I didn't say anyone is "dumb." The point was that NPR audiences ARE richer and better educated. It's not a black & white thing.
But it does seem that if you believe public radio fans, they're the smartest people on the face of the earth. Just ask one.
Yep, and Dallas Cowboy fans say they root for America's Team. So what?
They're both pompous and wrong.
"Educated" doesn't necessarily translate into "smart".
Right...and as I said, everyone's entitled to their opinion.
You can base "smart" on the size of one's cranium. But in this country, it's based on education.
As they say, everyone's entitled to their opinion.
Right...and as I said, everyone's entitled to their opinion.
You can base "smart" on the size of one's cranium. But in this country, it's based on education.
Anyone willing and able to pay the tuition can get an education. To be "smart" means using that knowledge to actually accomplish things.
But we're talking about people who've put together both an education and the ability to make money. Somewhere along the line, someone assessed that they were more than people who bought their degree. Smart is the ability to put things together. A certain amount of education, a certain amount of intuition, a certain amount of social skill, and the ability to bring all of those things together in a way that makes more than the minimum wage. In that way, they've demonstrated the ability to accomplish things. That's what the public radio profile shows.
But we're talking about people who've put together both an education and the ability to make money.
So the public radio profile just shows that they went to college, got a degree, and 46% of them didn't learn anything.
No you're not. You're bloviating with terse little platitudes and throwing around sweeping generalities like they were holy writ.
And you're attempting to imitate a TV talk show host. I'm simply interpreting the data. You don't agree. So what?
The thing is, your "interpretations" are wrong. Disagreeing with something that is wrong is the right thing to do.
Which part of what I said was wrong?
A lot of them have cushy government management level jobs, which pay well. That doesn't make them "smarter" than your average commercial radio listener.
You're making a lot of assumptions. There was nothing in the statistics that said anything about them working for the government. Just that they get paid well. It's pretty well known that more education tends to lead to higher paying jobs.
If you are comparing public radio news and information stations to commercial music format stations that's one thing. If you compare the audiences for public radio news and information to commercial right-wing talk then you see a significant different in the respective audiences income, education levels and in other lifestyle factors.
"Smart" and "dumb" are vague terms and almost impossible to quantify. Public radio news and information content is more intellectually demanding and therefore draws people who appreciate such content. Right-wing news talk is largely hate speech and demagoguery and draws a different kind of person.
Some music formats have audience demographic profiles similar to public radio news and information (and often many of the same listeners). Other music formats do not.
People who don't appreciate intellectually-demanding content tend to resent those who do appreciate it. Ask any kid with good grades who got beat up at recess. Guess which listens to public radio and which listens to Rush.