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De-Programming Students :-
That is one way of going about
trying to de-program young people. There are, for example,
some good books showing what is wrong with the "global
warming" crusades or showing why male-female differences in
income or occupations are not automatically discrimination.
Various authors have written a lot of good books that demolish
what is currently believed-- and taught to students-- on a
wide range of issues. Some of those books are listed as
suggested readings on my website.
Yet trying to undo the propaganda that passes for education at
too many schools and colleges, one issue at a time, may not
always be the best strategy. There are too many issues on
which the politically correct party line is considered to be
the only way to look at things.
Given the wide range of issues on which students are
indoctrinated, instead of being educated, trying to undo all
of that would require a whole shelf full of books-- and
somehow getting the students to read them all.
Another approach might be to respond to the dogmatic certainty
of some young person, perhaps your own offspring, by asking:
"Have you ever read a single book on the other side of that
issue?"
Chances are, after years of being "educated," even at some of
the highest-priced schools and colleges, they have not.
When the inevitable answer to your question is "No," you can
simply point out how illogical it is to be so certain about
anything when you have heard only one side of the story-- no
matter how often you have heard that one side repeated.
Would it make sense for a jury to reach a verdict after having
heard only the prosecution's case, or only the defense
attorney's case, but not both?
There is no need to argue the specifics of the particular
issue that has come up. You can tell your overconfident young
student that you will be happy to discuss that particular
issue after he or she has taken the elementary step of reading
something by somebody on the other side.
Elementary as it may seem that we should hear both sides of an
issue before making up our minds, that is seldom what happens
on politically correct issues today in our schools and
colleges. The biggest argument of the left is that there is no
argument-- whether the issue is global warming, "open space"
laws or whatever.
Some students may even imagine that they have already heard
the other side because their teachers may have given them
their version of other people's arguments or motives.
But a jury would never be impressed by having the prosecution
tell them what the defendant's defense is. They would want to
hear the defense attorney present that case.
Yet most students who have read and heard repeatedly about the
catastrophes awaiting us unless we try to stop "global
warming" have never read a book, an article or even a single
word by any of the hundreds of climate scientists, in
countries around the world, who have expressed opposition to
that view.
These students may have been shown Al Gore's movie "An
Inconvenient Truth" in school, but are very unlikely to have
been shown the British Channel 4 television special, "The
Great Global Warming Swindle."
Even if we assume, for the sake of argument, that students are
being indoctrinated with the correct conclusions on current
issues, that would still be irrelevant educationally. Hearing
only one side does nothing to equip students with the
experience to know how to sort out opposing sides of other
issues they will have to confront in the future, after they
have left school and need to reach their own conclusions on
the issues arising later.
Yet they
are the jury that will ultimately decide the fate of this
nation.
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