I'm A Banana
Potassium-Rich
I disagree in every respect. Nobody "gets their way" with the ability to voice dissent. Voicing it isn't itself a "victory for the message". And it does not have to be respectful. Nor should it be "safe" - indeed "dangerous" speech is often the most important speech, and labeling speech as dangerous is a step to oppression. Like I said, Brendan O'Neill describes it far better than I have (you should watch that debate I linked to). But offensive speech is often the driver of the most positive social change in history, and squelching it to protect people and make them feel safe does the opposite. It stagnates society, and leads to echo chambers.
Offensive speech is only a driver of change when it is offensive to those in power (almost by definition - it is only the powerful who have the ability and authority to enact that change). When it is offensive to the powerless, it is simply an exercise (and, often, an abuse) of that power - nothing changes when you offend the weak or insult those without power to respond. If anyone seeks true freedom of speech, then they will absolutely advocate for an area where the speech of the powerless can be heard and respected, without the powerful shutting it down (including shutting it down by simply making it uncomfortable for the powerless to be there). That means that the powerful have to agree not to use their power - that those with the freedom of speech agree to curtail their speech in a way that allows others' speech to be heard. The fact that it is the powerless that are encouraged to speak here makes the spectre of authoritarianism moot - by definition, the powerless have less authority.
My most direct analogy is professional - I manage some employees, and like any manager, I care about honest feedback, so that I can improve my own skills. But as anyone who manages employees knows, getting truly honest feedback from those who work under you is nigh impossible - even a high schooler's understanding of cognitive bias makes it clear why. I have to go out of my way to make a safe space for feedback, to get the most honest (and thus most useful) feedback possible, to fight for a space where I voluntarily curtail what I am allowed to do and say so that the person with less power is as free as possible to speak their mind.
That power dynamic is explicit in a professional setting, but the thesis is unchanged: the powerful must make space without their power in order for the powerless to speak freely.
And please do not assume I am in "the majority group" because you disagree with my viewpoint on this (that's making me the topic rather than the opinion itself). Nothing I said imagines the world is simple. How about you return to focusing on what I said rather than who you think I am and what my experiences might be.
I've got no assumptions about who you are. You'll find my statement was not about you, but about the ease with which the power dynamic can be overlooked, as it was in your post. One common cause is that it is overlooked by someone who has power, but doesn't quite realize it. Whether or not this was the cause of your oversight in this particular instance, I can't (and didn't) say, it's merely something that often plays into statements like that often sounding reasonable, but in practice being insufficient for the true spread of ideas. It's entirely possible that has nothing to do with you in particular, but it's an important point to make in a discussion like this regardless - the powerful don't often realize their own power.