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I have no idea, maybe? Do you have a timestamp?

From an NR interview summarizing the exchange:

Why should your freedom of speech trump a trans person’s right not to be offended?” Newman asked. Peterson, ever the gentleman, answered the question without guffawing: “Because in order to be able to think, you have to risk being offensive. I mean, look at the conversation we’re having right now. You’re certainly willing to risk offending me in the pursuit of truth. Why should you have the right to do that? It’s been rather uncomfortable.”

Newman misdirected: “Well, I’m very glad I’ve put you on the spot.” But Peterson pursued: “Well, you get my point. You’re doing what you should do, which is digging a bit to see what the hell is going on. And that is what you should do. But you’re exercising your freedom of speech to certainly risk offending me, and that’s fine. More power to you, as far as I’m concerned.”

I can certainly see parallels, but I think the idea that by making yourself so small you're approximating being a dead person is a unique and surprising framing which is absent from the argument Peterson made here.

Gough Whitlam had a similar (though more vulgar) formulation: "Only the impotent are pure".