Dear Senator McSally:
I've sent you a $100 contribution to thank you for standing up to CNN reporter Manu Raju. The American media has deteriorated to the point at which treating them with contempt or ignoring them are the best options for those who are not antagonistic toward the United States, freedom of speech, and freedom of enterprise.
The American media does not serve an informational purpose but rather is a state-supported publicity industry for the Democratic Party and the Deep State, including both RINOs and Democrats. To restore the possibility of progress and of freedom, there needs to be a rethinking as to the monopoly privileges the state has bestowed on the tech industry, on the air-wave networks, and on the cable networks.
The New Deal marked the beginning of Deep State subsidization of the media through litmus tests concerning support of treaty-globalization, state-subsidized finance, and big government in exchange for monopoly privileges. Those subsidies need to end, and the media needs to be rebalanced.
Sincerely,
Mitchell Langbert
Sunday, January 19, 2020
Friday, January 17, 2020
Should You Have to Be 21 to Smoke?
Dan Klein raises this question at
Econlib.org: Does the recent federal
law increasing the smoking age to 21 make sense? He turns to the great observer of 1830s
America, Alexis De Tocqueville, for clues.
A couple of times, back in early Millennium days, I asked my classes of 65 NYU MBA students, who were graduates of elite colleges around the country, whether they were familiar with de Tocqueville, and no more than two or three percent had heard of him (one or two per class of 65). The state of the higher education system, which on average spent $27,000 per student in 2018, is that students who graduate are unfamiliar with the rudiments of history, culture, and literature. They are likely worse educated than the elementary-school-educated Americans of de Tocqueville's day, who read the classics as well as the Bible.
Klein recounts that the America de Tocqueville saw was one where boys and girls became men and women at the beginning of adolescence; Americans could think for themselves at the onset of adulthood; girls were the most self-reliant and self-confident in the world; boys became land speculators and entrepreneurs before they were what we would call men. Moreover, business people never dreamt of relying on government because they were self-reliant. People voluntarily helped each other. Crimes were rapidly punished.
Klein notes this quote from de Tocqueville: “Americans believe their freedom to be the best instrument and surest safeguard of their welfare.”
How sharply the observations of de Tocqueville differ from those of John Dewey, the early twentieth century philosopher of education. Dewey believed that schools need to provide a plastic, manipulated environment that provides learning through experience. Experiential learning is not to involve the real world of profit and loss, and it is to be guided by omniscient teachers.
The Antifa students of today have so internalized the rules of America's left-wing schoolmarms that they often have trouble making a living and instead spend their lives attacking those who do not conform to the left-wing rituals of the academic Temples of Political Correctness.
I wonder about the degree to which American education has not only debilitated most Americans intellectually but also made them more immature by encouraging a culture of dependency cloaked in experiential learning.
A couple of times, back in early Millennium days, I asked my classes of 65 NYU MBA students, who were graduates of elite colleges around the country, whether they were familiar with de Tocqueville, and no more than two or three percent had heard of him (one or two per class of 65). The state of the higher education system, which on average spent $27,000 per student in 2018, is that students who graduate are unfamiliar with the rudiments of history, culture, and literature. They are likely worse educated than the elementary-school-educated Americans of de Tocqueville's day, who read the classics as well as the Bible.
Klein recounts that the America de Tocqueville saw was one where boys and girls became men and women at the beginning of adolescence; Americans could think for themselves at the onset of adulthood; girls were the most self-reliant and self-confident in the world; boys became land speculators and entrepreneurs before they were what we would call men. Moreover, business people never dreamt of relying on government because they were self-reliant. People voluntarily helped each other. Crimes were rapidly punished.
Klein notes this quote from de Tocqueville: “Americans believe their freedom to be the best instrument and surest safeguard of their welfare.”
How sharply the observations of de Tocqueville differ from those of John Dewey, the early twentieth century philosopher of education. Dewey believed that schools need to provide a plastic, manipulated environment that provides learning through experience. Experiential learning is not to involve the real world of profit and loss, and it is to be guided by omniscient teachers.
The Antifa students of today have so internalized the rules of America's left-wing schoolmarms that they often have trouble making a living and instead spend their lives attacking those who do not conform to the left-wing rituals of the academic Temples of Political Correctness.
I wonder about the degree to which American education has not only debilitated most Americans intellectually but also made them more immature by encouraging a culture of dependency cloaked in experiential learning.
Thursday, January 16, 2020
Letter to Babson College's President Stephen Spinelli in Defense of Prof. Asheen Phansey
Dear President Spinelli:
I urge you to reconsider the firing of Asheen Phansey. I hold diametrically opposite views to Prof. Phansey’s, but more important considerations of freedom of speech and academic freedom should be given priority over matters of taste and opinion. Even if Prof. Phansey hadn’t been joking, firing him for his views would still have been a mistake. Recall John Stuart Mill: “If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind.” Mill’s position is central to anything resembling a free society, but it is even more important to academic culture because without freedom of speech and the freedom to make mistakes, innovation and creativity die.
Sincerely,
Mitchell Langbert, Ph.D.
Postscript: See FIRE's piece on Professor Phansey here.
I urge you to reconsider the firing of Asheen Phansey. I hold diametrically opposite views to Prof. Phansey’s, but more important considerations of freedom of speech and academic freedom should be given priority over matters of taste and opinion. Even if Prof. Phansey hadn’t been joking, firing him for his views would still have been a mistake. Recall John Stuart Mill: “If all mankind minus one, were of one opinion, and only one person were of the contrary opinion, mankind would be no more justified in silencing that one person, than he, if he had the power, would be justified in silencing mankind.” Mill’s position is central to anything resembling a free society, but it is even more important to academic culture because without freedom of speech and the freedom to make mistakes, innovation and creativity die.
Sincerely,
Mitchell Langbert, Ph.D.
Postscript: See FIRE's piece on Professor Phansey here.
Saturday, January 4, 2020
My Panel Talk at the Queens Village Republican Club
The Queens Village Republican Club, the country's oldest Republican club, invited me to participate in a three-professor panel about higher education reform. The chair of the club, Phil Orenstein, is an old friend. The meeting was on January 2, 2020. There were about 100 members in the audience--an enthusiastic group of strong Trump supporters--an oasis in the authoritarian wasteland that was New York City. Phil told me that the club has about 200 dues-paying members. The talk went well, and I made many new friends.
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