I am saddened how many people probably do believe that the mere presence of the word "liberal" is "all the evidence you need!!"prfsnl_gmr wrote: liberal arts colleges
Someone should have educated them about how to use a dictionary.
I am saddened how many people probably do believe that the mere presence of the word "liberal" is "all the evidence you need!!"prfsnl_gmr wrote: liberal arts colleges
The issue is when this becomes entirely one-sided. As an example, studying a conservative and a liberal take on the Vietnam War can lead to starkly different views. But neither is wholly accurate in their own right, it takes a combination of both. Yes, education is investing in the new, but to fully discard the past is just as much a folly as it is to look solely to the past with no regard to the future.dsheinem wrote:There's a lot of good research that pretty definitively links the amount (and quality) of education one receives to their political leanings (more/better education = more progressive political views). From what I recall, some of that research isn't strictly about college education, either...there's a "liberal bias" in all education, to the extent that education is invested in the new and the future much more than it is in the old and the past. The more you get exposed to new ideas and other ways of thinking, the less likely you will find conservative politics endearing.MrPopo wrote: Indeed. I had a professor in high school who would say "I used to be a Republican, then I went to college and got an education." And my college's campus newspaper once had a story on a conservative rally, and the people they interviewed were talking about how they felt oppressed by the liberals.
That's what multi-party systems and coalition governments are for. Because a 2 party system offers binary solutions to complex issues.Ack wrote: The issue is when this becomes entirely one-sided. As an example, studying a conservative and a liberal take on the Vietnam War can lead to starkly different views. But neither is wholly accurate in their own right, it takes a combination of both. Yes, education is investing in the new, but to fully discard the past is just as much a folly as it is to look solely to the past with no regard to the future.
BoneSnapDeez wrote:The success of a console is determined by how much I enjoy it.
Yes and no. Having two parties makes them appear binary, but because two parties effectively have to represent the wide spectrum of American points of view, there's actually quite an interesting variety of views contained within. It's just that both parties struggle with perception, and our news services generally report on the division of ideas with a party as a dividing of the party itself.ZeroAX wrote:That's what multi-party systems and coalition governments are for. Because a 2 party system offers binary solutions to complex issues.Ack wrote: The issue is when this becomes entirely one-sided. As an example, studying a conservative and a liberal take on the Vietnam War can lead to starkly different views. But neither is wholly accurate in their own right, it takes a combination of both. Yes, education is investing in the new, but to fully discard the past is just as much a folly as it is to look solely to the past with no regard to the future.
I thought The West Wing did a really good job of showing this to be the case. The show definitely has a liberal bent, but I really liked how it depicted the general machinery of the government and the sort of working to gain support for votes that you aren't guaranteed of getting simply from party affiliation.Ack wrote:Yes and no. Having two parties makes them appear binary, but because two parties effectively have to represent the wide spectrum of American points of view, there's actually quite an interesting variety of views contained within. It's just that both parties struggle with perception, and our news services generally report on the division of ideas with a party as a dividing of the party itself.
That last part is interesting.Ack wrote: Yes and no. Having two parties makes them appear binary, but because two parties effectively have to represent the wide spectrum of American points of view, there's actually quite an interesting variety of views contained within. It's just that both parties struggle with perception, and our news services generally report on the division of ideas with a party as a dividing of the party itself.
BoneSnapDeez wrote:The success of a console is determined by how much I enjoy it.
Also depends on what they study. It seems the more liberal leaning move on to being professors and these academia type roles. Many of those who enter the workforce, and especially the engineering and tech fields, tend to lean more conservative. I know we have discussed this before.dsheinem wrote:There's a lot of good research that pretty definitively links the amount (and quality) of education one receives to their political leanings (more/better education = more progressive political views). From what I recall, some of that research isn't strictly about college education, either...there's a "liberal bias" in all education, to the extent that education is invested in the new and the future much more than it is in the old and the past. The more you get exposed to new ideas and other ways of thinking, the less likely you will find conservative politics endearing.MrPopo wrote: Indeed. I had a professor in high school who would say "I used to be a Republican, then I went to college and got an education." And my college's campus newspaper once had a story on a conservative rally, and the people they interviewed were talking about how they felt oppressed by the liberals.
Have you seriously never met a programmer? :S. We're so liberal we'll be the first to marry alien species when we meet them.Jmustang1968 wrote: Also depends on what they study. It seems the more liberal leaning move on to being professors and these academia type roles. Many of those who enter the workforce, and especially the engineering and tech fields, tend to lean more conservative. I know we have discussed this before.
Thanks Obama.Flake wrote: This isn't to say that liberals are better. Die hard liberals can be annoying naive and optimistic but optimism is much more attractive to me than living in such fear. The confirmation bias in media today only makes the whole thing worse. I used to be able to at least talk to my dad who is a bleed on the flag to keep the stripes red Republican where I am at best a kinda sorta independent / mostly socially liberal. Now he takes every single drivel that comes out of Matt Drudge's anus as the god honest truth, twice on Sundays as long as it's about something Obama did/didnt do.
BoneSnapDeez wrote:The success of a console is determined by how much I enjoy it.