Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no excuse for being this ignorant. It is unlikely that it stops at basic geography either.
I mean, you can make whatever generalizations you want. But as mentioned above, geography is not taught anymore in school and, until you have seen an ocean, there's no real reason to keep it in the forefront of your memory. That has nothing to do with other forms of knowledge, experience, life skills, or wisdom. Or worth of a person.
What???? THere a million reasons to keep it in the forefront of your memory.
A million? Name ten. Hell, name one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Half my MS kids' friends believe blood is blue. No amount of convincing them it's red works. Sigh. They believe something in the air makes the blood turn red. 13 year olds. Some moms also did not know blood is red.
Ugh. My kid wants to go to a different school.
I am 45 and was taught this in school - that it is blue but oxidizes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was out in public yesterday and overheard the following conversation:
Woman 1: “I’ve made a New Year’s resolution to get out more. I am going to Boston and then to Rhode Island to see the ocean. Is it the Pacific that’s there?”
Woman 2: “I have no idea.”
There’s no hope!
Where did you hear that OP?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no excuse for being this ignorant. It is unlikely that it stops at basic geography either.
I mean, you can make whatever generalizations you want. But as mentioned above, geography is not taught anymore in school and, until you have seen an ocean, there's no real reason to keep it in the forefront of your memory. That has nothing to do with other forms of knowledge, experience, life skills, or wisdom. Or worth of a person.
What???? THere a million reasons to keep it in the forefront of your memory.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There is no excuse for being this ignorant. It is unlikely that it stops at basic geography either.
I mean, you can make whatever generalizations you want. But as mentioned above, geography is not taught anymore in school and, until you have seen an ocean, there's no real reason to keep it in the forefront of your memory. That has nothing to do with other forms of knowledge, experience, life skills, or wisdom. Or worth of a person.
Anonymous wrote:I was out in public yesterday and overheard the following conversation:
Woman 1: “I’ve made a New Year’s resolution to get out more. I am going to Boston and then to Rhode Island to see the ocean. Is it the Pacific that’s there?”
Woman 2: “I have no idea.”
There’s no hope!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people don’t even know their own state capital. Or the nations capital. Or who the first President was.
This shouldn’t be surprising.
At least they didn’t say Indian Ocean.
Honest question that I’ve been wondering about since I was a kid: why do so many people conflate the ability to memorize completely unimportant facts with intelligence? (e.g. who gives a shit if you know every state capital?)
Because they are not unimportant. Quite the contrary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people don’t even know their own state capital. Or the nations capital. Or who the first President was.
This shouldn’t be surprising.
At least they didn’t say Indian Ocean.
Honest question that I’ve been wondering about since I was a kid: why do so many people conflate the ability to memorize completely unimportant facts with intelligence? (e.g. who gives a shit if you know every state capital?)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Half my MS kids' friends believe blood is blue. No amount of convincing them it's red works. Sigh. They believe something in the air makes the blood turn red. 13 year olds. Some moms also did not know blood is red.
Ugh. My kid wants to go to a different school.
I am 45 and was taught this in school - that it is blue but oxidizes.
Anonymous wrote:There is no excuse for being this ignorant. It is unlikely that it stops at basic geography either.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most people don’t even know their own state capital. Or the nations capital. Or who the first President was.
This shouldn’t be surprising.
At least they didn’t say Indian Ocean.
Honest question that I’ve been wondering about since I was a kid: why do so many people conflate the ability to memorize completely unimportant facts with intelligence? (e.g. who gives a shit if you know every state capital?)
It's not a mark of intelligence, but it is a mark of education and knowledge rather than ignorance.
Anonymous wrote:Half my MS kids' friends believe blood is blue. No amount of convincing them it's red works. Sigh. They believe something in the air makes the blood turn red. 13 year olds. Some moms also did not know blood is red.
Ugh. My kid wants to go to a different school.