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Roger Hoffmann's avatar

I agree with your thoughts as expressed here / a decade ago. I'm not and haven't been an educator; but in fact, often a critic of modern education for the reasons you note and the general disinterest in teaching / encouraging critical thinking.

I attended a parochial school K-12, and while a few of the teachers (mostly nuns) there actually wanted to stimulate actual learning- and the ability to think about what was taught, it was even then pretty much rote learning. As a quick study, I quickly learned how to identify the rote facts that were essential to good testing, etc.; and it wasn't until very much later that I actually enjoyed learning for its own (proper) sake.

Then it was on to College; it was simply assumed by all that I would follow that path based on my academic achievement up to that time. Fortunately, I had academic scholarships that at least covered tuition; and as I was not the scion of wealth but instead the descendant of poor, uneducated Irish and German miners, the whole notion of going into debt for such a thing seemed a bad idea.

VietNam was ongoing; the draft lottery was picking winners and losers. There was every motive to stay enrolled. Yet by the first semester of my sophomore year, the war, and realizations about the greater context, led me to the observation that the universities were mere training grounds - or even factories, for producing various types of widgets to keep the system going. And I did NOT want to become a widget.

So with the lucky draw of a high draft lottery number, I dropped out.

(While I've at times had some regret that I didn't have the patience to take as much of the good from the educational opportunity, and on a couple educations initiated attempts to resume it, overall, I now think I made the right choices. For one thing, while it reduced opportunities for a more sparkling career, at the same time it greatly expanded my options and varieties of experience- and my comprehension of the bigger world, its complexities, etc.

So, it's possible, if difficult, to avoid becoming widget-ized and keep one's values and principles intact. The system needs its widgets, and the increasing specialization in so many fields (creating administrative, managerial or technical wizards often unable to see the forest for the trees, is a hint at how successful that system is at controlling a fair part of the populace to sustain itself.

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Alex's avatar

Tucker Carlson explains why Washington is after Donald Trump:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1s_PLdGOcI

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