Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
Seriously, what are you prattling on about? Liberal guilt? Huh?
We're talking about colleges and universities here. You know, institutions of higher learning. What are you talking about libertarians and liberal guilt for?
Activism permeates many colleges. Think Berkeley, Wellesley, Wesleyan, etc. professors at many colleges mark down f you don't tow their line re: liberal values. Note your smart tone. My son doesn't want that permeating his educational experience and I don't want to pay for it
Your intensive experience tells you this, I take it? Or, are you rationalizing your child's inability to gain acceptance to those schools?
I attended some of these, and in my experience, people were taught to see the forest for the trees -- I have never heard of a professor marking down a student for disagreeing with him or her ideologically. Maybe if the disagreement wasn't persuasively argued with evidence (which tends to be a problem for a lot of conservatives), but for the disagreement, per se.
It seems to me that you're the only one prioritizing an ideology here is you. You seem very concerned that your child not be encouraged to explore ideas outside your short-sighted bubble of what is acceptable.
He didn't even apply to those schools. Some people aren't really interested in an activist environment. How quaint that you feel people are failures for not being activists. SO cute! I do indeed know of many people who have been bitten by the prof who marks people down for not sharing their point of view.
The best thing about being libertarian is that you just want to be left alone, hence the not being interested in an activist college.
Anonymous wrote:Keep talking ~ you are revealing George Mason's true colors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
GMU has been heavily funded and influenced since its early days by libertarian sources. It receives in particular a huge amount of funding from the Koch brothers.
http://www.desmogblog.com/koch-and-george-mason-university
The required economics component is likely designed to ensure that graduates come out with a perspective on the subject that mirrors that of the funders.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
GMU has been heavily funded and influenced since its early days by libertarian sources. It receives in particular a huge amount of funding from the Koch brothers.
http://www.desmogblog.com/koch-and-george-mason-university
The required economics component is likely designed to ensure that graduates come out with a perspective on the subject that mirrors that of the funders.
I don't think this perspective is really any different from that espoused by the PP above, regarding Berkeley et al. What is interesting is that the OP appears to view "libertarian" as "unbiased" or "objective." It's a bias like any other, and to the extent that GMU or any university has that bent, students there may not be "learning things on their own" but rather may be being encouraged to view the world around them through a certain lens. One can decide whether that is a plus or a minus.
Anonymous wrote:GMU has many students of different thought and, no doubt, your son will encounter them. If GMU doesn't work, you might like Furman University or Liberty University.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
Seriously, what are you prattling on about? Liberal guilt? Huh?
We're talking about colleges and universities here. You know, institutions of higher learning. What are you talking about libertarians and liberal guilt for?
Activism permeates many colleges. Think Berkeley, Wellesley, Wesleyan, etc. professors at many colleges mark down f you don't tow their line re: liberal values. Note your smart tone. My son doesn't want that permeating his educational experience and I don't want to pay for it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
GMU has been heavily funded and influenced since its early days by libertarian sources. It receives in particular a huge amount of funding from the Koch brothers.
http://www.desmogblog.com/koch-and-george-mason-university
The required economics component is likely designed to ensure that graduates come out with a perspective on the subject that mirrors that of the funders.
I don't think this perspective is really any different from that espoused by the PP above, regarding Berkeley et al. What is interesting is that the OP appears to view "libertarian" as "unbiased" or "objective." It's a bias like any other, and to the extent that GMU or any university has that bent, students there may not be "learning things on their own" but rather may be being encouraged to view the world around them through a certain lens. One can decide whether that is a plus or a minus.
Anonymous wrote:It's not easy to teach math, science engineering and technology with a political view. It is easy to inject a political view in liberal arts degrees by directing the students to read certain books or materials.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
Seriously, what are you prattling on about? Liberal guilt? Huh?
We're talking about colleges and universities here. You know, institutions of higher learning. What are you talking about libertarians and liberal guilt for?
Activism permeates many colleges. Think Berkeley, Wellesley, Wesleyan, etc. professors at many colleges mark down f you don't tow their line re: liberal values. Note your smart tone. My son doesn't want that permeating his educational experience and I don't want to pay for it
Your intensive experience tells you this, I take it? Or, are you rationalizing your child's inability to gain acceptance to those schools?
I attended some of these, and in my experience, people were taught to see the forest for the trees -- I have never heard of a professor marking down a student for disagreeing with him or her ideologically. Maybe if the disagreement wasn't persuasively argued with evidence (which tends to be a problem for a lot of conservatives), but for the disagreement, per se.
It seems to me that you're the only one prioritizing an ideology here is you. You seem very concerned that your child not be encouraged to explore ideas outside your short-sighted bubble of what is acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
Seriously, what are you prattling on about? Liberal guilt? Huh?
We're talking about colleges and universities here. You know, institutions of higher learning. What are you talking about libertarians and liberal guilt for?
Activism permeates many colleges. Think Berkeley, Wellesley, Wesleyan, etc. professors at many colleges mark down f you don't tow their line re: liberal values. Note your smart tone. My son doesn't want that permeating his educational experience and I don't want to pay for it
Anonymous wrote:GMU has many students of different thought and, no doubt, your son will encounter them. If GMU doesn't work, you might like Furman University or Liberty University.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the hell does libertarian have to do with anything?
no liberal guilt . Allow you to learn things in your own.
Seriously, what are you prattling on about? Liberal guilt? Huh?
We're talking about colleges and universities here. You know, institutions of higher learning. What are you talking about libertarians and liberal guilt for?
Activism permeates many colleges. Think Berkeley, Wellesley, Wesleyan, etc. professors at many colleges mark down f you don't tow their line re: liberal values. Note your smart tone. My son doesn't want that permeating his educational experience and I don't want to pay for it