Re: RE "When Glenn cries, we all cry..."
Huh?
I'm sorry, Quad, but I'm not following your train of thought. None of this affects my "emotions."
If you've been paying any attention at all to the continuous flood of polling information, not to mention voter analysis from recent elections, you'll recognize that conservative support is strongest among less educated and liberal support is strongest among the best educated. Read Thomas Frank's "What's the Matter with Kansas"--a best-seller from a few years ago--profiling how political conservatives use social issues (abortion, guns, race & religion) to get the poorest and least educated to vote against their own best economic interests.
Knowledge is power. The more education a person has, the better prepared they are to understand complex economic issues affecting their own lives. The less education a person has, the easier it is to control them--and the easier it is to get them riled up over imaginary threats.
The topic of this thread is "How Angry is Too Angry?" As Mr. Cooke first suggested, there seems to be evidence that conservative talk radio is engaged in pumping up its easily-led listeners into taking violent action against the current federal administration as well as Democrats and liberals and anyone opposed to the conservative movement.
As such, this entire thread is an indictment against conservative talk radio.
And those of us involved in the radio business for our livelihood need to consider these ideas pretty seriously.
quadraphonic said:amfmxm,
Why would whether or not someone is a fan of higher education affect your emotions?
Why is someone else's opinion of higher education that important to your feelings?
Should we also, conversely, be sorry for you if you are a fan of higher education? Wouldn't that be "balance?" I'm just trying to think at it from all the angles presented.
You know that conservative talk radio says we should all take up arms against the government but can't provide one example without going into that post full of sarcasm about how pure conservative talk radio is?
Apparently, higher education taught you that you can tell someone is "on The Right" just because their opinion of higher education is not as strong as yours. And that applying sarcasm is better than showing proof of your work.
So much for "critical thinking." So much for "thinking" at all, when you get to the point of expressing that your emotions are determined by someone else's expressed opinions. As if that's all the information a thinking person should need about someone else's life to evoke "sorrow."
Sounds like the "re-education" might have involved more than just "critical thinking."
Huh?
I'm sorry, Quad, but I'm not following your train of thought. None of this affects my "emotions."
If you've been paying any attention at all to the continuous flood of polling information, not to mention voter analysis from recent elections, you'll recognize that conservative support is strongest among less educated and liberal support is strongest among the best educated. Read Thomas Frank's "What's the Matter with Kansas"--a best-seller from a few years ago--profiling how political conservatives use social issues (abortion, guns, race & religion) to get the poorest and least educated to vote against their own best economic interests.
Knowledge is power. The more education a person has, the better prepared they are to understand complex economic issues affecting their own lives. The less education a person has, the easier it is to control them--and the easier it is to get them riled up over imaginary threats.
The topic of this thread is "How Angry is Too Angry?" As Mr. Cooke first suggested, there seems to be evidence that conservative talk radio is engaged in pumping up its easily-led listeners into taking violent action against the current federal administration as well as Democrats and liberals and anyone opposed to the conservative movement.
As such, this entire thread is an indictment against conservative talk radio.
And those of us involved in the radio business for our livelihood need to consider these ideas pretty seriously.