Ok, I can do give and take. First, an inadequately answered question:
How do you know the thing is true if you would have promoted anybody that would say it?
To which you said
I don't think anyone is calling for promoting anyone merely for being willing to say controversial things.
Where the opening paragraph of the article in this thread states a defender of Apartheid should given diversity have an increased likelihood of being hired by that virtue. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I somehow believe that telling our prestigious institutions to select for cranks will make it even harder for laymen to sort out the truth than it is already and undermine trust in those same institutions. It will also skew scientific consensus even when that consensus is deserved.
Second, a far more important and entirely unanswered question:
Do you know all the arguments for marginalized positions with which you disagree? If not, would you say you do not know that some of them are really false?
Give these items a good effort, and I will return in kind.
Do you know all the arguments for marginalized positions with which you disagree? If not, would you say you do not know that some of them are really false?
I use several heuristics to decide which ones are worth my time. Most of them are the ones mentioned by Paul Graham in his essay What you can't say.
Related: Heuristics for Evaluating the Soundness of the Academic Mainstream, Admitting to Bias, The Ideological Turing Test