Purple wrote:Trick question. Education has nothing to do with intelligence but with willingness to do hard work and study or cheat/pay your way through. I know plenty of college educated people who are very good specialists but are otherwise useless intellectually.
I've known a number of people who are flat out
too stupid to succeed in college.
You may be defining intelligence too narrowly: "That's not really intelligence, that's just a talent for problem-solving or social skills or artistic ability!" I'd argue that
all those things are part of intelligence, even if some specific person hasn't got them.
Of course, this does mean that some intelligent people fall prey to "group-think and indoctrination." This should not come as a shock to you, if you have a slightly realistic understanding of human nature.
HMS Conqueror wrote:This is really the sort of thing I am talking about:
Simon Jester wrote:http://abcnews.go.com/sections/living/U ... _poll.html
Broad general mandate for efforts to ensure universal health care. ~60% agreement that costs are likely to become disturbingly high in the future, even if they aren't already, among those already insured.
The soundbite claim is "60% of Americans want UHC". But if you read the article, it becomes "In an extensive ABCNEWS/Washington Post poll, Americans by a 2-1 margin, 62-32 percent, prefer a universal health insurance program over the current employer-based system. That support, however, is conditional: It falls to fewer than four in 10 if it means a limited choice of doctors, or waiting lists for non-emergency treatments. "
So Americans have 60% support for UHC if the government doesn't decide how much healthcare you get or ration healthcare in any way and generally everything is just as good as it is for the winners under the present system, now except that everyone is a winner and the government pays for it all. Ok. But then you look at a real state healthcare system, like the one in the UK, and you realise that the government
has to decide what it's going to offer you, and because there's no price mechanism, the government has to decide where doctors are and which you can see. And the way UHC is going to stop rising healthcare costs is precisely by rationing the statistically less useful services, to more the sort of level you would get in the UK. And the way the government will pay for it is by raising payroll taxes, so most people don't end up any better off. And then the support drops below 40%.
By comparison, if you asked either of those questions in the UK, you'd get >90% agreement. Probably people would even be confused by the implications of the questions, as if anyone doubted it was a good thing?
That is a (by US standards) left wing majority. And since Britain, like US, is a mostly functional democracy, that is what the public gets.
Personally, I think the answers to a lot of questions like this depend on what people are familiar with.
In the US, if you say "rationed health care," people will not have a frame of reference to describe what rationing means. They may well assume it means "I will die of Exploding Butt Syndrome while waiting on hold to talk to a doctor for eight months" when in fact it means "It's pretty hard to get just-in-case CT scans because lots of people are waiting to use the machines," which are something a lot of Americans couldn't afford anyway. Likewise, how many Americans who claim to oppose universal health care if it hurts their choice of doctor are
already on an insurance program that limits their choice of doctor?
There's a lot of potential here for simply not knowing the details of how another system would work. That's one of the reasons you see a lot of people here who think the American people are 'really' somewhere to the left of what their politics would indicate. Because
what they want is often not something right-wing politics has given them, or will ever give them.
Aside from a few babbling cretins who are full of nonsense like "get your socialist government out of my Social Security!" I think there are very few people who are welcoming the
real consequences of the stated agenda of the Republican Party reaching its logical conclusion. Most of the people who vote for them vote because of a perceived alignment of values that have little to do with policy: "these people are the real America, chock-full of responsibility and good old-fashioned values and determination, and they're not power-hungry, I know that because they want small government!"
The average voter is not a policy wonk; they have always and will always vote in large part based on their perception of personalities and values. Where democracy works, it uses this to its advantage; where it doesn't work, it fails to do so.
I think the "right-wing" or "left-wing" nature of America is largely a question of trust, not of intellectual agreement with right or left-wing policies. The Republican Party is simply better at maneuvering to gain the trust of chunks of the American people, and at making sure they distrust anyone else who comes along. At the same time, American history leads to intense distrust of "socialism" in various guises, and of the far left, because we had H-bombs pointed down our throats by the USSR for thirty years.
Combine those and you get a nation which would probably be far more comfortable with the actual policies of the left than it is with the rhetoric of the left, and which is far more comfortable with the rhetoric of the right than it is with the actual policies of the right.