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by Dylan16807 4058 days ago
>So, taking precautions to remove the college from a situation that could be detrimental to the college as a whole is wrong?

Such precautions are neither inherently wrong nor right. But if they have a strong side effect of hurting the student, without protecting the college from anything real, they are wrong.

>Let's say they stepped up and went beyond their responsibilities to help

Beyond? I strongly disagree that it's beyond their responsibilities to refrain from banning a student in good standing from campus.

>How exactly does that help the rest of the student body

I can make the same argument about every group. Now nobody will help. We're definitely not better of in that world. NIMBY is a bad motivator.

1 comments

So, taking the precautions is neutral until a student is harmed by them and then it becomes wrong? Seems to me they would have to take precautions for the precautions then. You are also assuming it was known beforehand that the precautions may cause harm to the student in question. Students have been banned from universities before.

I agree banning a student can be heavy-handed unless he was deemed a danger to other students or maybe other things warranted such a response. But I would imagine a university has the right to remove anyone from campus and ask that they not return.

I disagree, there will almost always be someone offering to help, it's human nature. But why is it the university's responsibility to help in a case where they choose not to do so? Just because one group decides to help in certain situations doesn't mean everyone else has to help. If the university decides they don't want to help in these situations then they have that right. Some people may not like that. Some people think it makes for a better world to force others to do things they don't want to do. Force them because it's been predetermined it's for the greater good, but I see that as going too far and a huge potential for abuse.

> So, taking the precautions is neutral until a student is harmed by them and then it becomes wrong?

No, I'll try to be clearer. The very idea of precautions is neutral. Specific precautions are good or bad based on whether they are likely to harm the student and/or prevent harm.

> I would imagine a university has the right to remove anyone from campus and ask that they not return.

Once someone has started a degree program at a university, I would very much hope that cause is required to remove them.

> But why is it the university's responsibility to help in a case where they choose not to do so?

They don't have to 'help', per se, but I expect them to not hinder. They are already giving away counseling, all they have to do is not interfere. Keep to the existing agreement. (Without using any "cancel at any time" loopholes they put into their contract of adhesion.)