private school kids are coddled assholes, more at 11.
the articles that you posted (well, article) that *wasn't* about assholes being assholes and using triggers and trigger warnings like a weapon against precariously-position adjuncts, private school teachers, or protesters (which isn't an argument against content warnings, it's an argument against being an asshole*) was the Guardian op-ed which amounted to the same stupid argument. "Oh nooo they're censoring people and they're coddling them!" which, again, is not what they do and not what they're for. I don't agree with taking course materials off the syllabus but that's an administrative decision, not inherent to content warnings. Everything else was just editorializing and opinion; "It skews students' perceptions," is an opinion, unless they have a survey sourced. (Spoiler: they don't.) "highlights particular issues as necessarily more upsetting than others" Also an opinion, and while probably true, we *are* talking about shit that can and has caused PTSD episodes. I think that's a fair thing to call "necessarily more upsetting." Then it goes into weird shit about content warnings othering and making women and marginalized groups seem weak. Again an opinion, and kind of a weird one? a) weak to who? (rhetorical question) b) nothing is stopping white men from asking for trigger warnings except for those same perceptions of weakness. So we want to encourage that perception, buckle under to that pressure? Get rid of trigger warnings for the people who actually want them because other people are too scared of seeming weak to ask for them?
* For example, you could replace "that she was "triggered" by images in the protesters' materials" with anything else, and it'd be the same thing: using an excuse to be an Asshole and hurt other people.