Darkwind
Diamond Member
- Jun 18, 2009
- 34,918
- 19,466
One problem I find is that liberals often attribute actions, thought and beliefs to others not based upon any reality, but upon their desire to be right at any and all costs. I think that liberals target science for their political agenda only, use it as a means of proof, and then name call others who question not only the results, but the methods and motivations of said studies.One problem I find. is that conservatives often have their own history, their own thinking methods, their own sciences, and many other beliefs that differ from from what is taught in most schools. These boards are full of these beliefs. I also think conservatives believe that science, history, biology and those subjects are really decided by political parties and ideology, and not by some type of scientific method.
If conservatives win an election they expect schools to now teach students their beliefs, their sciences, their history, and sadly education just goes on and they cannot understand why no change.
But then......I also know many classrooms that have no room for politics and are driven by the information and science alone. It is only when an instructor goes off the deep end (usually talking anything not of their own particular belief) does the bias actually creep into the classroom.
I have had a number of programing professors, English Professors, Project, System and Network Analyst professors who never uttered a peep about liberal or conservative philosophy. They simply stuck to the code and the procedures that makes a person a better employee in their chosen field.
Perhaps every one should acknowledge that professors bring a bias to the classroom, while understanding that SOME professors are actual professionals and stay on topic.