Anonymous wrote:That's interesting. Usually, it seems like the opposite situation (conservative, religious parent with liberal child). That's awesome that she respects his beliefs and encourages him even though he holds different beliefs from her. I feel like she should let him make this choice. Otherwise, he may resent her in the future. And, his beliefs will continue to evolve naturally.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious. A friend's son has committed to going; son is very religious and conservative; friend kind of the opposite. She respects his beliefs and doesn't want them to limit where he goes, but is personally not in favor of his choice. I'd especially like to hear from conservative religious folks who may be weighing the high ed appointment in this potential choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They don't teach basic science (ex: evolution). No way would I pay a dime to them. There are plenty of Christian colleges where you can get a good education. Liberty is not one of them.
+1 I was raised in an evangelical church, and attended the religious school associated with it. I'm still undoing the damage of that education, which was blatantly counterfactual about basic scientific truths. We were literally taught, in high school, that men had one fewer sets of ribs than women.
It's cruel to give a child (or young adult) that kind of clearly false information and then just send them out into the world to be mocked.
Anonymous wrote:Never ever. Coworker is sending her child because they got some huge discount or scholarship because the child's father is retired military. There's no amount of money that would convince me to let a college brainwash my kid.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you wouldn't send your kid there, but its president is about to be confirmed as the head of the Dept. of Education's higher ed task force.
So there's going to be a lot Liberty out there for all of us with college students to grapple with.
Anonymous wrote:PaleoCon here
I'm ultraconservative, and I didn't even look at Liberty. The academics don't seem strong at all, it's run by the Fallwell's (who I don't much like), and they seem WAY too obsessed with money.( The enrollment has gotten huge and it's endowment is now over 1 billion) I also heard that a lot of kids who go there attend because they're parents force them to. I don't want to go to school with a bunch of guys who didn't even want to go there. Liberty is also too politically focused for me. I love studying political philosophy, but I don't want my school being in the news every day because some candidate came to speak there, or because the President of the university made a dumb comment.(I'm as pro-gun as you can get, but allowing students to have guns on campus is just insane) Libery has a reputation as a fundamentalist university affiliated with the Republican Party. As an intellectual conservative (Christian) on the Far-Right, that didn't appeal to me. If you wnat a good Christian school, look at Grove City.
Anonymous wrote:I'd probably steer them to other christian school. BYU (though mormon) would be a better choice.
Anonymous wrote:Just curious. A friend's son has committed to going; son is very religious and conservative; friend kind of the opposite. She respects his beliefs and doesn't want them to limit where he goes, but is personally not in favor of his choice. I'd especially like to hear from conservative religious folks who may be weighing the high ed appointment in this potential choice.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you wouldn't send your kid there, but its president is about to be confirmed as the head of the Dept. of Education's higher ed task force.
So there's going to be a lot Liberty out there for all of us with college students to grapple with.