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These are "letters to the editor" by san Diego County residents. This is a demonstration of what has infiltrated into San Diego, and why these people will not get another Liberal elected.
1 posted on 12/03/2004 12:55:13 PM PST by Ramonan
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To: Ramonan

Drop one of these self satisfied, pompous jackass, academic elites on a desert island, along with one of us upon whom they sneer, and see which has survival skills and common sense enough to provide for the survival of both.


164 posted on 12/03/2004 2:16:04 PM PST by F.J. Mitchell (If you were still in the womb, would you trust your life to Specter the defector?????)
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To: Ramonan
I am a former professor. While it is true most professors are liberal, you'll find that it is discipline-specific. Those who are truly intelligent, in areas that require mastery of high mathematics (such as engineering and business ) tend to be Republicans. Those who got their degrees by learning how to act smart without having to prove it by mastering math (Communications, English, Social Work, Humanities, History, etc.) tend to be liberal.

As every undergraduate knows, there is a hierarchy of majors based on degree of difficulty, and the morons usually end up in education, social work and the humanities because there is no math and the grading is easy. It usually doesn't take much for the professors in these areas to convince the students they are smart -- the students are the bottom of the barrel, just as the professors were when they were students.

If you are smart enough to be a professor in the humanities, you are also usually just smart enough to know that you'd never succeed in a world based on self-reliance. Hence, you become a liberal and go about the business of manufacturing liberals in order to propagate your existence. Fortunately, the job market has figured all of this out, and most students are on to the game as very few choose liberal arts majors nowadays.

167 posted on 12/03/2004 2:22:24 PM PST by massadvj
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To: Ramonan

Liberal professors only seem intelligent because they're compared to other liberal professors.


172 posted on 12/03/2004 2:34:22 PM PST by BlueYonder
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To: Ramonan
Why professors are liberal: They're intelligent
Perhaps, but it seems that they're insufficiently intelligent to be conservative.
173 posted on 12/03/2004 2:38:20 PM PST by rightwingcrazy
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To: Ramonan
"Why professors are liberal: They're intelligent"

Correction:
Why professors are liberal: They're stupid!

Some of the most idiotic, most brain dead, most insane utterings over the past year have been from the liberal professors.
I have heard much more sense from street wise kids in The Bronx than the utter nonsense we keep getting from these moronic professors.
177 posted on 12/03/2004 2:53:59 PM PST by KwasiOwusu
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To: Ramonan
but of course! since professors are so intelligent, they deserve to be in control rather than the foolish, ignorant rubes who run things under a capitalist system and continually ignore their intelligent comments and suggestions, all firmly rooted in theories that only intelligent people (like jimmuh carter) can possibly understand.

of course, under socialism the intelligent elites run things -- any intelligent person would see its self evident and rationally satisfying superiority as an economic system... fortunately, there is always france where the intelligent elites, graduates of the best ecoles, run things.

perhaps all these intelligent professors would be happier in france, peut etre?

as for me, i'd rather have a bit of wisdom than a lot of intelligence...

179 posted on 12/03/2004 3:04:09 PM PST by chilepepper (The map is not the territory -- Alfred Korzybski)
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To: Ramonan

Can someone post the "Aw, not this $hit again!" pic of the fifties guy?


183 posted on 12/03/2004 3:22:15 PM PST by Still Thinking
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To: All
Just a comment or two, ok?

The term "academics" is broad, and includes a wide variety of instructors in educational settings.

Schools worth their salt hire men and women who have been in the "real world", and have some expertise in their chosen field. It's not all just theory, though some may think so and be comforted by the thought.

"Those who can't, teach...those who can, do." That comment, though repeated incessantly, has no validity. I usually hear this from relatives who haven't opened a book since high school and see no value in gaining an education. To these people I usually display a self-satisfied smirk and say something really witty, like "Yeh, right".

Some "academics" have a true gift for teaching, and have waived the big money and prestige for the benefits of teaching our little know-nothing offspring what we cannot, or didn't, teach them.
Money is not a dependabe measure of success.BR>

I have been a Mensan for many years, and believe me, that and $1.25 will get me a cup of java. There are a lot of fine people out there that are intimidated by the very idea of Mensa, and I wouldn't ever take the chance that a good person might be shy about openly speaking with me because of my iq score. The money isn't worth it, but the educating of "heads full of mush" has been deeply gratifying.


I am the academic you hope your children will sit with their first semester away from home.BR>
184 posted on 12/03/2004 3:32:53 PM PST by 1st-P-In-The-Pod
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To: Ramonan
Anyone choosing to live in Borrego Springs year-round is probably in special need of a mental evaluation himself, before pontificating about liberal intellect.

125 degrees in July? Sounds like Borrego.

If you like coyotes, roadrunners, tumbleweeds, cactus, sand, and dehydration, Borrego Springs is your place.

186 posted on 12/03/2004 3:40:16 PM PST by zoyd (Hi, I'm with the government. We're going to make you like your neighbor.)
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To: Ramonan
Demonstrating once again that you can be articulate, educated, powerful and connected yet still have no clue to what is actually going on, Will bemoans the lack of "conservative" thought on college campuses. The first thing that comes to my mind is thank God.

If most professors' ideological rudders represented those of the current Republican Party, institutions of higher learning would be teaching creationism as the explanation of man's existence on Earth, ignoring more than a century of anthropological discoveries because they conflicted with biblical teachings. Government studies would renounce labor unions as pseudocommunist fronts, since businesses always do what is best for workers. Law schools would concern themselves primarily with property law, since only owners of property have rights.

News alert: the conservatives have more new ideas than the liberals. We are not backward into the stone age. Open your mind and do some reading: like Thomas Sowell and others.

College is a time when young people find themselves exposed to different cultures and citizens, confirming that not everyone comes from similar backgrounds with similar beliefs. That diversity is the reality, not just a good idea.

Then why not have some conservative professors to challenge young liberal-indoctrinated minds?

It is also a time to reach further than your grasp, to seek new information and challenge long-held truths. In science, if existing theories are found to be in error, they are refined or new ones take their place. So it is with education. When processes from the past prove faulty in the present, they too are discarded, exchanged for new models that represent recent findings. Perhaps this is Will's strongest objection: that his ideas have outlived their relevance.

I guess I was far too busy teaching to read this until now. I am appalled by this man's perspective. But I guess that's true of most FR readers. Fascinating remarks by many who responded to your post.

193 posted on 12/03/2004 4:40:44 PM PST by Republicanprofessor
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To: Ramonan
Why I'm a Conservative,

I'm more intelligent and also experienced

195 posted on 12/03/2004 5:00:47 PM PST by muir_redwoods
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To: Ramonan

talk about a transfer of wealth, just what was "the great society" but a 5 trillion dollar scam?


201 posted on 12/03/2004 7:40:03 PM PST by ken21 (against the democrat plantation.)
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To: Ramonan

If you consider depravity, and Marxism, intelligent then liberal professors certainly fill the bill.


203 posted on 12/03/2004 7:55:04 PM PST by MissAmericanPie
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To: Ramonan

           Why are so many university professors liberal?

 These people are liberal because they are intelligent, thoughtful and well-educated.

           This is the advice I would give the author of the above quote: Hitler and Chairman Mao were able to cultivate your kind of mental regurgitation and create your type of blind pseudo intellectual. My friend, do not assume that just because a person is “well-educated” that he is intelligent. You will find just the opposite. More so-called “well-educated” people lack the ability to think for themselves.

          You want to be a liberal, right? Well then listen to what the former president of the National Organization for Woman [NOW] had to say about liberal speak:

 1. Murdering your children isn’t murder if you’re a woman – it’s postpartum depression.

 2. Sex addiction, compulsion and promiscuity aren’t problems if you’re gay – they’re part of an “alternate lifestyle.”

 3. Murdering a police office isn’t murder if you’re black – it’s a “heroic” act.

 4. Vandalizing, degrading or mocking the symbols of a religion is only a hate crime if the object is Islam or Judaism. If the target is Christianity, it’s “art.”

 5. Murdering 3,000 American civilians isn’t terrorism if the murderers are Muslims – it’s the Freedom Fighter’s heroic last act against an oppressor.

Moral relativity results in confusion, contradiction, and chaos.  How about your showing us poor, uneducated, easily led conservatives how to reconcile your liberal positions? Take murder. If someone murders a pregnant woman, it is a double murder, but if the mother kills her baby, it is not. Your professors will demonstrate their intelligence and caring by explaining to us ignorant, heartless conservatives that it is better to abort an unwanted child than cause him to suffer a life of poverty, sickness, or abuse. On the other hand, these same caring intellectuals opposed the liberation of millions in Iraq, many of whom were victims of rape, torture, and mass murders.

You are probably a socialist. I know you probably do not realize it, because your bright professors would not describe their political ideology in those terms, but socialists they are. Has not that form of government failed in every instance in the past century?  Perhaps this will be news to you but your liberal professors want to redistribute the wealth. They desire high taxes on individuals with high incomes so that they can create welfare plans for those who either are unemployed, or are employed in low paying jobs. Sounds like a great incentive program does it not? Your professors believe that capitalism is evil. They say it enslaves labor. They probably did not teach you anything about how communist corruption, did they?

          Have those “intelligent, thoughtful, and well-educated” professors taught you that homosexual sex is primarily responsible for the HIV pandemic? I doubt it because your professor’s malignant narcissism prevents them from having an open and honest discussion on that subject. Any one who suggests that of all sexual acts anal intercourse has the highest risk of transmitting the virus. If you were to raise that issue - and if you want a good grade, I recommend against it - your professor is likely to say that there is no proof to suggest that HIV is more prevalent among homosexuals. There is never enough proof to convince a liberal professor that he is wrong. On the other hand, he might reply that heterosexuals also have anal intercourse, which is not a denial, just moral relativism.

          I thought you might benefit from the following article that I found on the Internet:

 NAMBLA: Coming to a campus near you!

Mike S. Adams

http://www.townhall.com/columnists/mikeadams/ma20030929.shtml

 Dear Director of Diversity:

 I am writing today to apologize for recent derogatory statements I have made about the Office of Campus Diversity, and about the diversity movement in general. For example, I was very critical of the previous chancellor for his refusal to respond to my request to promote books that criticize the gay rights movement on the Office of Campus Diversity website. I thought it would promote diversity if we posted them next to all the references to books that support the gay rights movement from a religious perspective.

 Recently, I also noticed that the university's Women's Center website provides a link to a gay website that is loaded with religious writings and advertisements for gay churches. One of the writings is called "Christ on a Rainbow." It is located just below another called "Love that is binding: The musings of a deep throated Pollyanna." One of the advertisements for a local gay church reads, "Whatever you believe, we embrace you!" All this, despite the center's refusal to provide a link to a crisis pregnancy center because it is, in the director's words, "overtly religious."

 I must confess that for a long time, I considered your office, the Women's Center, and the diversity task force to be dominated by mendacious hypocrites. But now, I realize that this has all been a big misunderstanding. When the administration began to promote diversity, I thought that this included ideas predicated upon the existence of moral absolutes. That is why, for example, I thought that the campus diversity movement would be willing to work with groups who espouse the view that abortion is murder and that murder is simply objectively wrong.

 I now realize that this movement really seeks to promote moral relativism. In fact, all of the speakers, organizations, programs, and readings your office promotes are geared towards abolishing the notion of absolute truth and any accompanying form of moral judgment.

 While I accept full responsibility for the misunderstanding, I think it would be wise to consider renaming your office. Perhaps you could call it "The Office of Moral Relativism" and call yourself the "Director of Relativism." You may also want to ask the "Diversity Task Force" to change its name to the "Relativism Task Force."

 Now that I have finally come to a better understanding of your mission, I plan to make some more realistic recommendations to the new Office of Moral Relativism. In fact, I'd like to start with one today.

 Recently, I visited the website of the North American Man/Boy Love Association (NAMBLA). I must confess that, at first, I didn't believe that such an organization could be easily located on the Internet. But the more I read about their purpose, the more I realized that they share the principle concerns and ultimate goals of both your office and our university.

 For example, NAMBLA is geared towards:

 1. Building understanding and support for man/boy relationships;

 2. Educating the general public on the benevolent nature of man/boy love;

 3. Cooperating with lesbian, gay, feminist, and other liberation movements; and

 4. Supporting the liberation of persons of all ages from sexual prejudice and oppression.

 In other words, NAMBLA doesn't claim that sex with children is the only legitimate sexual orientation or alternative lifestyle. It merely helps people to be understanding and supportive of those who have sex with children and, of course, to free them from unfair prejudice and persecution at the hands of an oppressive and judgmental criminal justice system.

 Furthermore, NAMBLA's membership is open to everyone sympathetic to man/boy love and personal freedom. In fact, so strong is their dedication to personal freedom that they would eliminate age-of-consent laws altogether. Grown men who are attracted to 23 year olds, 13 year olds, and even 3 year olds could enjoy full equality and personal autonomy in a society embracing the policies of their organization.

 On a recent trip to the Project B-Glad portion of the university website, I was pleased to see that our university already promotes books encouraging homosexuality among children. We should expand our recommended reading list by drawing upon some of NAMBLA's recommended readings. Some of their readings also deal with ageism and prison rape. I will, therefore, encourage the Gerontology and Criminal Justice Programs to consider incorporating some of these readings into their curriculum. Perhaps an entire course on man/boy love relationships would be an appropriate elective for the Gerontology program.

 While some of these goals may take time, I think that we should immediately provide a link to NAMBLA's website on the university's home page. We should also invite a member of their organization to speak at the university. And maybe we could provide faculty and staff with bumper stickers, which read, "Pedophobia is a Social Disease." Could you imagine any more effective way to assist the university in carrying out its mission of eliminating moral judgment and promoting understanding and tolerance? Neither can I.

 Hopefully, my suggestions will help our students understand that there really are no moral absolutes. Except, of course, for moral relativism.

 Mike S. Adams (adams_mike@hotmail.com) is an associate professor of social satire at the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. He is frequently chastised by his colleagues for believing some things (such as having sex with children) are simply wrong regardless of one's cultural perspective. Some people who aren't Swift enough to understand satire also occasionally chastise him.

 

207 posted on 12/05/2004 7:41:04 PM PST by watchdog_writer (God blessed America for the next FOUR YEARS!)
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To: Ramonan

Any person whose life goal is to be a college professor and through tenure "not get fired," has no vision or even real ambition.


208 posted on 12/05/2004 7:44:20 PM PST by Tax Government (Boycott and defeat the Legacy Media. Become a monthly contributor to FR.)
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To: Ramonan

Actually, it's very simple...

Most college professors have never been outside of the academic world, so it's easy to assume that the "theoretical world" they inhabit is the "real world."

Let's not forget that Michael Dell and the guy who started Federal Express were both told by their professors that they'd be failures.

Mark


211 posted on 12/05/2004 7:58:46 PM PST by MarkL (Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. But it rocks absolutely, too!)
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To: Ramonan

Actually, it's very simple...

Most college professors have never been outside of the academic world, so it's easy to assume that the "theoretical world" they inhabit is the "real world."

Let's not forget that Michael Dell and the guy who started Federal Express were both told by their professors that they'd be failures.

This is also why socialism is so popular in academia! Just because it doesn't work in the real world shouldn't keep it from being supported!

Mark


212 posted on 12/05/2004 7:59:42 PM PST by MarkL (Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely. But it rocks absolutely, too!)
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To: Ramonan
Oh lovely, yet another "enlightened" condescendng rant about the backwards, knuckle-dragging, redneck denizens of the red states.
214 posted on 12/05/2004 8:33:42 PM PST by sweetliberty (Just because we CAN do something, doesn't mean we should.)
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To: Ramonan

Liberal secular humanism is for whiny dorks and kooks with sex hang-ups. Nothing "intelligent" about it. An ideology which is helping to destroy American society and Western civilization is hardly something for "intelligent" people to brag about.

235 posted on 12/29/2004 11:16:56 PM PST by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: Ramonan
These people are liberal because they are intelligent, thoughtful and well-educated. They know something of labor and social history and realize that for most people a return to conditions of the early 20th century would not be in their interest.

This letter is precisely why more conservatives are needed in academia. This dork actually believes this is what conservatives advocate?

246 posted on 12/29/2004 11:37:58 PM PST by L.N. Smithee (Twice a week, Maureen Dowd progressively lowers the value of a Pulitzer Prize.)
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