By Curtis Kalin
Beings I just returned from my freshman year of college, I believe the time is right to look back on a year spent inside the ivory towers of academia.
I entered college life knowing that I would be tremendously outnumbered ideologically. My principle on professors said that they were liberal until proven otherwise. After one year, none proved themselves to be conservative. However, I was surprised to find a couple that were liberal but also intellectually curious. Others held the quite open view that the point of being a professor is to preach from “on high” a political perspective. A year spent in uncharted waters honed my beliefs and attending the hub of the intellectual elite showed me some basics about the intellectual left in America.
First, on any issue on the horizon it is the liberal view that in some way individuals are not capable of fully living their lives, spending their money, or making important life choices. This takes many forms. Many would claim that we are simply too small in the scheme of things. We are so little compared to the big corporations and thus need someone to always help us fight them. On the surface this argument makes sense, due to the fact that in some cases money does equal power. But while that view tended to be the most pervasive, I discovered it was only the first layer of an onion. When you peel another back it reveals another reason individuals are incapable. Coupled with their lack of political power is their lack of civic knowledge. The line would go that the American people don’t pay attention to politics. That’s why politicians, who presumably follow day-to-day politics, must take a more assertive role. Again this seems plausible due to Jay Leno’s “Jaywalking” where random folks can’t name the Vice President. Even this reason isn’t the end though. If you peel one last layer back you see the real reason individuals are deemed incapable, you’re stupid. In the end the first two layers stem from the individual’s inherent lack of basic knowledge. They are susceptible to fads, have unreasonable expectations, they have inherent bigotries, etc. They buy a truck even after the elite say they’ll kill us all. They buy guns even though they’re dangerous. They believe in a God that elite science cannot definitively prove. All of this is the underlying reason why we need a small intellectual elite to make decisions for the large, predominantly dumb populous.
This view of middle America as a bunch of redneck, gun-toting, Bible thumping, bigots was eloquently put in 2008 by an Illinois Senator named Barack Obama, a former college professor himself. All of this leads to the inevitable conclusion that Ronald Reagan said in 1964 on the choice America faced then…
“This is the issue of this election: whether we believe in our capacity for self-government or whether we abandon the American revolution and confess that a little intellectual elite in a far-distant capitol can plan our lives for us better than we can plan them ourselves.”
This issue continues to be debated today.
Another issue that raised its head was the attack on the free market. I kept hearing how the market has enabled the rape and pillage of land and people. Thus, markets must be severely limited and highly regulated. But the facts that determined the raping of an individual were compared to our living standards in the wealthiest nation on Earth. If a farmer in the Caribbean gets paid 80 cents an hour that must be wrong because Americans get paid upwards of seven dollars. One professor attacked a corporation for paying farmers in Jamaica 40 cents a day to harvest the crops. She acknowledged that prior to the company coming to that country the farmer was paid 10 cents a day. She found a way to attack a 400% increase in pay as unethical. If a corporation made it, it must be bad. Even so, the hypocrisy was wild as she came in with designer clothes every single class.
Click Here To Read The Rest Of The Article At Gateway Patriot

{ 1 trackback }
Comments on this entry are closed.