Posted on 11/09/2010 10:24:07 AM PST by lbryce
When an idiot like Jesse Jackson is seen as a hero while Clarence Thomas is scorned it is a sign of a very big problem.
I worked for a company owned by a black man for several years. He is also a good friend. One day he told a black customer he couldn't jump right on a request, he was headed to the school his kids attended to help with a project. The customer told him, "no one did crap like that when we were in school". My friend told him "damn straight, but it's about time we started".
All of his kids are doing great.
When she was studying for her master's degree, I happened to be at her house one day. Because I'm a better typist than she is, she asked if I could type one of her papers for her.
I happened to leaf through one of the books she had included as a reference and was horrified to see that the "expert" author emphasized that teachers should expect classroom disruption by black students since their culture encouraged such behavior and attempting to correct it was a repudiation of black culture and so was, of course, racist.
I’m discussing inherited intelligence. What makes anyone think that everyone starts off with an equal amount?
I’ve had my own kids study hard and not learn things that were easy for me. They worked harder and had more resources than I did, but the results were not equal. In languages, I studied hard for 6 years - 7th grade thru HS - and the only reason I didn’t flunk was that the teacher needed students to keep her job. Later, I met guys in the military who learned to speak acceptable Japanese in a week.
We aren’t all equal. We are born with limited ability to learn some types of things. It is painfully obvious that we are not all born equally intelligent.
What are you talking about? NEA was founded back in 1850 or so. AFT the beginning of 1900's.
But it does coincide with the widespread availability of marijuana.
Why is the heritability of intelligence is such a threatening concept to some?
Genetics plays an important role in areas such as beef and milk production, timber and crop production and show dog breeding. Athletic ability and physical traits in humans clearly have a genetic component.
Yet somehow we are to believe that genes affect all these characteristics *except* intelligence?
“Why is the heritability of intelligence is such a threatening concept to some?”
I see two groups taking exception to the idea. One group with more muscles in their legs are insulted to be thought of as inferior to those with more muscles in their heads, regardless of reality. They do know those with the head muscles are more likely to rule, and they resent it. Another group that demands equal outcomes is threatened by challenges to the ideology of their agenda.
Even California outlawed Teacher's Unions until Jerry Brown became Governor.
We can breed Border Collies for herding and intelligence, but in humans, genetics have no impact on intelligence.
Riiigghhhttt!
I had a Border Collie who had never seen a sheep until she was middle aged...on vacation, she met a friend’s range sheep (about 30 being kept in a pasture for a day just off the range), and she immediately rounded them up and pushed them thru a gate. She KNEW what to do without ever having seen it done. But behavior and intelligence have no basis in genetics. How odd!
Yes but they did not have the right to collectively bargain.
Even California outlawed Public Unions as until Jerry Brown became Governor.
Well at least we know have proof that the liberal programs worked. They have successfully positioned Blacks to be enslaved again.
Now they will continue on the rest of us.
Oh but they do - for animals. Not for humans though.
In humans, intelligence is not affected by genetics.
You didn't get the memo? LOL
The entire IQ genetics thing is so absurd it's hard to believe people can even argue about it.
I am not a big supporter of unions. To the contrary. But I can’t blame teachers (and their unions) for failing to teach reading and math to slugs who are sound asleep in class - when they even show up for class.
Somebody posted this picture yesterday showing a Border Collie herding sheep. For some reason it totally broke me up.
http://theorstrahyun.blogspot.com/2009/07/wake-up-sheeple-trevor-sheep-knows.html
And thanks for the picture. This was our Border Collie watching our youngest:
Mr. Rogers, what are you saying here? Do you believe they inherited a trait that renders them less intelligent than you are? Or, would it be more logical to conclude that something else was the reason?
Listen, my own children don't go to school. They never did. And I can trace almost everything about them to something in their environment or to an actual physical reason. I found out those first few years are crucial; everything to which a child is exposed at that age influences him for a long time. So, what might seem innate is not necessarily so. It probably traces back to the child's experiences in the early years.
But, the brain continues to develop. The type of thinking I see here on this thread is like shrugging, "Oh, well, I can't do it," and then giving up.
“Do you believe they inherited a trait that renders them less intelligent than you are?”
Of course. My son worked very hard in school, had more resources than I ever had, and struggled to get a C in easy classes. I had fewer resources, rarely studied, and got As in calculus and physics. My youngest daughter, OTOH, read at the 12th grade level in 3rd grade.
We breed dogs for intelligence - or we can, if we choose. Or we can breed them for behaviors, or inherited abilities. Border Collies were bred to become what they are today. Those that didn’t measure up were culled. I obviously am NOT suggesting that for humans, but in theory humans could be bred for traits just as dogs are - not outside the range of their abilities as a species, but for more consistent placement within the range of the species ability.
Arabians are also bred for alertness and inquisitiveness. And when riding them, I understand why other horses are NOT bred for those traits - but the point is we CAN breed for them.
Why is it possible to breed for intelligence in dogs and horses, but every human is born equal? It doesn’t make sense.
If a student is struggling with his studies, there's either a biological reason, an outside influence, or both. Agreed?
If your position is that the reason is biological, then to support your position, you'd have to identify what that biological reason is. For example, there are real disabilities that affect a person's learning ability. If you cannot identify a disability, then you don't know if the reason is biological or environmental, and you're only jumping to a conclusion by assuming it's biological.
I find that number a little hard to believe, frankly. I wonder if that’s implying reading on a fourth grade level or simply reading.
I was reading 300+ page books in fourth grade for fun. Did that mean I read with an adult’s comprehension? Absolutely not.
I HATE how they use such poor grammar.It drives me nuts.Where you at?,He do,she do,you dumb,you is dumb,etc.I guess they don’t mind sounding ignorant.
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