UK Buying a round in the pub is branded potentially 'triggering' for students at top university - Students were given helpline numbers in case the lecture was too distressing

It's a vital aspect of British life, but buying a round in the pub has been branded potentially triggering for students at a top university.

A warning was slapped on a sociology lecture about 'money and finance' which addressed topics including picking up bar tabs at the University of Manchester.

Undergraduates were given links to a university-run emergency suicide helpline and counselling service in case the financial focus of the lecture was too distressing.

And the lecturer gave a verbal warning before opening discussions to enable students to leave if they found the themes too upsetting, an attendee revealed.

One of the lecture's key focuses was the stress caused by buying a round at the pub – deemed to be an uncomfortable financial issue for cash-strapped students.

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Buying a round of drinks at a pub is a vital aspect of British life, but buying a round in the pub has been branded potentially triggering for students

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A warning was slapped on a sociology lecture about 'money and finance' which addressed topics including picking up bar tabs at the University of Manchester

One student said: 'A few heads turned when they mentioned a trigger warning for a topic like that.

I think my initial thought was, 'If you're going to put a trigger warning on a topic such as finance then everything's going to need a trigger warning, especially in a subject like sociology.' '

Professor Dennis Hayes, director of Academics for Academic Freedom, lambasted the university for insulting students.

He said: 'There is an endless list of things now said to be triggering or are labelled microaggressions. They may just seem silly but they point to something very serious.'

He said that this approach 'insults students by treating them as if they can't cope', while self-censoring academics, adding: 'What lies behind this silliness is a campus culture in which 'make sure no one takes offence' is the unwritten rule. It is a censorious culture that undermines the academic duty of criticism.'

The lecture in November also dealt with inheritance issues, rising prices and how to split bills. Despite the warning, no one opted to walk out.

Money and finance are not included by the University of Manchester on a list of topics they outline may merit trigger warnings, such as genocide, violence, murder and sexual assault.

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The lecture in November also dealt with inheritance issues, rising prices and how to split bills

A university spokesman said: 'Students are being affected by the ongoing cost-of-living crisis and financial problems can be especially difficult for young people to deal with.

'We take the welfare of our students very seriously, and we have a duty of care towards them.

'This lecture simply pointed attendees towards the free mental health support the university provides for students who may be having financial difficulties, which includes a counselling service, a 24/7 helpline and a wellbeing app.

'We also provide a cost-of-living support fund to ensure that none of our students are left struggling.'

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Worth keeping in mind that the people actually coming up with and implementing these policies are the university staff and management, not the students. The students quoted for the article seem to be mostly eye-rolling about the whole thing. I say this because no doubt the Daily Mail comments section for this article will be older people ragging on "snowflake Gen Z", not realizing it's millennials in their thirties and forties who are actually responsible
 
I say this because no doubt the Daily Mail comments section for this article will be older people ragging on "snowflake Gen Z", not realizing it's millennials in their thirties and forties who are actually responsible
Which, of course, started because the millennials were all forced to play nice together and make sure everyone is included and give everyone participation awards by the gen Xers and boomers who were teaching and parenting and leading things in the mid 80s and through the 90s. Millennials never got to play dodgeball because their parents got it banned to protect them, not that any of them wanted the protection.

All this woke shit started when the silent generation failed to prevent the slippery slope from beginning. All the younger generations actively don't want it, but they're not going to speak up against the authority of the elders on the issue. The boomers say we have to listen to the niggers when they tell us their pronouns are 'person of color' or whatever the fuck it is this year, and the whole honor thy elders thing is still kinda sorta functional.
 
Worth keeping in mind that the people actually coming up with and implementing these policies are the university staff and management, not the students. The students quoted for the article seem to be mostly eye-rolling about the whole thing. I say this because no doubt the Daily Mail comments section for this article will be older people ragging on "snowflake Gen Z", not realizing it's millennials in their thirties and forties who are actually responsible

These policies come up because of an earlier policy - copied from America, of course, since the British exist to be gayer than America - that if a student says they're offended, the professor is slapped with the presumption of guilt.

All the younger generations actively don't want it

The younger generation is gayer and more leftist than ever. The difference is that the shrinking right-wing portion of the younger generation is increasingly in the mood to Minecraft the insanity.
 
Worth keeping in mind that the people actually coming up with and implementing these policies are the university staff and management, not the students. The students quoted for the article seem to be mostly eye-rolling about the whole thing. I say this because no doubt the Daily Mail comments section for this article will be older people ragging on "snowflake Gen Z", not realizing it's millennials in their thirties and forties who are actually responsible
It's also lecturers being excessive to placate the policies set by uni management- they're at the whim of student feedback reports, among other things, given the precarious nature of employment at a university.
 
The UK has a dangerous binge drinking and alcoholism culture that alongside the US we both sorta stand alone compared to the rest of the developed world. It seems to be actively promoted by at least our media here on all levels, not sure over there. I've heard this leads to quite a few actual suicides. Are there trigger warnings for the alcohol itself? /Lisa Simpson
 
Uni students need a lesson in how to use the pub properly. Nothing fucks me off more than walking into the pub and a bunch of students are queuing up one behind another like they're in the fucking post office. THAT'S NOT HOW YOU QUEUE AT THE BAR, CUNTS. Always push straight past those cultureless tits.
Whoevas loudest gets drinks first, simple as!
 
What annoys me is that triggers can be valid, but they're going the exact opposite way they should be in dealing with them. They're cured by exposure therapy. Consider someone who's suffering from severe agoraphobia and has become a shut in for instance. Would a psychologist recommend he never leave the house again so he doesn't get triggered? No, the treatment would be to go outside, maybe five minutes a day at first, and then spend more and more time outside as he gets used to it. As easy as it is to laugh at these student snowflakes, at the end of the day they're victims of enablers and their quality of life will suffer as a result.
 
It was always an unwritten rule in my student days that you bought your own, because we were all incredibly skint.
Reminder that this entire student cohort is being deliberately told that words and ideas are akin to physical violence. Why? because then they can be used to deliver violent responses to words and ideas the powers that be deem a threat. If your words are seen as violence and harmful, you’re justified in using violence in response.
They’re too fucking thick to realise they’re going to be used as shock troops in the idea wars
 
Uni students need a lesson in how to use the pub properly. Nothing fucks me off more than walking into the pub and a bunch of students are queuing up one behind another like they're in the fucking post office. THAT'S NOT HOW YOU QUEUE AT THE BAR, CUNTS. Always push straight past those cultureless tits.
What do you expect them to do, walk up to the bar and make eye contact with the bartender? They're socially awkward!
 
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