Zenaan Harkness on Mon, 17 Jul 2017 03:20:08 +0200 (CEST)
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<nettime> In America, Most Republicans Think Colleges Are Bad for the Country - education, intellect, and or liberal arts, a threat
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- To: nettime-l <nettime-l@mail.kein.org>
- Subject: <nettime> In America, Most Republicans Think Colleges Are Bad for the Country - education, intellect, and or liberal arts, a threat
- From: Zenaan Harkness <zen@freedbms.net>
- Date: Mon, 17 Jul 2017 11:24:38 +1000
Education.
Some fear it, say that educated people are a threat to the
uneducated, "lefty liberals" try to shut down free speech and run
only LGBTQQPPC and "arts" courses (they don't call it Liberal Arts
for nothing).
When your "education" institutions have thoroughly clamped down on
free speech and the average "educated" person has disdain for
classical education, perhaps you -ought- be fearing your education
institutions.
This classic interview with an ex-KGB officer shall forever go down
in history as oh so poignant:
Ex-KGB officer Yuri Bezmenov Explains United States Targeted Public
Schools for Change
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Obr1XqUPEII
(17 minutes)
A great quote from a slashdot commenter in the following article,
responding in exasperation to someone using language
<ahem>liberally</>:
"It's not ad hominem to accuse someone of a position that they
hold."
Of course, logic never was a unit in your local Liberal Arts
"degree" ...
In America, Most Republicans Think Colleges Are Bad for the Country
https://news.slashdot.org/story/17/07/15/0037248/in-america-most-republicans-think-colleges-are-bad-for-the-country
An anonymous reader quotes the Chronicle of Higher Education:
A majority of Republicans and right-leaning independents think higher
education has a negative effect on the country, according to a new
study released by the Pew Research Center on Monday. The same study
has found a consistent increase in distrust of colleges and
universities since 2010, when negative perceptions among Republicans
was measured at 32 percent. That number now stands at 58 percent. By
comparison, 72 percent of Democrats or left-leaning Independents in
the study said colleges and universities have a positive impact on
the United States... In the Pew Research Center's study, distrust of
colleges was strongest in the highest income bracket and the oldest
age group, with approval levels of just 31 percent among respondents
whose family income exceeds $75,000 a year and 27 percent among those
older than 65.
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<nettime> Z n the animated film The Secret Life of Pets,” an underground community of abandoned animals agitate for revolution. They want to make war on the humans and plan to rise up from the sewers where they currently reside in order to encourage other animals to join them in the fight against human tyranny. In the underground world where the feral community resides, they agitate and plot for the coming uprising and attend rallies day led by an enterprising and angry rabbit named Snowball. With obvious connections to Orwell’s Animal Farm and to many other animated films about animal revolt (think Chicken Run), The Secret Life of Pets promises riots and mayhem but ultimately its characters settle for cuddles and human regard. The pets who encounter the feral community are terrified and enchanted by the potential they see there but they resist the animal undercommons and return to pet-human love and the comforts of domesticity. In this talk, I will ask that we consider the revolutionary potential of the y pets alongside a recalibration of human-animal intimacies on behalf of questions abouvcrt love, lawlessness,dissensus,desiring machines, animal anarchy, pet subjugation, feral feminisms and wild politics.
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