Christina Hoff Sommers, a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, spoke at Georgetown University last week and at Oberlin College last night.

Apparently, Sommers' mere presence was traumatizing to students.

Trace Gallagher reported on "The Kelly File" tonight that the controversy surrounding Sommers and her lecture "What’s Right (and Badly Wrong) with Feminism?" stems from the fact that she disagrees with the views of some students regarding sexual assault and the campus rape culture.

Instead of simply not attending the lecture, Georgetown students placed a "trigger warning" sign outside of the auditorium, advising that the speech would "contain discussions of sexual assault and may deny the experiences of survivors."

The trigger warning also came with directions to a "safe space" for anyone who might be traumatized by Sommers' views, Gallagher reported.

And Oberlin students didn't just protest Sommers' speech last night, they got a jump on the trigger warnings, putting up signs days ahead of time, Gallagher stated.

"While they were creating safe spaces and giving one another trigger warnings, campus administration provided me with two police officers who were sort of my bodyguards," Sommers said. "So I think they felt I wasn't very safe among the 'safe spacers.'"

At last night's Georgetown lecture, safe spacers held up these signs throughout my talk. But never interrupted. pic.twitter.com/cNEnt9s2FB — Christina H. Sommers (@CHSommers) April 17, 2015

Posted outside my lecture at Georgetown last night. I suggested feminist jazz hands instead of triggering clapping. pic.twitter.com/PdsuOtwozU — Christina H. Sommers (@CHSommers) April 17, 2015

Spoke at Georgetown last night. Lots of trigger warnings and safe spaces. pic.twitter.com/04z7A7WVxn — Christina H. Sommers (@CHSommers) April 17, 2015

Watch more above and see Sommers' Georgetown lecture below.

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