I see your point, but let’s be completely for real here, people didn’t just make that leap from COVID to other vaccines innocently on their own. Just as we need to be careful about underselling the errors of some COVID policy, we need to also look critically at some of the over-corrections from those who felt wronged by the policy.Indeed. Let's not also forget the deaths of despair. The spousal and child abuse. The massive increase in obesity and alcoholism. Deaths of despair rose. Family relationships were severed (including my own).
Let's not also forget that damage to pur institutional legitimacy. Now more people than ever are hesitant about vaccines. And why should they believe the FDA today?
Oh, and let's not forget about the destruction of the dollar, our purchasing power, and our country's finances that we still have not and apparently will not revert to prior to the emergency.
All of that would have been less insulting if they got it right. But all of their recommendations lockdowns, 6 ft, masks, vaccines preventing spread) all turned out to be bullshit
Nonsense. The government has a case study on what they can get away with under the guise of a national emergency. They have a reset fiscal budget, and we are seeing today how the current tyrant is using a national emergency to make himself a king, just like the last one did that you celebratedthe slippery slope argument wasn't my argument...it was your argument and the argument of your ideological bros on these boards...it was a prediction that didn't pan out...as your ability to go to church last weekend eloquently testifies to
The one place I really believe the two are directly related is the length of time in which the Biden Administration extended the COVID emergency for legislative convenience. While it’s patently absurd to compare using emergency powers for an ongoing pandemic vs. say, the fucking trade deficit, Biden absolutely abused the hell out of the definition in the later stages of his term. I think the past several years of federal policy has made it clear we need a constitutional amendment or something closing the loopholes being used to allow such generous use of executive orders and emergency declarations.Nonsense. The government has a case study on what they can get away with under the guise of a national emergency. They have a reset fiscal budget, and we are seeing today how the current tyrant is using a national emergency to make himself a king, just like the last one did that you celebrated
As always, it's refreshing to have one liberal on here who is able to acknowledge reality when it stares us in the face.The one place I really believe the two are directly related is the length of time in which the Biden Administration extended the COVID emergency for legislative convenience. While it’s patently absurd to compare using emergency powers for an ongoing pandemic vs. say, the fucking trade deficit, Biden absolutely abused the hell out of the definition in the later stages of his term. I think the past several years of federal policy has made it clear we need a constitutional amendment or something closing the loopholes being used to allow such generous use of executive orders and emergency declarations.
how long are you ok with Presidents canceling our rights for before you express concern?still waiting for one actual for real right that has been compromised in any way due to that slippery slope
If the right wants to “save academia” then it also needs to stop engaging in anti-intellectualism and embracing nationalist impulses that decrease the talent pool in American universities, and actually engage with Universities in good faith. There’s an increasing trend toward appeals *Against* authority on the right that are every bit as fallacious as appeals to authority. People simply cannot become experts on every topic, and there *is* a need for people who actually study these things and can be that resource for humanity. They’re still human beings with biases and faulty views and every other quality that should lead a rational person to retain some healthy skepticism, but it’s not inherently better to instead treat their expertise as a specific reason *not* to listen to them.As always, it's refreshing to have one liberal on here who is able to acknowledge reality when it stares us in the face.
It'd be cool to live in a world where our academics could assess a topic based on its merit... but those days are long gone in this country
I am very pro education. I work for a ed tech company who is currently in the process or making college degrees obsolete.If the right wants to “save academia” then it also needs to stop engaging in anti-intellectualism and embracing nationalist impulses that decrease the talent pool in American universities, and actually engage with Universities in good faith. There’s an increasing trend toward appeals *Against* authority on the right that are every bit as fallacious as appeals to authority. People simply cannot become experts on every topic, and there *is* a need for people who actually study these things and can be that resource for humanity. They’re still human beings with biases and faulty views and every other quality that should lead a rational person to retain some healthy skepticism, but it’s not inherently better to instead treat their expertise as a specific reason *not* to listen to them.
I see your point, but let’s be completely for real here, people didn’t just make that leap from COVID to other vaccines innocently on their own. Just as we need to be careful about underselling the errors of some COVID policy, we need to also look critically at some of the over-corrections from those who felt wronged by the policy.
I very, very frequently see COVID used to justify *other* violations of civil liberties. We’re still talking about executing Fauci for advising on a pandemic response in an overly cautious or restrictive manner, but like that’s his fucking job, man. The virus guy isn’t the economy guy or the civil rights guy or the education guy, or any number of other guys who actually caused the conditions you bemoan. We don’t need to hang him on the stairs of the Lincoln Memorial for being the guy in the room whose job it is to try to stop the virus. Hell, the egg-head scientist being overruled by the government in a crisis is an actual movie trope. It’s not Fauci’s fault the people who run the place chose to listen to the virus guy.
But this isn’t really a problem with academia, I think it’s that the government is in the business of providing predatory loans to kids who were told they had to go to college. The Universities are honestly just doing what Universities have done for centuries, but now it’s a gazillion dollar industry selling career paths that don’t exist, and the federal government will give an 18-year-old child a mortgage-sized loan (that’s not even dischargeable in bankruptcy) with absolutely, positively no consideration of the risk of that loan.I am very pro education. I work for a ed tech company who is currently in the process or making college degrees obsolete.
But this institution has been so corrupted it is not salvageable. In order for the right to regain trust, it needs to be burnt to the ground and re-built with a modern lens.
College educated kids support the most retarded political causes in the world. They are finding it harder and harder to find employment. Their degrees are so worthless they are begging for truck drivers and plumbers to pay off their debts.
It's not hard to see why. You can very clearly see how our academic on this board approaches thinking. He is not curious. He is an ideaolog. He has an agenda and he is constantly pushing it. If a student asks him ot reflect on a subject, he will deflect and steer the conversation to his ideology. This is not unique among this 99% democrat profession
Yes it is a federal government problem. Yet another authoritarian overreach instituted by Obama that when, objected to by anyone, they get labeled as anti educationBut this isn’t really a problem with academia, I think it’s that the government is in the business of providing predatory loans to kids who were told they had to go to college. The Universities are honestly just doing what Universities have done for centuries, but now it’s a gazillion dollar industry selling career paths that don’t exist, and the federal government will give an 18-year-old child a mortgage-sized loan (that’s not even dischargeable in bankruptcy) with absolutely, positively no consideration of the risk of that loan.
I don’t actually intend to absolve any individual of their personal responsibility to pay back their debts, and I don’t think loan forgiveness is sound policy. But the problem is higher education is too big compared to the opportunity it provides, and it takes away from actual paths to employment.
This didn’t even remotely start with Obama. I know this because I was in college when Obama was elected and it was every bit the same as it is now. One defining feature of the most prominent anti-education critics is that they themselves are almost all graduates of elite institutions that helped to propel them into their current station, so it’s not like college *isn’t* allowing conservative sentiment to flourish.Yes it is a federal government problem. Yet another authoritarian overreach instituted by Obama that when, objected to by anyone, they get labeled as anti education
Obama is the one who guaranteed federal loan access to all citizensThis didn’t even remotely start with Obama. I know this because I was in college when Obama was elected and it was every bit the same as it is now. One defining feature of the most prominent anti-education critics is that they themselves are almost all graduates of elite institutions that helped to propel them into their current station, so it’s not like college *isn’t* allowing conservative sentiment to flourish.