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Reply to "Liberty, Regents College or George Mason? Which is most conservative?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]If your son wants to study economics, then GMU. If politics, look at the Claremont Colleges, including Harvey Mudd and Pomona. Hillsdale if Catholic conservative. Yale is not conservative at all. Baylor Univ. in Texas and Pepperdine in Malibu (gorgeous campus) are more religiously conservative. Southern campuses may be more socially conservative, depending. A politically active conservative just picked Yale over UVA. I don't know anything about Emory or Henry (Patrick?). Avoid any campus where the faculty and students have taken over. If he is in xlnt physical shape and can endure being a rat, I would recommend VMI over all the others, especially if you are in-state.[/quote]Harvey Mudd is about engineering not political science. They do not offer a degree in poli sci but students take their social sciences at one of the other Claremont schools.[/quote] You're right, I meant Claremont-McKenna.[/quote] Not. [b]The student body voted 87percent for Obama in a two way straw...[/quote][/b] Assuming you are correct about Claremont-McKenna, well of course you would get those numbers! If you went to my SLAC it would have been 99% for Obama. Having 13% of any liberal arts student body vote for romney is amazing. Bet you would get different figures now. You Do understand that almost all of higher ed in america is left wing liberal due to tenured professors who were educated in the 60s still teaching the 60s liberal cafeteria style of education, don't you? You really have to look hard to find someone with an opposing view, which is problematic when working here in D.C. because you must be able to respond intelligently to both sides of the debate. Most kids coming out of a liberal arts education have had a piece-meal liberal agenda thrown at them and react from a knee-jerk liberal point of view seen so often on this forum: deflect, accuse the opposition of racism or being a knuckledragger, blame it on Bush, etc. Everyone needs to read the Madison papers and be educated in arguments from all sides to be a truly educated person conversant on all issues, nationally and internationally. Unfortunately, that's not what our colleges turn out.[/quote]
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