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![]() "DSK" wrote in message ... Jeff Rigby wrote: At USF the smart people were on the HARD science side of the campus and the Liberal arts side of the campus had the most muddle headed people. And that's true on both sides of the fence. ... For instance, my English literature professor was preaching communism in class. In her class, those of us from the Hard science side of the campus were telling her that communism wouldn't work as it went against too many imperatives built into human beings to be a workable system. Did you ever stop to think that you were the student, and the teacher was the teacher? I see you began your career of big mouth & closed mind early on. Actually I was kinda timid at that time and only offered a couple of examples. We were very polite to the ENGLISH teacher only trying to correct her thinking when she drifted off her JOB and into her pet philosiphies. Most of us were afraid of being given a lower grade if we disagreed with her too strenuously. It always irked me that there were different math and science courses offered for hard science students and liberal arts students. They are called the same but the liberal arts version is MUCH easier. In all the college catalogs I am aware of, they are *not* given the same designation. In fact, if the material is different then they must be named & designated differently. Nope the name was the same but there was, If I remember correctly, a letter difference in the designation. Like calculus 101 and 101E and Chemistry 101 and 101E. ... Same number of credit hour too but we would get zero credits for those courses for our majors. I always found that courses offered on the liberal arts side of the campus were very easy. In some cases yes. OTOH I remember a fellow engineer who was furious with an economics professor for giving him a GPA busting grade. The student had a childish tantrum in front of the class, yelling (among other things) that this was an easy class. However, this guy was in my study group and he just plain didn't know the material... which might not have been extremely difficult (300 level micro econ), but it certainly wasn't See Spot Run. You can't bull**** a computer, machine or building and have it work. Yep, that's why it's really stupid & short sighted to continue to apply political and religious litmus tests to political, military, & economic problems. That's true for both sides, but I tend to hear more of that type of behavior from the left. We know that the world is not a simple place with simple solutions. Polititions on both sides try to polerize issues into simple (for the public) to understand "sound bites". The problem is that the liberal academics are teaching young people based on those sound bites. The Issue with the English teacher and communisum is a perfect example. She believed in the "perfect solution" offered by communisum, that all would be fed and none would lack. The problem is in the implementation, they never look at the big picture. ... But you can bull**** people especially if they are young or believe the same bull****. Which is why the Bush Administration has been able to hang on to it's power & influence. It may finally be on the wane as people are figuring out the hypocrisy & greed, but maybe not. DSK It is on it's way out. But only because it's hard and expensive being the good guy. We will back out after the new guy is elected and force others to shoulder their fair share and they will weasel out of it after giving lip service and in a decade we will be back to square one again. |
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