Anonymous wrote:Which T50 colleges are conservative, because that's how they always were or now with the administration butting in?
Purdue?
WashU?
UVA?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pepperdine. Although despite the Christian moniker a poll of students in the 2023 elections had Kamala up 65%.
California conservatives would be called liberals in the South….![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Clemson is incredibly conservative. Not even close to moderate.
Glad to hear this. It’s DDs first choice.
Anonymous wrote:Clemson is incredibly conservative. Not even close to moderate.
Anonymous wrote:Pepperdine. Although despite the Christian moniker a poll of students in the 2023 elections had Kamala up 65%.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define conservative. By definition, education learning new things, new approaches, meeting new people and ideas tends to be a liberal tenet.
One would think so. Unfortunately the progressive left has forgotten this. Statistics show they are the most intolerant, and now Democrats are more likely to refuse to date or be friends with conservatives and boasts of cutting off family and old friends over views is much more common on the left than the right. So I'd be careful in making these kinds of assumptions. Any pragmatic person who's been through the elite Ivory tower knows they are the most ideologically rigid and unforgiving of any higher education institutions.
I don't know what OP is looking for, but it she or he is looking for the old fashioned concept of liberal, aka a genuine tolerance of diversity of viewpoints, best places are probably the big state universities and southern schools. Faculty will be D voters but students are all across the spectrum with minimal pressure to hide their views.
I would guess this is women unwilling to date men who think they are second class citizens/shouldn't have bodily autonomy. I don't find that surprising at all, tolerating a view point doesn't require you to date them.
Anonymous wrote:There’s nothing conservative about Trumpism. You should clarify what you’re looking for.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&L, CMC, Hillsdale, TCU, BYU, TAMU, Baylor, Sewanee
Can't believe that someone thought that WashUStL was conservative.
Probably because they never set foot at WashU nor Missouri, nevermind the fact that it's in St. Louis which, like most large enough cities, tend to be liberal.
Missouri is a totally Koch-blocked red state with extreme gerrymandering and extreme oppression of "liberals"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:W&L, CMC, Hillsdale, TCU, BYU, TAMU, Baylor, Sewanee
Can't believe that someone thought that WashUStL was conservative.
Probably because they never set foot at WashU nor Missouri, nevermind the fact that it's in St. Louis which, like most large enough cities, tend to be liberal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define conservative. By definition, education learning new things, new approaches, meeting new people and ideas tends to be a liberal tenet.
One would think so. Unfortunately the progressive left has forgotten this. Statistics show they are the most intolerant, and now Democrats are more likely to refuse to date or be friends with conservatives and boasts of cutting off family and old friends over views is much more common on the left than the right. So I'd be careful in making these kinds of assumptions. Any pragmatic person who's been through the elite Ivory tower knows they are the most ideologically rigid and unforgiving of any higher education institutions.
I don't know what OP is looking for, but it she or he is looking for the old fashioned concept of liberal, aka a genuine tolerance of diversity of viewpoints, best places are probably the big state universities and southern schools. Faculty will be D voters but students are all across the spectrum with minimal pressure to hide their views.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Define conservative. By definition, education learning new things, new approaches, meeting new people and ideas tends to be a liberal tenet.
Maybe in 1995.
It is the opposite now.
Absolutely, 100% this.