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There are a lot of reasons why people work in retail. One that my wife works with is in the National Guard and this is a second job. The ones I mentioned earlier are not the products of the schools you mention because they have not graduated from those schools yet, they are 16 year olds. A significant portion of the people who work in the store who are adults are immigrants, largely from eastern Europe for whatever reason, so they are not the products of our education system. Also, my wife started as an associate at that company before becoming a manager.

So basically, your comment was ignorant, incorrect and extremely condescending. Maybe there was something about your educational endeavors that was lacking?
Good post.

And if one were to look at this problem seriously, there is anti-intellectualism on both sides of the political spectrum. It’s far worse on the right, where anti-intellectualism is a mainstream tenant of American conservatism. You see that with climate change, anti-vaccines, refusal to admit slavery was the cause of the civil war and systemic inequities still exist, the big lie, etc. But it also exists on the fringes on the left as well.

Which is sad. Most of us want to have honest and open discussion about issues. Sadly, some people want to ban books and teaching certain subjects and prevent these discussions from even happening. Deplorable
 
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...because they have not graduated from those schools yet, they are 16 year olds.
You think it is acceptable for 16 year olds to not know we've been to space or that the Holocaust happened? As for the rest of your misdirection, The Thriller's article specifically said they were "young Americans". It is a giant fail for so many young Americans to not know very basic things. Specifically it is a failure of the education system that we spend billions of dollars funding.
 
there is anti-intellectualism on both sides of the political spectrum.
The problem isn’t anti-intellectualism but willful incompetence among educators and administrators. Not knowing basic facts that should be taught in school is a failure of schools, and if you really want to point political fingers, the overwhelming number of educators are on the political left. You and your fellows are so busy teaching about the evils of particular skin colors that you have failed an entire generation. It would be one thing if it were only space and the Holocaust, but it is basic reading and math as well.
 
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The problem isn’t anti-intellectualism but willful incompetence among educators and administrators. Not knowing basic facts that should be taught in school is a failure of schools, and if you really want to point political fingers, the overwhelming number of educators are on the political left. You and your fellows are so busy teaching about the evils of particular skin colors that you have failed an entire generation. It would be one thing if it were only space and the Holocaust, but it is basic reading and math as well.
This has already been addressed in another thread about public education. You demonstrated a poor level of understanding about public education. You couldn’t even specify which assessment(s) Utah uses and some of the key stipulations that might impact assessment results. Instead, you paint with broad brush using your Facebook talking pts. So if you feel like finally responding to those pts like an adult, please do so in the appropriate thread.
 
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you paint with broad brush using your Facebook talking pts.
They aren't my talking points. You posted an article pointing out how dumb young Americans were and Sardines backed that up by agreeing that young Americans were dumb. All I did was point out that if young Americans are dumb then that is an indictment of America's educators. The laughable response was to claim I look down on dumb people, that it is fine if American educators are failing a generation because dumb people are people too. Those are not mutually exclusive. Agreed that dumb people are people. Now lets talk about your point, and Sardine's point of young Americans coming out of our public education system with an unfortunate ineptness.

Educators and administrators are failing to educate America's youth.
 
You think it is acceptable for 16 year olds to not know we've been to space or that the Holocaust happened? As for the rest of your misdirection, The Thriller's article specifically said they were "young Americans". It is a giant fail for so many young Americans to not know very basic things. Specifically it is a failure of the education system that we spend billions of dollars funding.
I have nothing to do with you and Thriller beefing.
 
Society-wide, anti-intellectualism is a problem, and can be seen as a natural result of the trend toward distrusting authority, sources of authority, distrusting sources of “received wisdom” in so many areas, distrust of received wisdom in history, in science, etc. The realm of “alternative facts” and conspiracy theories to explain why “the truth is being hidden” is just a part of the world we live in in 2023. Probably not conducive to critical thinking skills, and I’m not saying our educators are doing the best job imaginable. Just saying that the forces drawing people away from rational thought are probably not the best development in our history.

The late American historian Daniel Boorstin, was of the opinion that America grew as a series of frontier settlements, ever moving westward over the centuries. And the thing about frontiers, intellectuals don’t provide useful skills in that setting, so there was an anti-intellectual bias somewhat built into our growth through time as a nation and society.

Anyway, it’s an interesting subject, in and of itself, maybe no more than now, in an era of alternate facts and fiction-based “realities”.


As science fiction writer Isaac Asimovwrote in the 1980s:


“The strain of anti-intellectualism has been...nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”
 
I have nothing to do with you and Thriller beefing.
This is a beef between a taxpaying parent and a representative of the total failure that is public education. Below is a chart showing proficiency of 3rd through 8th graders. It is very hard to find a point in the Utah state numbers where even half of students meet basic proficiency. In sixth grade, that number failed to meet even one out of three kids. We have in this forum a representative of that system during that time, who has spent hours and hours during the work day posting on an internet board after spending hours and hours scrolling his social media to find material to post on the internet board. That representative just posted an article along with his own commentary to essentially say "ha ha, young Americans are dumb".

washington-county-rise-results-math.jpg
 
I haven’t worked in the K-12 system for years. You know this and yet continue to try and bash me and it. It’s already been explained to you some of the issues with those assessments and how they affect the reliability of those scores. You know this and continue to repeat your same talking pts. You don’t try and understand or learn from anyone. You just try and stir the pot

Talking to you is worthless.
 
It is a giant fail for so many young Americans to not know very basic things. Specifically it is a failure of the education system that we spend billions of dollars funding.
Is it your claim that these students were never taught about the Holocaust, or the moon landing? I'm pretty sure if you examined their curricula, you find these topics mentioned. People tend to believe what they want.
 
I'm pretty sure if you examined their curricula, you find these topics mentioned.
Two-thirds of Utah's sixth graders failed to meet basic proficiency in math. It isn't because they believe alternate facts but because the kids don't know the answer. It is a systemic failure to educate. Claims of alternate facts and issues with those assessment affecting the reliability of the scores are just excuses. America's youth aren't receiving a level of education anywhere near what they should be receiving given the incredible amount of money being poured into that system from both taxpayers and the students themselves taking on crippling debt. No nation on Earth charges as much per student. They should be better served. It was just galling to have The Thriller laugh at the product of his own work.
 
It is a systemic failure to educate.
The US has 14-15 of the top 20 colleges in the world, and it's university system overall is expensive but top-notch. You don't get a top-notch university system with uneducated students. I think its your evaluation criteria that is failing.
 
Don’t get me mixed in with this troll. This moron tries to beef with everyone here. He’s a sad bored person who gets his entertainment from stirring the pot.
My bad. I wasn't trying to "both sides" you two. I was just saying that I didn't want AI-O-Meter to use my posts as if they were in support of his criticisms against you, because I didn't intend them that way and I don't think they actually made the point he was trying to push.
 
My bad. I wasn't trying to "both sides" you two. I was just saying that I didn't want AI-O-Meter to use my posts as if they were in support of his criticisms against you, because I didn't intend them that way and I don't think they actually made the point he was trying to push.
Understood.

Thank you.

He likes to distort what others say to personally attack those he’s trying to troll. Then he’ll ignore honest attempts to correct distortions (since most of us assume he’s made a mistake or misunderstood, not purposely distorted or lied). It’s best to just ignore him.
 
@Red see this? Can democracy survive when 30-40 percent of the electorate views authoritarianism as being more attractive than democracy?
I do not know. I have wondered, since I believe conservatives and liberals respond to the world at large in fundamentally different ways, if favoring authoritarianism is more prevalent among conservatives. I also believe we might help ourselves if we simply recognize part of our problems, maybe particularly in the culture wars, is due to differences in how we respond to the world at large. Let’s get to know what makes us different better, and we might fight less.

But, and anyway, it’s a global thing in Western democracies:


Abstract​

Recent events have raised concern about potential threats to democracy within Western countries. If Western citizens who are open to authoritarian governance share a common set of political preferences, then authoritarian elites can attract mass coalitions that are willing to subvert democracy to achieve shared ideological goals. With this in mind, we explored which ideological groups are most open to authoritarian governance within Western general publics using World Values Survey data from fourteen Western democracies and three recent Latin American Public Opinion Project samples from Canada and the United States. Two key findings emerged. First, cultural conservatism was consistently associated with openness to authoritarian governance. Second, within half of the democracies studied, including all of the English-speaking ones, Western citizens holding a protection-based attitude package—combining cultural conservatism with left economic attitudes—were the most open to authoritarian governance. Within other countries, protection-based and consistently right-wing attitude packages were associated with similarly high levels of openness to authoritarian governance. We discuss implications for radical right populism and the possibility of splitting potentially undemocratic mass coalitions along economic lines.


“Nearly half of Republicans say they would prefer “strong, unelected leaders” over “weak elected ones,” according to a September Axios-Ipsos poll, and around 55 percent of Republicans say defending the “traditional” way of life by force may soon become necessary. About 61 percent of Republicans don’t believe the results of the 2020 presidential election.”.

“To call a party democratic—committed to democracy—they’ve got to do three basic things: They have to unambiguously accept election results, they have to unambiguously renounce violence, and they have to consistently and unambiguously break with extremists or antidemocratic forces,” says Steve Levitsky, a professor of government at Harvard University. “I think the Republican Party now fails these three basic tests.”

And, in a word, THIS!!:

““The problem is our incentives—the Electoral College, the Supreme Court, the fact that sparsely populated territories are dramatically overrepresented in our electoral system—allows the Republicans to wield a lot of power without winning national majorities,” Levitsky says. “If the Republican Party actually had to win over 50 percent of the national vote to control the Senate, to control the presidency, to control the Supreme Court, you would not see them behaving the way they’re behaving. They would never win.”

 
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