Posted on 09/12/2018 6:07:12 AM PDT by reaganaut1
Many professors cannot resist the temptation to smuggle their personal beliefs into the courses they teach. As long as those beliefs are progressive, there is little chance that higher-ups in their departments or top administrators will try to rein them in. For example, engineering has been infiltrated by activists who are concerned about social justice concerns, not just how to best design objects for performance and safety, as Michigan State professor Indrek Wichman pointed out.
A recent article published on Inside Higher Ed, B-Schools That Dont Boast About Billionaire Alumni, similarly informs us that some business school professors have decided that they should teach students about their own social justice concerns, not just how to best manage an enterprise.
Writer Marjorie Valbrun explains that increasing academic concern about income inequality is justified because, in the words of the leftist Institute for Policy Studies, income inequality has been growing markedly by every major statistical measure for some 30 years.
In fact, there is good reason to doubt that income in the United States is distributed much differently that in other major industrial nations. Former Senator Phil Gramm and John Early (former commissioner in the Bureau of Labor Statistics) explained in this August 9 Wall Street Journal article (subscriber content) that the U.S. only appears to have a high concentration of wealth because the statistics we submit to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development underreport income transfers.
(Excerpt) Read more at jamesgmartin.center ...
Leftists know that controlling education is by far the biggest bang for the buck. Its been paying off as the indoctrinated graduates are filling positions of influence. Why wouldnt they ramp it up even more. As long as people still pay big bucks to have their chidren programmed with leftist ideology, theyll reap the benefits.
H. L. Mencken:
Wealth - any income that is at least one hundred dollars more a year than the income of one’s wife’s sister’s husband.
Differently that???
Probably meant to use "than" but that than would be wrong, too. From.
The woman probably has little understanding of statistics, even if she is skilled in the math. As a business process analyst, I never trust scary metrics in isolation. If inequality is too high, how much inequality is okay and why? What is the trend of real income?
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