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Rand Simberg wrote:
On Sun, 18 Jun 2006 18:28:13 GMT, in a place far, far away, "Mike Schilling" made the phosphor on my monitor glow in such a way as to indicate that: Say the fifties instead, if you like. OK, same question abut the 50s. "Starship Troopers." That's an awfully intrusive government to call "libertarian". Nothing intrusive about it. The government-mandated Moral Philosophy class, complete with government-mandated content, that every single student has to take doesn't strike you as intrusive? No more so than today's public schools. Mike Shilling was arguing the Starship Trooper government wasn't that libertarian. Comparing the Starship Trooper schools to today's public schools doesn't counter that argument. Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Hop |
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Hop David wrote:
That's an awfully intrusive government to call "libertarian". Nothing intrusive about it. The government-mandated Moral Philosophy class, complete with government-mandated content, that every single student has to take doesn't strike you as intrusive? No more so than today's public schools. Mike Shilling was arguing the Starship Trooper government wasn't that libertarian. Comparing the Starship Trooper schools to today's public schools doesn't counter that argument. Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Well, I certainly don't believe that. ;-) But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, and aren't learning the basics. |
#3
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On Mon, 19 Jun 2006 16:49:04 -0700, Rand Simberg
wrote: Hop David wrote: That's an awfully intrusive government to call "libertarian". Nothing intrusive about it. The government-mandated Moral Philosophy class, complete with government-mandated content, that every single student has to take doesn't strike you as intrusive? No more so than today's public schools. Mike Shilling was arguing the Starship Trooper government wasn't that libertarian. Comparing the Starship Trooper schools to today's public schools doesn't counter that argument. Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Well, I certainly don't believe that. ;-) But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, and aren't learning the basics. I see. You think that the schools in Starship Troopers keep their societies ideology strictly in one class and it doesn't influence how they teach history or literature at all? |
#4
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, Algebra, spelling, reading, biology, geography, furrin languages. Communism! All of it! and aren't learning the basics. Like basing your worldview on silly, simplistic propaganda. Schools won't teach that, so they've got to learn it in the streets. |
#5
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David Johnston wrote:
Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Well, I certainly don't believe that. ;-) But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, and aren't learning the basics. I see. You think that the schools in Starship Troopers keep their societies ideology strictly in one class and it doesn't influence how they teach history or literature at all? It probably does. In what fantasy nation (libertarian or otherwise) do you suppose that some "objective" version of history and literature is taught? |
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Mike Schilling wrote:
"Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, Algebra, spelling, reading, biology, geography, furrin languages. They're apparently no learning a lot of that, judging by tests. |
#7
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![]() "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... Mike Schilling wrote: "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, Algebra, spelling, reading, biology, geography, furrin languages. They're apparently no learning a lot of that, judging by tests. But they lap up the commie propaganda. |
#8
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Mike Schilling wrote:
"Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... Mike Schilling wrote: "Rand Simberg" wrote in message ... But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, Algebra, spelling, reading, biology, geography, furrin languages. They're apparently no learning a lot of that, judging by tests. But they lap up the commie propaganda. You were the one fantasizing about commie propaganda, not me. |
#9
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On Mon, 19 Jun 2006 18:14:33 -0700, Rand Simberg
wrote: David Johnston wrote: Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Well, I certainly don't believe that. ;-) But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, and aren't learning the basics. I see. You think that the schools in Starship Troopers keep their societies ideology strictly in one class and it doesn't influence how they teach history or literature at all? It probably does. In what fantasy nation (libertarian or otherwise) do you suppose that some "objective" version of history and literature is taught? You were the one suggesting Starship Troopers took place in such a fantasy nation. |
#10
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David Johnston wrote:
On Mon, 19 Jun 2006 18:14:33 -0700, Rand Simberg wrote: David Johnston wrote: Unless you believe today's public schools are run by a libertarian government. Well, I certainly don't believe that. ;-) But I in fact think that the schools in ST were in fact less dogmatic than the public schools in America. If only there were a single course that were required here... Instead, the students are immersed in collectivist, politically correct nonsense all day, and aren't learning the basics. I see. You think that the schools in Starship Troopers keep their societies ideology strictly in one class and it doesn't influence how they teach history or literature at all? It probably does. In what fantasy nation (libertarian or otherwise) do you suppose that some "objective" version of history and literature is taught? You were the one suggesting Starship Troopers took place in such a fantasy nation. My point is that there is no such fantasy nation (hint: that's what the word "fantasy" means). The nation of ST was as close to libertarian in that respect as you're likely to get. At least, any nation that survives as a nation. But then, "nation" is becoming one of those dirty words in this politically correct, transnationalist world... |
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