(Part 2) Top products from r/Liberal

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We found 7 product mentions on r/Liberal. We ranked the 27 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/Liberal:

u/tob_krean · 3 pointsr/Liberal

> Here's the problem I have with liberal arts: other people have to pay for that education.

And here is the problem I have with people in this country. We have gotten so concerned about "what other people are paying for" that we don't even stop to question if any of us are getting our money's worth, including you.

It is the collective jealousy that "someone might be getting something for nothing" or might be getting ahead of our own station that we pull each other down in a race to the bottom, and its sad, and it needs to stop.

And we're not even talking about subsidizing education here, something that many other industrialized countries have while we instead build up elite universities that other countries send their students to but our own citizens' can't fully enjoy (with the exception of the online MIT university, I will commend that).

In essence, you seem to be bitching about the fact that these programs even exist and I find that pretty shallow.

> I agree with you things such as philosophy, sociology and English. Those are majors that require work and effort to excel in. The other degrees do not.

That's simply your opinion. Speaking as someone who excelled in English yet never cared for it, appreciated the timelessness of Shakespeare supporting others pursuit of it, I actually got the most out of journalism and if I were like you I'd say all English majors are useless. But I don't actually feel that way, and if I did, I would be wrong to do so.

> At my school, the history program is the cesspool for every student that can't get into a major (where I go to the majors are competitive).

Yup, I know. CivilEng here, remember? What I found instead is that the "competitive" environment was to a certain extent BS, that cookie cutter curriculum fed by TA drones fostered a lot of people who went through the motions. It was a reasonable state school, but not everyone was learning there because it was a tired formula.

Where did I find people with a high degree of creativity? The arts.

And likely some of those students might have benefited from that as well because I blame the program, not really the students. I stepped away from it when I couldn't get what I wanted out of the program and got tired of Simon Says.

Make no mistake, I also give an equally hard time to those in the arts who question the value of higher level math and science. It cuts both ways. I'm not simply singling out.

Had the Internet not exploded when it did I would have gone back, but instead I am probably more successful as a person embracing a multi-disciplinarian approach. Besides, its not like as a civil engineer I might find enough work. We aren't maintaining our infrastructure anymore anyway... /sarcasm, in jest.

> These are people who on average aren't doing more than one hour of homework a week. No motivation or critical learning is being acquired. The only skills these people are improving on is the ability to drink heavily.

That's your problem. Stereotyping based on just your personal experiences combined with a heavy does of jealousy. No offense, but to take this position you aren't doing much critical or creative thinking yourself. What you see doesn't condemn the academic discipline, just their implementation of it.

You also would be surprised how many "dumb" people have power and are moving up the ladder at happy hour. Again, I kid, but some of these people might be learning networking skills. Can't say how many people I've seen bust their ass to be outdone but people who knock back a few because they know the right people. This I'm actually not kidding about. Not to say those skills are really developed at a kegger, but I can say those who are just stuck in a book will be in for a rude awakening when someone half as qualified with the ability to schmooze sneaks past them.

You're proud of your studies as an electrical engineer. And you should be. Know what I'm proud of? Investing in a program that helped take a kid from a problematic background and combined with opportunities at school and in our arts group because a successful technical director in NYC theaters and electrician at Juilliard. So forgive me if I'm less than impressed with the position you put forth.

How does that saying go, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

> And the issue about polymaths.

Is that you don't understand them? A polymath is simply "a person whose expertise spans a significant number of different subject areas" and while the fact that I used DaVinci may have confused you, it shouldn't have. I simply used it to show the duality of art and science.

Benjamin Franklin would have been another good example. Or the guy down the street that tinkers with stuff and also paints murals.

Simply put, Polymath means the ability to be able to have a greater understanding of many disciplines, especially on the left and right sides of the brain. But see you then talk about "meaningful academic contributions" when I never said this was a requirement. Meaningful contributions to society is another matter.

A person could be like Douglas Hofstadter which arguably made contributions in his field, but he didn't set out to wake up one say and say "I'm going to make contributions in my field", he simply as himself and let his curiosity and imagination take him wherever it lead. Read Metamagical Themas or Gödel, Escher, Bach: an Eternal Golden Braid Do you think he got his start by someone telling him to "go get a job" or "have marketable skills"? Hardly.

For that matter, I'm a polymath because my multi-disciplinary approach lets me interface and relate to more people. Its not about becoming published. That's actually what's wrong with our university level education.

What you run the risk of with your attitude is becoming a white-collar Joe-The-Plumber. We have a country filled with people who no longer are getting a well rounded education anymore. We have a Balkanization of people into various disciplines, sub-disciplines and ideologies yet have a shortage of people who can relate in a meaningful way to those outside their circle. That's why politics have become so partisan.

We need visionaries to help build the next generation of development and your approach does NOTHING to foster them.

So you may ask "why do we need another art history major" as if that is really the issue here, and I ask "perhaps if we stopped waging so many wars, we wouldn't need as many engineers developing electronics for high-tech weapons systems?" To me, you seem like a Chris Knight who has yet to meet your Laslo Hollyfeld.

The weekend is coming up. Why not put the books down for a few hours and step out into the world and interact with a few people from a different discipline than yourself. The worst that could happen is that you might learn something new.

u/pinkerton_jones · 13 pointsr/Liberal

If folks are really having trouble coping turn to Seneca, private tutor of Nero and one of the great authorities on Stoicism:

https://www.amazon.com/Revenge-Complete-Lucius-Annaeus-Seneca/dp/0226748421

This isn't our first rodeo as a culture with a tyrannical leader and you do not need to burn out. You do need to learn how to handle your emotions so you can continue with your life.

Please try to get a copy of the book from Amazon or your library. It looks like used copies run for about $11 and it's worth it.

u/FantasticMikey · 1 pointr/Liberal

I highly recommend the book "The Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion" - it's about this very thing. About how we usually make up our judgements based on feeling, then justify our judgements with reasoning. When we go to talk to someone else about it, we're using reasoning, but they're still on feeling.

u/UtimateAgentM · 2 pointsr/Liberal

http://2012.presidential-candidates.org/Obama/Social-Security.php


Some quick Googling will get you to these answers. Also, I'd highly recommend you read some of Krugman's books, including his newest: "End This Depression Now!" If you're unsure about the Democratic stances on fiscal policy (including PPACA, Medicare, and Social Security) Krugman actually lays out liberal fiscal policy in a very strong, understandable manner.

u/podcastman · 1 pointr/Liberal

When are you going to start discussing the issues? I suspect neoliberalism is out of your league, since you don't know appear to know anything about it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoliberalism

http://www.amazon.com/Brief-History-Neoliberalism-David-Harvey/dp/0199283273