A logical worldview is something important. Without a worldview where facts are checks and balances, we have no reason to know whether things are fact or fiction, right or wrong, let alone why anything exists. People cannot thrive without ensuring they have laws of logic or morality.
Worldviews form our compass as to why we are here, what shaped our world, and how we should live. It influences our decisions. We strive to make the right choices each day, but what determines right?
The quality of education that people receive is a large concern.
Across the United States and Western Europe, colleges are now widely perceived as centers for unsound opinion-based worldviews instead of time-tested truth.
More and more, colleges, from local universities to the Ivy Leagues, seem to enforce one dominant opinion and try to censor other ideas.
Students across elite colleges sometimes get physically or verbally attacked, or their event posters or displays vandalized, over their beliefs. It is as if these colleges are receiving marching orders from some dark force.
Beware of "agitator" students
The "agitator" type of students could be considered a dark force, and likely grew from absorbing said force in class into taking on its role.
Their intention is ostensibly to be a force for good and to save the world. They want to change the world, but are misled on how to do it. They may feel life would be empty without a higher purpose or a worldview reflective of less temporal goals and values, since college students have a sense of pride and achievement that they get from completing challenging coursework and improving the local community. They need to perform good deeds.
They perhaps heard the historical accounts of revered agitators, such as W.E.B. DuBois or Frederick Douglas, motivating the world to change. However, DuBois and Douglas fought to expose cultural problems that were objectively wrong.
These agitator students come off as not wanting others to hear both sides of an argument. They worry that their colleagues will feel unsafe when the echo chamber is broken.
A while ago, some troublemakers attending the Pennsylvania West University California campus drew devil horns, pitchforks, and fangs on Turning Point USA posters advertising an event featuring the pro-life host Savannah Craven. The magic marker graffiti rendered the event time and location hidden. The posters warned that Craven "wants your soul."
On May 11, the Oshtroushko family obtained federal charges as a consequence of an alleged assault against a Turning Point USA student journalist. Mother and daughter DeYanna and Paige Oshtroushko apparently cursed out and endangered TPUSA's Savannah Hernandez during a local demonstration against ICE. DeYanna had also tried to support Paige in the attack on Ms. Hernandez. Frighteningly, Paige Oshtroushko had played as a University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point student athlete.
There had been a TPUSA presentation at the University of Washington from children's advocate Chloe Cole scheduled for May 13, but other student groups threatened death and harassed her. In consequence, these students lost the privilege of improving their minds with the guidance of her speech, as Cole refused to give the rioters the time of day. These students do not know how to change the world, while Cole herself is actively making a difference.
The examples above paint a picture of students badly attempting to change the world because their worldview is not based on facts. A comment from The College Fix coverage of the removed Cole event argues that the "agitator" students made censorship of all "unsafe" matters their own religion.
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