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posted by on Tuesday December 20 2016, @01:36PM   Printer-friendly
from the foolproof-like-all-other-watchlists dept.

The latest manifestation of the conservative targetting of academia is the Professor Watchlist, created by the "activist organization" Turning Point USA, founded by rising star Charlie Kirk. It's stated purpose is to "watch" professors "who discriminate against conservative students and advance leftist propaganda in the classroom"

Of course, this is not new. David Horowitz has written a book called The Professors: The 101 Most Dangerous Academics in America . HeterodoxAcademy.org has rational articles discussing the liberal slant to modern college campuses. Nicholas Kristoff writes an interesting piece on the same topic. However, with the election of President Trump, the stakes may have been raised. A professor in California has gone incognitio after criticizing Trump in the classroom and receiving death threats.

But more important is how the attempt to blacklist liberal academics has actually backfired. George Yancy [not the George Yancey from the Kristoff piece above] published a response, "I Am a Dangerous Professor" in the New York Times, and since then it seems to have become de rigueur for all academics to get their name on the Professor Watchlist in order to cement their tenure. An entire hashtag on Twitter has taken form: #trollprofwatchlist! People have taken to mocking the list by suggesting candidates such as Thomas Jefferson, Gandhi, and Jesus, not to mention Socrates, who obviously belongs.

Charlie Kirk may not be dangerous, but he did start this list. I am watching him now.


[Editor note - This story was substantially rewritten for balance. As always, the original submission is available at the link below.]

Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @01:46PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @01:46PM (#443757)

    This backlash from the "anti-left" didn't come out of nowhere.

    Starting Score:    0  points
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    Extra 'Insightful' Modifier   0  

    Total Score:   3  
  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:12PM

    by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:12PM (#443778) Journal

    So I trust you won't complain when the inevitable anti-anti-left backlash commences?

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:34PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:34PM (#443795)

      Context matters. I (not same AC) would not complain if the backlash consists of a moderate response in which people who object to this list explain why and how the concerns outlined are not truthful or the reaction is not reasonable.

      However, both me and you know that the response will be is to liberally (no pun intended) mis-interpret all of their actions as racist/sexist/homophobe/whatever based on the most contrived "evidence", while dissmissing their points without addressing them.

      Not all protests are equal.

      • (Score: 1) by kurenai.tsubasa on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:59PM

        by kurenai.tsubasa (5227) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @02:59PM (#443808) Journal

        But what about the big, swinging pendulum?

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:08PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:08PM (#443850)

        However, both me and you know that the response will be is to liberally (no pun intended) mis-interpret all of their actions as racist/sexist/homophobe/whatever based on the most contrived "evidence", while dissmissing their points without addressing them.

        So basically you require that "the left" to go high in response to "the right" going low.
        Funny, I don't see your argument as a condemnation of "the left," at all.

    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:12PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:12PM (#443855)

      This is a natural and one of the few good parts of American society. A minority of one side or the other of the political spectrum goes full on bat-shit psycho radical, meets a backlash and we end up in a nice "real" medium.

      Before the SJW insanity conservatives had dibs on being the morality police under the auspices of the "Moral Majority." Ironically they and the SJW types use the exact same sort of emotional catch as well. When anybody challenged the Moral Majority they called into question their character. Instead of calling them a racist or sexist or whatever else, they'd call them a pervert or a deviant. Critique the extremes of SJW land and you get called a sexist, racist, or various other ad hominem slurs that really have nothing to do with what's being discussed - but are used to conveniently dismiss otherwise valid issues.

      Most people who think they're the moral crusaders of today just don't have the life experience to recall the Moral Majority and so the cycle repeats itself. Much as the conservatives who will become the new force in America won't have the life experience to recall the Moral Majority and avoid falling into the same extremes they did, nor will the far left liberals who will eventually replace this new conservative group remember the SJWs, and so on. It's just a vicious cycle of ignorance because nobody learns from what's happened before time and time again.

      • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:03PM

        by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:03PM (#443887) Journal

        +50 insightful

        Yes, that so-called "moral majority" were some real sons-of-bitches. I hated them just as passionately as I hate today's SJW's. And, again, we see that today's left authoritarians are simply a remake of yesterday's right authoritarians. The message is exactly the same: FEAR MUh AUTHORITY!!! SUBMIT!!! If either the lefts or the rights ever really took control of this country, we would be indistinguishable from Islam. Maybe a few cosmetic differences, but it would authoritarianism, all the same.

        --
        We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
        • (Score: 2) by GreatAuntAnesthesia on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:21PM

          by GreatAuntAnesthesia (3275) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:21PM (#443902) Journal

          If either the lefts or the rights ever really took control of this country/quote.

          Phew, good thing there's no chance of that happening any time soon, eh?

        • (Score: 2) by cubancigar11 on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:14AM

          by cubancigar11 (330) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:14AM (#444197) Homepage Journal

          I said this before here only and I will say it again - we need to divorce the words "liberal" and "left", and marry the words "conservative" and "power". Whoever is in power is conservative and gets the right to question other people's character, intention and to pass judgement without needing to provide a proof. Whoever wants to have more wiggle room is liberal. Left is the true conservative here and what we are seeing is that huge pendulum swing just starting to happen.

  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @03:55PM

    by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @03:55PM (#443842) Journal

    Yeah, it came out of the hard right being ignorant shitbags who can't stand actual learning, just like they've always been.

    The honest to god truth is you goddamn idiots will never learn your lesson until your subject to the kind of hate and violence you regularly subject harmless people to. It's a lesson you're going to have to learn every few generations until it really fucking sticks.

    Make nazis bleed again.

    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:07PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:07PM (#443849)

      Wow, just wow. I guess there is some truth to Nietzsche's words after all, those who fight monsters might just end up becoming the monsters themselves.

      • (Score: 1, Flamebait) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:52PM

        by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:52PM (#443875) Journal

        If the boundary on being a monster is hurting a few nazis, I'm willing to be a monster.

        But come on, they're nazis

        • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:07PM

          by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:07PM (#443891) Journal

          Stare into the abyss, and I'll be staring back at you.

          --
          We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:16PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:16PM (#443896)

            Stare into the abyss, and I'll be staring back at you.

            Well, now I'm scared. I mean, having the abyss stare back at me I might handle. But having Runaway1956 stare back at me from within the abyss? ;-)

            • (Score: 1, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:27PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:27PM (#443908)

              Stare into the abyss, and I'll be staring back at you.

              Well, now I'm scared. I mean, having the abyss stare back at me I might handle. But having Runaway1956 stare back at me from within the abyss? ;-)

              Runaway1956 as the bottomless pit of all evil. It all makes sense now.

              • (Score: 3, Funny) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:00PM

                by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:00PM (#443933) Journal

                Don't confuse me with either of the Clintons.

                --
                We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:05PM

                  by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:05PM (#444106)

                  From Arkansas, they're all the same!

        • (Score: -1, Flamebait) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:30PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:30PM (#443909)

          So you're saying that Nationalism is bad? That makes you a globalist. Look around at a possible WW3 within reach. Yes, globalism is bad, it is unnatural and it does not work. The best thing about being a Jew is that you get goy to fight and destroy each other. And the Jew happily takes it all.

          • (Score: 2, Interesting) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:56PM

            by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:56PM (#443964) Journal

            I don't much care about your opinion; you're a nazi so fuck you. But I do wonder what people like Jmorris think when they see posts like this.

            Elsewhere in this discussion he's saying that people are crying wolf about calling people nazis, and yet the boring old anti-semitism that defined the worst of the Nazi party is everywhere with even a casual glance. Does he look at that and say "Well that's not me so obviously it has nothing to do with this?" Or does he write it off as trolling(I mean, honestly who can tell or care at this point)? Do his eyes just roll right off the words?

            How do people see that this stuff is appearing everywhere and go "Yep, the problem is definetly still calling people nazis unfairly"? Call it a curiosity.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:42PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:42PM (#444034)

              But I do wonder what people like Jmorris think when they see posts like this.

              I imagine the same thing as myself - "Really Ethanol? Try harder".

              Elsewhere in this discussion he's saying that people are crying wolf about calling people nazis, and yet the boring old anti-semitism that defined the worst of the Nazi party is everywhere with even a casual glance. Does he look at that and say "Well that's not me so obviously it has nothing to do with this?" Or does he write it off as trolling(I mean, honestly who can tell or care at this point)? Do his eyes just roll right off the words?

              Obviously neo nazis still exist and I don't think anyone would contest that. The problem most people have is when people are labelled as nazi when they obviously aren't, or when the evidence is not enough to clearly determine it.

              Calling someone a nazi is a heavy allegation, it should not be thrown lightly.

              How do people see that this stuff is appearing everywhere and go "Yep, the problem is definetly still calling people nazis unfairly"?

              I doubt anyone here would object to classifying this particular comment as nazi sentiment.

              • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:47PM

                by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:47PM (#444035) Journal

                I think more people are unreasonably defended as "not 100%-sure, for-certain a nazi" when they are, than called a nazi when they're not.

                At a certain point militaristic, cult-of-personality ethnonationalism looks like a duck, sig hiels like a duck, and walks like a goose regardless of whether they're actively matching every tenet of national socialism perfectly.

                • (Score: 2) by art guerrilla on Tuesday December 20 2016, @09:53PM

                  by art guerrilla (3082) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @09:53PM (#444062)

                  uh, yeah, except anyone and everyone who simply disagrees with your diagnosis and prescription are 'nazis', the word has NO MEANING in the manner you use it...
                  i -an anarchist of no particular flavor- am a nazi, calling out zionists makes you a nazi, saying mean things about anyone (oh, except for -you know- nazis) makes you a nazi...
                  nazis abound in your eensy-weensy, teeny-tiny proscribed worldview...

                  • (Score: 1, Troll) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:04PM

                    by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:04PM (#444071) Journal

                    Oh, bullshit, just the stupid-ass ethnonationalists who identify strongly with authoritarian ideologies all are.

                    The problem is that shouldn't be a lot of people, but it is. You're taking Godwin's law and using it to ignore that they're here, they're getting a lot of power, and doing shitty things with it.

                    As far as Zionism goes, it's about half and half people who genuinely care about a government receiving financial and military support from the US while remaining one of the latest remaining apartheid states in the world, and people who use that as a code-word for anti-Semitic ideas that tend to center on conspiracies about how "The Zionists" just happen to control everything. I can be a member of the former group and recognize the reality of the latter. I know I've been called anti-Semitic because of that, but you know what? I understand those charges and how it relates to the shitty people out there who are saying shitty things. I don't go out of my way to resent people who are concerned about it.

              • (Score: 2) by Phoenix666 on Wednesday December 21 2016, @01:46PM

                by Phoenix666 (552) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @01:46PM (#444306) Journal

                Obviously neo nazis still exist and I don't think anyone would contest that. The problem most people have is when people are labelled as nazi when they obviously aren't, or when the evidence is not enough to clearly determine it.

                Calling someone a nazi is a heavy allegation, it should not be thrown lightly.

                "Nazi" is not, and was not, an absolute. Using it as such is dangerous, too. It lulls people into thinking that they're not absolutely evil, so they couldn't possibly be called a nazi justly. They are just a little evil, so calling them a nazi is just hurtful hyperbole. Fascism in the Third Reich reached the extremes it did because people kept making those same little rationalizations.

                We know that not even the guys tasked with carrying out the attrocities, the Einsatzgruppen, were absolutely evil. Their incidence of suicide, heavy drinking, mental breakdowns, and the like were so high Berlin kept trying to come up with ways to shield them from the psychological effects of what they were doing. That wouldn't have been the case if those guys didn't feel guilt for what they were doing.

                The point is it's a lot easier for a society and individuals to cross the line into evil than most people now think it is. It is best to be vigilant, but also to call out people precisely on what they've done so that you don't rob more extreme labels of their meaning. If somebody does something foolish, call them a fool. If he kills a man in cold blood, call him a murderer. If he steals, a thief. If he expresses hatred or contempt for an ethnicity, a bigot. Save "nazi" for the people who want to round others up and march them into gas chambers, but also don't be afraid to level that charge when they purpose exactly that.

                Soylent has a few bigots and some fools, but we also have a couple of real nazis.

                --
                Washington DC delenda est.
    • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:06PM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:06PM (#443889) Journal

      "the hard right being ignorant shitbags who can't stand actual learning"

      Yeah - that's why all STEM research in this country comes out of liberal arts schools, like UCLA, right? Basketweaving courses and black history, and feminist agendas all contribute heavily to real science. Well, maybe they would if we were to redefine science.

      --
      We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
      • (Score: 4, Insightful) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:24PM

        by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:24PM (#443905) Journal

        Yes, the overwhelming majority [people-press.org] of "actual scientists" (using whatever filter you feel like applying to make it "real" enough) doing real research are also incredibly left leaning.

        You can continue to imagine a world where you're not completely full of shit, but... there's no factual basis for your beliefs.

        And I'm glad you could show off how whiningly anti-intellectual you are is with your unprovoked hatred of an uncommon art class almost no one actually takes. Raise your hand if you think user Runaway1956 could assemble a wicker basket if sat in a room full of straw and sticks, and a whole day of free time. I sure don't.

        "PEOPLE SHOULDN'T STUDY ART" screams the dimwitted boomer robot, "IT SERVES NO LOGICAL FUNCTION" beep boop. Go fuck your self, you complete moron.

        • (Score: 3, Insightful) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:48PM

          by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:48PM (#443918) Journal

          "Raise your hand if you think user Runaway1956 could assemble a wicker basket if sat in a room full of straw and sticks, and a whole day of free time. I sure don't."

          How sad. My basket wouldn't be of the same quality as people who make them all the time - but I could produce a basket good enough to carry eggs in. If you want to carry grain, like wheat, you'll have to give a couple practice runs. WIcker baskets aren't complicated, after all.

          Studying art? Hey, that's fine - study all you want. Just don't try to tell us that art is science.

          --
          We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
          • (Score: 1, Flamebait) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:12PM

            by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:12PM (#444075) Journal

            Who the fuck mods this shit insightful?

            No, you goddamn manchild, I'm not a fucking artist, I do the same programming work you delusionally think makes you good at science.

            "You think X has value? You must be X" is the most childish thing that only conservatives ever do. It's like the idiots who think I'm a woman because I'm a feminist, it's so intellectually vacant and unthinking I cannot imagine how you function in life.

            • (Score: 2, Insightful) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:35PM

              by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:35PM (#444085) Journal

              "You think X has value? You must be X" is the most childish thing that only conservatives ever do.

              Let's look at the money quote again.

              Studying art? Hey, that's fine - study all you want. Just don't try to tell us that art is science.

              Runaway doesn't assume that you're an artist, much less assume that you're an artist because you sort of defended art.

              If only straw man building was the most childish thing the new puritans do.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:59PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:59PM (#444103)

              Ah, the foul odor of ad hominem - a pile of fecal matter on the floor. Perhaps you have lost yours, ikanreed? Here, have it back, along with a downmod!

              • (Score: 4, Informative) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:54PM

                by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:54PM (#444124) Journal

                Yay, babies first misapplication of a logical fallacy. You win the prize. The prize is smug condescension.

                An ad hominenem, you dimwitted vagrant, is to deduce, from the qualitative or quantitative nature of the person making an argument, the factual validity of that argument. You utterly childish buffoon.

                To inject asides, whether due or not, about how their argument reflects on their character, is not, in fact fallacious, and, indeed, you backwards bugbear from nowhere, if such a statement is follows from preceding statements, it's literally the opposite of fallacious: logically valid. You trifling thespian playing a logician

                Is it okay to condemn Runaway1956 as a manchild for being dismissive of art and intellectualism that he doesn't personally consider valid for reasons, that are, at best, specious? It's definetly impolite, but I'd argue pretty due for being such a piece of shit.

                Is it an ad hominem? No, stop learning cargo cult argumentation from the internet. Learn the details, you mugginly sapfool

            • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:37PM

              by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:37PM (#444115) Journal

              I just don't understand the hatred. I've not badmouthed art. I've simply established that art and science are not the same thing. I have a prized painting. A woman in Corea, Maine painted it. It's of her granddaughter, showing off her new easter hat. The painting focuses on the straw hat, and only the lower half of the girl's face is visible. Jo wanted to give me a painting, and she pointed to dozens of paintings, told me to take the one I liked best. All of them were nice, all of them were attractive in one way or another. Sea scenes, beach scenes, meadows, children at play, downtown busy work, all sorts of subjects. That one painting, of her granddaughter, caught my eye. A demure little girl, tipping her head down, so that you could see the artwork in her new straw hat. To me, that was art, and I asked for that painting, ahead of other, more elaborate art. Art is good. But, Jo wasn't a scientist. Art is not science.

              Oh my - I hope I haven't shocked anyone with the fact that I have met real artists in my life.

              --
              We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
              • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Wednesday December 21 2016, @12:06AM

                by ikanreed (3164) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @12:06AM (#444128) Journal

                You're right, inasmuch as I was putting you into a box that I should have known didn't really describe you based on what you said.

                On the other hand, you're sneering disdain for non-STEM teachers was... pretty much out of left field and I still feel like everything I said about you came from a fair and reasoned place given that context.

                You listed an arbitrary field of study, something that's not studied at college at all, and a minor elective art classes as the sole home for left-leaning thought in universities in a tone that implied your contempt(as if STEM was the only thing worthy of study and capable of real insight), and now, you're understandably hurt that I think so strongly that attitude reflects a certain class of anti-intellectualism.

                So I know I'm supposed to act like it was okay to call you a manchild for you views, because defending what I've already said to the death is how internet arguments are supposed to work, and I know I went too far in impugning your character so directly. Sorry.

                But dude, you were saying you think studying art is okay, when you pretty clearly implied you didn't think it isn't. That's not a contradiction I think you should let slide in your own belief system. Think about why you think, that of all people, only some arbitrary subset of scientists should be allowed political viewpoints informed by their expertise. And how that ties into the factually incorrect assumptions you made about the beliefs of those scientists. I think you've got some serious anti-intellectualism mixed into that.

                • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday December 21 2016, @12:30AM

                  by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 21 2016, @12:30AM (#444136) Journal

                  The problem is, the left is claiming that xx% of scientists are left wing, democrat, blah blah blah - and then they want to rewrite the definitions of science.

                  Of course those scientists who are getting grants from the US/UN/UK/other sources are going to speak out in favor of global warming theories. But then, every technician associated with that scientist's research and labs is promoted to scientist as well. Well, of course they all agree with the professor - publicly at least.

                  Professor watch list. We should have had a professor watch list decades ago. And we should have been watching the colleges and universities themselves. As evidence, I point to the surplus of "college educated" people who can't find a job today. People with degrees in black history, woman's history, and various almost useless degrees. Our liberal leaning colleges are failing us.

                  --
                  We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
                  • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Wednesday December 21 2016, @02:26AM

                    by ikanreed (3164) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @02:26AM (#444174) Journal

                    Come on man, I linked my Pew study way back at the beginning. There's no definition fiddlyness at all. Research scientists are left leaning. In every field.

                    • (Score: 2) by cubancigar11 on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:34AM

                      by cubancigar11 (330) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:34AM (#444203) Homepage Journal

                      I have two things to add here :- science begets multiculturalism and anti-establishment, and republicans are puritanical pro-christian anti-immigrant. And this has been so for so long that scientists have become democrat leaning. The use of word 'left' to describe liberal is an age old tactic of politics. Not to mention that there are multiple points of disagreement between different scientists who all call themselves liberal which such surveys purposefully reflect.

                      Second thing is that scientists in other countries don't reflect the same zeitgeist as american/european academia.

                    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 22 2016, @07:59PM

                      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday December 22 2016, @07:59PM (#444821)

                      My dad could have done it. He got his PhD in microbiology.

                      He's super-conservative, though not a Bible thumper: wants more nukes, attended tea party events, thinks Obama is the worst post-WWII president, owns 15 guns, hates abortion, opposes same-sex marriage, wants lower taxes, wants welfare gone, supported Goldwater for president, liked Nixon, wants active searching for illegal aliens and fast deportation, opposes affirmative action, avoided living in or downwind of places that the USSR might nuke, stocked up on disaster food, stayed with one wife, owned houses, good credit score, does preventative car maintenance, etc.

                      He went into the food industry. This fits a conservative: It's steady work. It's productive. The pay is reliable. There is no screwing around with post-doctoral busywork, in poverty, hoping that just maybe a professor position might open up. There is no gambling on tenure. You just take a job and get paid to do useful stuff.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:55PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:55PM (#443928)

          Not so fast.

          The vast majority of social scientists are left-leaning. Arts professors and their fellows, likewise.

          Professional courses do not follow the same pattern. If you want to find a libertarian, or a conservative globalist, or an evangelical christian? Your best bet is to poke around the back alleys of engineering, legal or medical departments.

          And the one discipline with the widest, most balanced range? Economics.

          But please, do go on patting yourself on the back about how smart people are totally in agreement about how to run society. It makes it easy to find brainwashed droids.

          • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:02PM

            by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:02PM (#443971) Journal

            Please do continue to share your hypothetical anecdotes with me when the link I shared was quite explicit about the kinds of science (and engineering) studied by the surveyed people. Smart people don't become conservatives for the most part, and when they do, I've noticed(*gasp*, I'm able to use unsubstantiated anecdotes too) a strong tendency for that conservatism to be tempered with respect to their own area of expertise.

        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:55PM

          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:55PM (#443929) Journal

          Yes, the overwhelming majority of "actual scientists" (using whatever filter you feel like applying to make it "real" enough) doing real research are also incredibly left leaning.

          Let's apply the filter of petroleum and chemical engineers. Burn.

          This ideological bias can be completely explained by self-interest. It doesn't take a PhD to figure out which side your bread is buttered on.

          • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:50PM

            by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:50PM (#443961) Journal

            Uh, still no when it comes to the people doing actual research, but feel free to say "Burn". Turns out when you have a useful science PhD, you're typically a rare commodity that you don't feel compelled to follow the implied ideology of your employers. Research engineering is still 51% liberal to 20% conservative.

            Your beliefs are based on non-reality. There's no science field dominated by right-leaning researchers. None. If you isolated your population down to Liberty University, you'd get a right-leaning group.

            • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:59PM

              by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:59PM (#444006) Journal

              Turns out when you have a useful science PhD, you're typically a rare commodity that you don't feel compelled to follow the implied ideology of your employers.

              It's just a curious coincidence that they have the ideology that happens to benefit them the most?

              Research engineering is still 51% liberal to 20% conservative.

              Where did that come from? The Pew survey didn't cover that group.

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:14PM

                by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:14PM (#444010)

                Its telling that you interpret their beliefs as directly related to their "bread butter". A very typical conservative approach, self centered and ignorant.

                • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:03PM

                  by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:03PM (#444068) Journal

                  Its telling that you interpret their beliefs as directly related to their "bread butter".

                  It's true.

                  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:16AM

                    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 21 2016, @04:16AM (#444199)

                    Uh huh sure buddy. You really are in some little universe to yourself. I don't doubt that it does happen, just like you shouldn't doubt that the same thing happens with private industry scientists. Except that the private industry scientists are under an even bigger "bread and butter" conflict of interest. Boss says make it read favorably, scientist obliges by stretching his scientific integrity to personal limits.

                    I 100% disagree that a relevant majority of scientists are under such influence, and the primary negative influence comes from the industries themselves.

                    But seeing your general post history I'd wager your pro-industry and against government funded research. The problem is industry has a financial motive for research to have favorable outcomes for their products / activities. The democratic party has nothing to gain from pro-climate change research, aside from your theory that they are some evil cabal making people afraid of pollution so that some oil barons have to jump through regulation hoops and do things the "hard" way.

                    Your theory just doesn't make sense, except as a false flag type argument to keep the conversation away from the real problem with current scientific research. Industry funded research is basically propaganda which confuses the less scientifically literate.

                    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday December 21 2016, @09:05AM

                      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday December 21 2016, @09:05AM (#444264) Journal
                      Really, what is the point of your post?

                      But seeing your general post history I'd wager your pro-industry and against government funded research. The problem is industry has a financial motive for research to have favorable outcomes for their products / activities.

                      That's why in a nutshell. Industry needs research that is productive. Government doesn't give a shit as long as the checks get signed by the right people. And what's the better approach for the would-be researcher of dubious competence and diligence? They know how to sign checks so they're going to swing that way. Having to spend a good portion of their working day with grant application theater is just a cost of doing business.

                      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 21 2016, @10:56PM

                        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 21 2016, @10:56PM (#444508)

                        That's why in a nutshell. Industry needs research that is productive

                        Even if it is fake research; in fact, especially when it is fake research! This is what happens when you define knowledge in terms of revenue. If they are so rich, why aren't they smart?

                        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Thursday December 22 2016, @02:20AM

                          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Thursday December 22 2016, @02:20AM (#444581) Journal

                          If they are so rich, why aren't they smart?

                          That goes for everything else too. If they're so rich, why do they need anyone to clean the toilets?

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:14PM

              by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @11:14PM (#444111)

              Your beliefs are based on non-reality. There's no science field dominated by right-leaning researchers.

              Not quite true! Almost all of the professors of "White Studies" are right-wing nut-jobs. And then there is the David Duke Endowed Chair for the Study of European American Supremacy at the Ku Klux Klan Institute of Post-factual Studies.

      • (Score: 2) by Hawkwind on Wednesday December 21 2016, @11:18PM

        by Hawkwind (3531) on Wednesday December 21 2016, @11:18PM (#444517)

        Wait, you think UCLA isn't crammed full of STEM activity? Go check out this chart: https://ncsesdata.nsf.gov/profiles/site?method=rankingBySource&ds=herd [nsf.gov].

        • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Thursday December 22 2016, @01:26AM

          by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Thursday December 22 2016, @01:26AM (#444559) Journal

          UCLA ranking is 392. Got it. There are 392 educational institutions in the US that invest more into R&D than UCLA does. Obviously, UCLA isn't an MIT, or a Johns Hopkins, now is it? Not even a Penn State. Thank you for helping to make my point, I think.

          --
          We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
          • (Score: 2) by Hawkwind on Thursday December 22 2016, @04:44PM

            by Hawkwind (3531) on Thursday December 22 2016, @04:44PM (#444760)

            And your citation? The one I provided of funding from NSF and NIH has UCLA 9th. I suppose we should be grateful the thousands of STEM people aren't aware of your alternate universe.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:48PM

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:48PM (#443919) Journal

      The honest to god truth is you goddamn idiots will never learn your lesson until your subject to the kind of hate and violence you regularly subject harmless people to. It's a lesson you're going to have to learn every few generations until it really fucking sticks.

      A good argument for longevity right there. No lesson will last every few generations because everyone who learned the lesson is dead.

      • (Score: 2) by ikanreed on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:05PM

        by ikanreed (3164) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @07:05PM (#443978) Journal

        That's not actually true.

        The notion of a democratic republic run for and by the people has become endemic to American society, and it was gradually developed from a weak-sauce British version of the ideology. The failures of fascism didn't stick the same way as the failures of hereditary monarchism did, but you put enough goose-steppers in shallow graves, it will. It might take another cycle of people outgrowing the lessons of last time and dying off or two, but that's no reason not to try.

        • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:11PM

          by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:11PM (#444074) Journal

          The notion of a democratic republic run for and by the people has become endemic to American society

          You can't teach experience. Some things can only be learned by making the same mistakes.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:12PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @04:12PM (#443854)

    > This backlash from the "anti-left" didn't come out of nowhere.

    Its pretty clear that this "backlash" comes straight out of the right's butthurt of being exposed to smart people who disagree with them.

    • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:09PM

      by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:09PM (#443893) Journal

      LMAO - plenty of butthurt going around these days. Whose butt was hurting when someone or other went crying to the electoral college? "Oh, we don't like the results of the election, you guys have got to change how business is done around here!"

      --
      We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
      • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:20PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:20PM (#443901)

        Well that is a really long stretch. Kinda feels like you are just lumping everything you disagree with together in one boat. Because either they are with you or they are against you and actual ideas don't matter, just tribe.

        But since you bought it up... werent you one of those people saying the electoral college is legitimate despite the popular vote because the USA is a representative democracy?

        Well, if they are just a bunch of rubberstampers, that's not how a representative democracy works.

        • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:53PM

          by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:53PM (#443923) Journal

          So, you're saying that O'bummer wasn't legitimately elected? Or Bush? Or Clinton? The same mechanism has been in place for quite a long while now. Although the mechanism has been tweaked a couple of times, the electoral college has existed since our first election. The college votes are assigned according to the rules established in each of their home states. It's how it works. You don't get sent to the college to vote your own likes and dislikes - there are rules to follow. Each electoral vote should be cast according to the rules of the people who sent them there.

          --
          We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:57PM

            by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @05:57PM (#443930)

            I'm saying that lobbying a representative in a representative democracy is the way representative democracy is intended to work.

            • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:08PM

              by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday December 20 2016, @06:08PM (#443938) Journal

              So now you are advocating the lobbying of electoral college voter? Look how well that has worked out in congress. Congress no longer represents the American people either.

              --
              We're gonna be able to vacation in Gaza, Cuba, Venezuela, Iran and maybe Minnesota soon. Incredible times.
              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @09:30PM

                by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @09:30PM (#444050)

                > Lobbying

                You are easily triggered by words that confuse you.
                Probably because your knowledge of practically everything is so shallow.

              • (Score: 2) by AthanasiusKircher on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:00PM

                by AthanasiusKircher (5291) on Tuesday December 20 2016, @10:00PM (#444066) Journal

                Before I reply, let me just remind everyone that I've repeatedly argued here that, while I am no Trump supporter, the recent last-ditch effort to try to change the Electoral College outcome was a terrible idea. I still think so, and I think the efforts of the so-called "Hamilton electors" actually went against the spirit of the Founders in trying to collude to ensure a specific outcome (something the Constitution and the Founders explicitly tried to prevent).

                However:

                So now you are advocating the lobbying of electoral college voter?

                I see nothing necessarily wrong with this, particularly in the large proportion of states which do not penalize "unfaithful" electors. Electors were originally specified in the Constitution as representatives of STATES, as you noted. But since around the 1830s, they have almost universally been PARTY-SELECTED state appointees. From my (and the Constitution's) perspective, they are first-and-foremost representatives of states, not parties.

                Just to be clear, the way many laws are written is that the ELECTORS are awarded/allocated based on the popular vote outcome in states, not the VOTES of said electors. Traditionally, in most states you'd have a notice on the ballot at the election making clear that you were NOT voting for a candidate, but rather a slate of electors X, Y, and Z who declared support to that party (or something to that effect). Most states have done away with having that information on a ballot (which, from my perspective, is HIGHLY misleading, given who the Constitution clearly vests voting power in).

                Anyhow, if a state legislature does not EXPLICITLY bind the votes of its electors (instead merely allocating electors based on the popular vote, as I believe is true of 21 states), I see nothing wrong with people contacting their appointed electoral representatives and making their case.

                To my mind, the problematic aspect comes in the way the state governments choose to mislead the public by not putting electors' names on the ballot. If the state government is not going to ensure a vote is cast in a particular way by statute, then they should make clear to voters that their votes are merely cast for another set of voters, who can then make their own choice. The problem in this case isn't with the lobbying, but the misleading way that states now make people think they are actually voting for President, when Constitutionally, they are not.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:31PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 20 2016, @08:31PM (#444020)

    So you're promoting a cultural witch hunt lime the McCarthy days? You don't mind constitutional violations as long as its against those filthy liberals? Its interesting to see how quickly conservatives will turn on their own values, or do you only care about the 2nd amendment since that's the one that guarantees your ability to invoke violence?

    Keep on "winning" pal, you're doing a great job. Tremendous.