Liberty, Regents College or George Mason? Which is most conservative?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP -- there are no real conservative equivalents to the really good liberal arts schools and universities.

There are good schools where conservatives are enough of a vocal minority that she will have clubs to join and friends to make and won't be relentlessly mocked, for example, if she chooses to go to church on Sunday.

Dartmouth and Princeton come to mind.

As for non-Ivies, I wonder about some state schools in more conservative states (the South?) such as UVA, or Ole Miss, as well as Sewanee.

I would just generally tell her to avoid SLAC, which are essentially boarding schools writ large. Exceptions might also be schools with very strong STEM -- Union, RPI, MIT, Carnegie Mellon . . .

Liberals like to think they are sticking it to the man, but I don't think they realize to what extent they have become "the man."

College campuses have become tough places to disagree with the prevailing liberal orthodoxy.



+1. I caught on by the time I hit law school. I disagreed with all my professors political points of view but learned just to dish it back on exams and get my A.

:roll: More right-wing victimology.



Say how?

I refer you to my post of June 10, 11:27.
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