That's a pretty accurate assumption.Number_6 said:Most leftists in education have never met an intellectual conservative. That's the real problem. Their idea of on conservative is a Rush-listenin', Nascar-goin', Bush-votin', country-music-singin', Church-goin' redneck.
In education, conservatives/righties are looked upon as the enemy, if for no other reason than they are prone to budget cuts, most typically in the arts. Pisses us lefties off who think that the arts make a well rounded individual.Friday is correct--they don't really know any other way of thinking, because they've never been exposed to the intellectual tradition of the right. Hell, even in composition textbooks, when you're given a pairing of Adam Smith and Karl Marx, the Marx selection is generally longer and the Smith section chosen to cast him in the most unfavorable light possible. And the Marx is preceded by editorial commentary that is generally positive in tone, while Smith is upbraided for not caring enough about poor people.
In a textbook I was looking through the other day, the voice of the left was represented by a leading left intellectual (I can't remember her name); the right was represented by the text of a speech by Dan Quayle. A little biased? And this is pretty common. I'll post a few links to some table of contents for the most commonly used textbooks in freshman composition courses at some point over the weekend.
A true conservative intellectual, like Thomas Sowell for example, is never heard from in economic and public policy discussions on university campuses. Most of the intellectual right is holed away in think tanks, and they aren't really welcomed at the university. This also means that there isn't really a handing down of the intellectual traditions of the right, because think tanks aren't there for the purposes of teaching the next generation of thinkers.
And the fact that the Republicans forwarded George W. Bush as their shining light hasn't exactly done much to change their opinion; if anything, it's reified it. Nor is it helpful that campus Republican groups generally invite people like Anne Coulter to campus.
Friday said:That's a pretty accurate assumption.
Friday said:In education, conservatives/righties are looked upon as the enemy, if for no other reason than they are prone to budget cuts, most typically in the arts. Pisses us lefties off who think that the arts make a well rounded individual.
when you're given a pairing of Adam Smith and Karl Marx, the Marx selection is generally longer and the Smith section chosen to cast him in the most unfavorable light possible. And the Marx is preceded by editorial commentary that is generally positive in tone, while Smith is upbraided for not caring enough about poor people.
WordInterrupted said:This is something that annoys me as well. Both sides of the political spectrum use Marx and Smith as ideological props, without paying much attention to what they actually said. Smith is one of my favorite political economists because he realized that economic systems are created by and embeded within political and economic institutions. Most free market fanatics of our time ignore this simple fact in favor of the notion that the market is some kind of pure, natural utopia that can exist completely divorced from government and the rest of society. If they actually understood Smith, their views would be much more nuanced.
This is why I refuse to have discussions or debates with college students. They're all idiots that don't know they're idiots, and instead claim to know everything about everything.
Number_6 said:Better if I was allowed to kill one per term, as a lesson to the others.
Mentalist said:As well as valuing it a hell of a lot more.