Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory
Univ of Chicago
Most schools in Florida
Notre Dame
BYU
College of Charleston
But any big school will have people all across the spectrum. UVA for instance.
Good list, but I have doubts about Emory. Probably the science schools -- MIT, CatTech, the Calif small lib arts school that is part of the Pomona family (I forget the name) -- maybe Carnegie Melon.
Nope. Hate to break it to you, but they're not. Plus they have a ton of Asians - a group that generally leans liberal.
PS Harvey Mudd is the one you're thinking of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Emory
Univ of Chicago
Most schools in Florida
Notre Dame
BYU
College of Charleston
But any big school will have people all across the spectrum. UVA for instance.
Good list, but I have doubts about Emory. Probably the science schools -- MIT, CatTech, the Calif small lib arts school that is part of the Pomona family (I forget the name) -- maybe Carnegie Melon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with big state schools.
But part of being an adult is learning to identify bias, [/b]and interact with people who have different beliefs than you do.[b]
This is why I am extremely glad my kids would never consider going to places like Oberlin or Brown.
Because you want to expose them from different views than what they see at home?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with big state schools.
But part of being an adult is learning to identify bias, [/b]and interact with people who have different beliefs than you do.[b]
This is why I am extremely glad my kids would never consider going to places like Oberlin or Brown.
Because you want to expose them from different views than what they see at home?
Yes, I don’t think it is at all healthy for students to be in an environment where everyone thinks exactly like them and dissenters are immediately written off.
So you would advise a liberal student not to attend Reed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would W&L fit on this list ?
I suspect it is just as SJW crazy as the rest of them, but the prevalence and cost of Greek life there turned me off.
Your suspicion would be incorrect. White hoods in more than one closet on that campus. Seriously.
Anonymous wrote:Hillsdale. Definitely not liberal.
Anonymous wrote:where did that paleocon wanker end up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with big state schools.
But part of being an adult is learning to identify bias, [/b]and interact with people who have different beliefs than you do.[b]
This is why I am extremely glad my kids would never consider going to places like Oberlin or Brown.
Because you want to expose them from different views than what they see at home?
Yes, I don’t think it is at all healthy for students to be in an environment where everyone thinks exactly like them and dissenters are immediately written off.