The Patriot Post® · Video: The Importance of Uncomfortable Conversations
Zachary R. Wood came to national attention when, as a undergraduate at ultra-liberal Williams College, the student group that he helped lead was pressured to cancel its invitation to Suzanne Venker, a conservative author and critic of feminism.
Activists accused him of “causing actual mental, social, psychological, and physical harm” to his fellow students, and “paying for … the continued dispersal of violent ideologies that kill our black and brown (trans) femme sisters.” After he invited the former National Review writer John Derbyshire to speak, the university president unilaterally shut the event down.
In Uncensored: My Life and Uncomfortable Conversations at the Intersection of Black and White America, Wood writes about the urgent need for civil discourse and open debate, especially on college campuses. The recent graduate talked with Reason about how administrators are as much or more to blame as student activists for the repressive atmosphere at universities, and why he looks forward to exploring issues of class mobility and how school choice can benefit low-income minorities in his work as a journalist.