It’s anecdotal, not that I don’t believe MP, or Coco for that matter, in fact I have a lot of time for both of their opinions; however, as you say, ‘the USA is basically a load of smaller countries put together’ so what MP sees in Philly isn’t necessarily what happens in the rest of the country or indeed in the primary school down the road. Ditto Coco latching onto a handful of stories in a country of over 300mil though the idea that she has no ‘actual, real world experience’ is pretty laughable given here we are in Europe on a rugby chat board telling her what to think.Stom wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 10:55 amCashead is not the rest of us. And Coco has yet to react to Morepork, the only one with actual, real world experience in the "situations" she describes.Donny osmond wrote: ↑Sat Nov 09, 2024 8:39 am
Absolutely loving all the non American men explaining to the American woman how and why she's wrong about American society and politics, then throwing in a few insults for good measure. This is what everyone loves about the Left.
Not sure why I’m replying as this argument is sooo boring and miles from the really, really important stuff that will happen in the next four years, other than both things can be true, ie there will be institutions with their sole focus on academic rigour as there will be institutions with ideas on teaching on cultural issues. Both can be true at the same time and as much as we can have a go at people’s sources you can also look more critically at your own sources… In fact, from what I’ve read on the subject, just being told your sources aren’t believable and you’re thick for believing them (whilst simultaneously ignoring that your media of choice is probably almost as/just as/more skewed) makes someone less likely to change their mind.
My final thought, as alluded to previously, is I’ve no idea why Coco or MP give a flying f**k what people in a foreign country with no first hand experience of their world think about their political decisions.