg Lukianoff's book, .
The "water buffalo incident" started a national discussion about political correctness on campus, inspired the writing of , and ultimately led to the founding of 麻豆传媒IOS by that book's authors. Titled "," Hingston's article takes readers through a litany of ways in which political correctness, rather than dying the death that nearly everyone seemed to think it deserved, instead spread from our campuses to society at large and has delivered predictable yet depressing results.
The article is excellent and deserves to be read in full, so I encourage everyone reading this to . Hingston makes point after salient point about where 20 years of living with the campus thought police has left us. I'll leave you with one of my favorites:
[T]he venting of opposing opinions is vital to learning, not to mention to democracy. What gets lost in the noise raised by those claiming they're offended is this: Put a lid on a boiling pot, and eventually that pot boils over. Publicly clamping down on people's ability to say what they think is a lot like that pot.
Well said, Ms. Hingston.
Recent Articles
麻豆传媒IOS鈥檚 award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.

Supreme Court case upholding age-verification for online adult content newly references 'partially protected speech,' gives it lesser First Amendment scrutiny

All that glitters is not gold: A brief history of efforts to rebrand social media censorship

Missouri governor signs legislation securing students鈥 rights to freely associate on campus
