Monday, May 11, 2009
Ashley Herzog :: Townhall.com Columnist
Socialism, College Style (Part II)
by Ashley Herzog
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It seems a lot of college professors didn’t like my column last week about academic socialism. Though conspicuously short on details, a University of Oregon professor declared the analogy between grade redistribution and wealth redistribution “really dumb.” (This should show you what sophisticated thinkers most of these professors are: they call everything they disagree with “dumb.”)

But I think their real problem is the fact that the YAF video contest made students rethink the Marxist claptrap they’ve been force-fed during their college years.

Take, for example, the “meritocracy myth,” the core theory of many sociology and political science courses. Students learn that America is not a land of opportunity and only children born with “privilege” can get ahead. (My recommended response to any professor who teaches this notion: “You’re obviously teaching at this school because of your privilege and not your expertise, so why should we listen to you?”)

But when it comes to their own classrooms, these professors absolutely believe in meritocracy. You’ll never hear them tell a member of an allegedly oppressed group, “I’m sorry, you won’t succeed in this class because you’re black/Latino/a woman/from a working-class background.” Instead, they’ll likely recommend a tutor, a study group, better class attendance—in others words, more effort on the student’s part.

I’ve never walked into the first day of a class and heard a professor say, “You’re all entitled to a decent grade, no matter how poorly you perform.” Instead, one of their favorite lines is, “If you don’t come to class or do your homework, don’t come to me at the end of the quarter asking for extra credit.” Even the dedicated socialists don’t believe students are entitled to benefits they didn’t earn.

But they think turning America into a massive welfare state is a fabulous idea. They expect students to accept socialism as a morally superior system. (In my first sociology class, the assigned textbook stated as hard fact that America’s lack of government-run health care is a form of racism.)

Therefore, I have a challenge for professors who believe socialism works: try it out in your own classrooms. On the first day of class, tell your students, “I believe in equality for all people. At the end of the quarter, you’ll all receive more or less the same grade. And if you flunk all your tests, you’re actually entitled to extra points, because you must be a victim of our racist/sexist/classist society. That’s social justice, people!”

See how many students continue to show up to your pompously boring lectures about how America is a colonialist oppressor. See how many complete the assigned readings or study for tests. You’ll either have to force students to do those things—just as the Soviets had to force people to work on disastrously inefficient “collective farms”—or you’ll have to watch as your class deteriorates due to lack of productivity.

My guess is that your academic department won’t tolerate your socialist classroom for long. You’ll be replaced by a professor who actually does his job, one who expects students to learn the material and awards grades based on merit. Why? Because whether we’re talking about the economy or the classroom, most people instinctively know the notion of “from each according to his ability, to each according to his need” is a recipe for disaster.

And I suspect that deep down you know it, too—despite what you say in order to fit in with the Marxist in-crowd on campus.

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About The Author
Ashley Herzog is a Townhall columnist and the author of Feminism vs. Women.

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Uber anti capitalism
Uber says: "...the actual fact is that the risk which those with a capital cushion take is not more risky for them. the risk is mitigated by the capital. It is simply more risky for the person with out the capital cushion."

Capitalism has a component of investment of capital, and arguments that those with more capital take less risk than those with less, are simply appeals to punish the thrifty, to envy and class warfare, and misdirection from the real class system in the United States.

The United States is one of the few nations created without a class system, and that is a reason that this nation has done so well for it's short history. (And don't go thinkin' of citing slavery in rebuttal, it won't fly) However we have developed a class system in the US. The Ruling Class, socialist indoctrinated government employees and those who receive their income from tax payer funds.

Appeals to wealth class warfare are designed to conceal the real class that oppresses the citizen.

Finally, capitalism does not exclude all but monetary investment or reserves. On the contrary, an individual may invest in many ways; Einstein invested intellect and work, not a lot of money. Everyone else has the opportunity to invest and succeed at what they are best at.

Capitalism rewards work, discipline, thrift perseverance, and creates productive jobs.

Socialism rewards sloth, complaint, envy, tyranny, and creates government non-productive jobs.

Uberscientist
Uber says: "If we let Math and Science teachers determine who could and could not do their jobs, Einstein would never have become a physicist. and would have continued his previous occupation as a clerk who had flunked out of school."

I'm sure Uber believes it would be better to let union bosses determine who could and could not do their jobs. Oh, that's right, in the auto industry, they do.

Einstein was an example of the triumph of free enterprise. Born with the ability to conceptualize in a manner most men cannot comprehend, he trained himself to think and logic in a different way for two reasons, most mentors do not have the ability to think that way and, therfore, cannot teach it, and he was one of the few who knew that there had to be a way to get to the probable answers for the questions he wanted answered.

Einstein created his own enterprise in collaboration with his peers, and invested his intelect to create his own job in which, he produced a product (his theories) that was largely worthy, and have been greatly usefull.

Finally, Math and Science teachers don't determine students jobs, they simply give employers a means to make an educated guess on who can do the job they need done.

Ordinary Math and Science teachers may have been out of their league with Albert, but the SYSTEM did not fail him, the proof is that you, Uber, know his name and why.
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