Travis B. wrote:Who do these people protesting the DNC think they're helping? Every non-vote for Harris is a vote for Trump.
I must point out that nearly every case of institutional failure applies this kind of logic to silence their critics. Example: "Priests are molesting children, which makes the Catholic Church look bad, which makes people lose faith in the church, which makes people leave the church (and join another religion or quit religion entirely). In order to rectify the situation, we could admit that it happened, apologize for it, thoroughly purge the priesthood of offenders, and enact institutional change to prevent it from happening again, but that would require publicizing the situation, which would cause more people to leave (thus their soul isn't saved, yada yada), which is unacceptable. So instead, we will deny for decades that it ever happened, move offending priests around to new congregations (without telling the old or new congregations why) where they will offend again, and not enact institutional change, allowing the problem to persist."
Color me unimpressed and disappointed.
1. GOP criticizes a Dem for something that in an ideal world would maybe be bad, but is trivial or at best misleading.
2. New York Times and other centrists write at least a story a day reinforcing this talking point.
3. Meanwhile the GOP says or does all sorts of crazy stuff that the NYT and centrists ignore.
4. Very serious people weigh in just before the election criticizing only the Dem and only for the trivial point.
5. Dems lose.
6. NYT, centrists, very serious people, and GOP all completely forget that criticism, and often do that thing themselves.
This problem is a consequence of liberals' poor grand strategy for the Democratic party. That is, why are they even vying for the votes of NYT readers and centrists (AKA "Republicans that don't want to admit that they're Republicans") in the first place? There's more working class people than non-working class people in America, after all. It's telling that your post assumes that NYT readers deserve to be convinced, but this same assumption of worthiness is never afforded to, say, coal miners in West Virginia. Whenever the coal miners (or poor, uneducated people in general) start to doubt the Democratic party, they're just told to shut up and take it, because the other side is even worse, and decried as bigots when they do actually leave. Thus, there must be some X factor that determines how liberals decide whether someone is worthy of being convinced or not. As far as I can tell, that X factor is education. This fetish for education is the root of Democrats' problems.
But I've also seen the results of, say, not requiring STEM majors to take classes in the arts and humanities and they are not pretty. (Stable Diffusion and ChatGPT, anyone?)
To me, this problem seems not caused by STEM majors not appreciating art, but instead caused by an economic system tilted towards big business and a lax justice system that allows STEM/business majors to own businesses that can exploit other people's art for their own profits.
As a corollary, do you think that Martin Shkreli (aka "Pharma Bro")'s problem is that he simply doesn't understand or appreciate the process of creating a drug? Or is the problem that he's a parasitic sociopathic businessman that would/did gladly use the capitalist free market economic system to pressure and indirectly kill people to enrich himself, because the system doesn't recognize his actions as murder, because "It's just the free market, bro!"?
Agreed. The people who want to reduce all education to "STEM" and nothing more, or who would prefer people not get educated at all in the first place, can go straight to hell in my book.
What I believe:
(1) Getting an education should be an option for everybody, ideally without requiring them to accumulate any debt, and if that's not an option, then with as little debt as possible.
(2) I want everybody to be able to live a good, decent life, regardless of whether they have a college degree or not. After all, about 6/10 of Americans don't have a college degree. (
https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads ... graduates/ )
(3) Telling 6/10 of people that they're not worthy of a good life is a poor basis to build a political party on.
(4) There will always be a portion of society that will never be book smart enough to get a college degree, but I still think that they're worthy of a good life despite that.
(5) Getting a college degree doesn't make somebody a better person morally.
(6) Just because there's more people with college degrees doesn't guarantee that there's jobs to use them in. Thus, people's time is wasted. This loss of time (and money) must be considered when evaluating whether to encourage people to get a college degree.
(7) As more people get degrees, the relative value of each individual degree decreases, because the supply has increased.
(8) Believing these things is not done to keep people dumb, but to save them from wasting their time and money, and to acknowledge that education doesn't have a monopoly on human goodness and morality.