Vampires, Zombies, And 'Hooking-Up': 37 Examples Of Real College Courses That Are Almost Too Crazy To Believe

Tyler Durden's picture

Authored by Michael Snyder via The American Dream blog,

You just can’t make this stuff up. 

All over America we push our young people to get good grades so that they can get “a college education”, but then once they get through college many of our young people are completely unequipped to deal with the real world.  Personally, I spent eight years at public universities, and I can tell you that the quality of education that our college students are receiving is a complete joke.  Especially on the undergraduate level, almost all testing consists of either true/false, multiple choice or fill in the blank questions.  Students learn very few useful skills at our “institutions of higher learning”, and many of them leave school barely even able to function in society.

I am about to share with you a list of 37 of the most ridiculous courses that are currently being offered at major U.S. colleges and universities today.  This information comes from a brand new report that was just put out by Young America’s Foundation, and it is tempting to chuckle as you read through what they have compiled, but the truth is that what is happening to our system of higher learning is not a laughing matter.  The following is a short excerpt from the report

As tuition rates increase and students face increasing levels of college-related debt, the value and quality of education plummets. Rather than churning out the next generation of American leaders, so-called “premiere” institutions graduate class after class of adults who are unable to tolerate opposing viewpoints.

 

Many of the courses listed in the following pages are comical in their titles and descriptions, but the situation unfolding on America’s campuses is hardly a laughing matter. Beyond the inane topics, these classes advance a liberal agenda, malign conservatives, and shut out ideological diversity.

 

Since 1995, Young America’s Foundation has released “Comedy and Tragedy” to document the intellectual abuse and flat-out indoctrination happening by way of the appalling curriculum at our country’s most (so-called) prestigious institutions of higher education.

For a long time I have been describing our colleges and universities as “indoctrination centers”, and most parents have absolutely no idea what is really going on at our “institutions of higher education”.  The following are 37 examples of real college courses that are almost too crazy to believe…

#1 MCL 135: Vampires: Evolution of a Sexy Monster (University of Kentucky)

#2 HIST 336: Saints, Witches, and Madwomen (University of Nebraska)

#3 WOMGEN 1225: Leaning In, Hooking Up (Harvard University)

#4 SOAN 261: Campus Sex in the Digital Age (Washington & Lee University)

#5 GSWS 434: The Politics of Ugly (University of Pennsylvania)

#6 AMS 398: FAT: The F-Word and the Public Body (Princeton University)

#7 GWS 462: Hip Hop Feminism (University of Illinois)

#8 GWS 255: Queer Lives, Queer Politics (University of Illinois)

#9 SOC 388: Marriage in the Age of Trump (Davidson College)

#10 HISTORY 330-0: Medieval Sexuality (Northwestern University)

#11 AI 318: Zombies: Modern Myths, Race, and Capitalism (DePaul University)

#12 SOCI 332: Alternative Genders (Texas A&M University)

#13 AMCULT 103: Drag in America (University of Michigan)

#14 AMCULT 334: Race, Gender, Sexuality and U.S. Culture in Video Games (University of Michigan)

#15 AMCULT 411: Rednecks, Queers, and Country Music (University of Michigan)

#16 WGS 255: Deconstructing the Diva (DePaul University)

#17 GLBT 3404: Transnational Sexualities (University of Minnesota)

#18 GSFS 0208: Unruly Bodies: Black Womanhood in Popular Culture (Middlebury College)

#19 MC 2002: Media, Sport and Culture: Amplifying the Sporting-Ism (Louisiana State University)

#20 THEO 025: The Bible and Horror (Georgetown University)

#21 SOAS 3500: Queerness in South Asian Literature and Cinema (University of Iowa)

#22 AADS 2204: Black Women and the Politics of Blackness and Beauty (Vanderbilt University)

#23 AFR 334: Radical Theories of Political Struggle: Anti-Black Racism and the Obama Administration (Williams College)

#24 COLT 0510F: Fidel Castro and Che Guevara, The Men and the Myths (Brown University)

#25 HIST 379: Queering Colonialism (Washington & Lee University)

#26 AMST 274: Rainbow Cowboys (and Girls): Gender, Race, Class, and Sexuality in Westerns (Wellesley College)

#27 AFA 4430: Black Lives Matter (University of Florida)

#28 RELI GU 4355: The African American Prophetic Political Tradition from David Walker to Barack Obama (Columbia University)

#29 RELG 032: Queering God: Feminist and Queer Theology (Swarthmore College)

#30 RELG 033: Queering the Bible (Swarthmore College)

#31 ENVS 042: Ecofeminism (Swarthmore College)

#32 FRSEMR 61D: Trying Socrates in the Age of Trump (Harvard University)

#33 GSWS 2219: Deconstructing Masculinities (Bowdoin College)

#34 GSFS 0325: American Misogyny (Middlebury College)

#35 BLSTU 3850: Gender, Hip Hop, and the Politics of Representation (University of Missouri)

#36 AAS 301: Black to the Future: Science, Fiction, and Society (Princeton University)

#37 SOC 105: Race, Religion, & Donald Trump (Davidson College)

As a bonus, let me share with you 20 more crazy college courses that have been previously offered at colleges and universities around the nation.

This list comes from one of my previous articles, and even though most of these courses are no longer being offered, they still serve as examples of how pathetic our system of “higher education” has truly become in recent years…

1.What If Harry Potter Is Real?” (Appalachian State University) – This course will engage students with questions about the very nature of history. Who decides what history is? Who decides how it is used or mis-used? How does this use or misuse affect us? How can the historical imagination inform literature and fantasy? How can fantasy reshape how we look at history? The Harry Potter novels and films are fertile ground for exploring all of these deeper questions. By looking at the actual geography of the novels, real and imagined historical events portrayed in the novels, the reactions of scholars in all the social sciences to the novels, and the world-wide frenzy inspired by them, students will examine issues of race, class, gender, time, place, the uses of space and movement, the role of multiculturalism in history as well as how to read a novel and how to read scholarly essays to get the most out of them.

2.God, Sex, Chocolate: Desire and the Spiritual Path” (UC San Diego) – Who shapes our desire? Who suffers for it? Do we control our desire or does desire control us? When we yield to desire, do we become more fully ourselves or must we deny it to find an authentic identity beneath? How have religious & philosophical approaches dealt with the problem of desire?

3.GaGa for Gaga: Sex, Gender, and Identity” (The University Of Virginia) – In Graduate Arts & Sciences student Christa Romanosky’s ongoing ENWR 1510 class, “GaGa for Gaga: Sex, Gender, and Identity,” students analyze how the musician pushes social boundaries with her work. For this introductory course to argumentative essay writing, Romanosky chose the Lady Gaga theme to establish an engaging framework for critical analysis.

4.Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame” (The University Of South Carolina) – Lady Gaga may not have much class but now there is a class on her. The University of South Carolina is offering a class called Lady Gaga and the Sociology of Fame.  Mathieu Deflem, the professor teaching the course describes it as aiming to “unravel some of the sociologically relevant dimensions of the fame of Lady Gaga with respect to her music, videos, fashion, and other artistic endeavours.”

5.Philosophy And Star Trek” (Georgetown) – Star Trek is very philosophical. What better way, then, to learn philosophy, than to watch Star Trek, read philosophy, and hash it all out in class? That’s the plan. This course is basically an introduction to certain topics in metaphysics and epistemology philosophy, centered around major philosophical questions that come up again and again in Star Trek. In conjunction with watching Star Trek, we will read excerpts from the writings of great philosophers, extract key concepts and arguments and then analyze those arguments.

6.Invented Languages: Klingon and Beyond” (The University Of Texas) – Why would anyone want to learn Klingon?

7.The Science Of Superheroes” (UC Irvine) – Have you ever wondered if Superman could really bend steel bars? Would a “gamma ray” accident turn you into the Hulk? What is a “spidey-sense”? And just who did think of all these superheroes and their powers? In this seminar, we discuss the science (or lack of science) behind many of the most famous superheroes. Even more amazing, we will discuss what kind of superheroes might be imagined using our current scientific understanding.

8.Learning From YouTube” (Pitzer College) – About 35 students meet in a classroom but work mostly online, where they view YouTube content and post their comments.  Class lessons also are posted and students are encouraged to post videos. One class member, for instance, posted a 1:36-minute video of himself juggling.

9.Arguing with Judge Judy” (UC Berkeley) – TV “Judge” shows have become extremely popular in the last 3-5 years. A fascinating aspect of these shows from a rhetorical point of view is the number of arguments made by the litigants that are utterly illogical, or perversions of standard logic, and yet are used over and over again. For example, when asked “Did you hit the plaintiff?” respondents often say, “If I woulda hit him, he’d be dead!” This reply avoids answering “yes” or “no” by presenting a perverted form of the logical strategy called “a fortiori” argument [“from the stronger”] in Latin. The seminar will be concerned with identifying such apparently popular logical fallacies on “Judge Judy” and “The People’s Court” and discussing why such strategies are so widespread. It is NOT a course about law or “legal reasoning.” Students who are interested in logic, argument, TV, and American popular culture will probably be interested in this course. I emphasize that it is NOT about the application of law or the operations of the court system in general.

10.Elvis As Anthology” (The University Of Iowa) – The class, “Elvis as Anthology,” focuses on Presley’s relationship to African American history, social change, and aesthetics. It focuses not just on Elvis, but on other artists who inspired him and whom he inspired.

11.The Feminist Critique Of Christianity” (The University Of Pennsylvania) – An overview of the past decades of feminist scholarship about Christian and post-Christian historians and theologians who offer a feminist perspective on traditional Christian theology and practice. This course is a critical overview of this material, presented with a summary of Christian biblical studies, history and theology, and with a special interest in constructive attempts at creating a spiritual tradition with women’s experience at the center.

12.Zombies In Popular Media” (Columbia College) – This course explores the history, significance, and representation of the zombie as a figure in horror and fantasy texts. Instruction follows an intense schedule, using critical theory and source media (literature, comics, and films) to spur discussion and exploration of the figure’s many incarnations. Daily assignments focus on reflection and commentary, while final projects foster thoughtful connections between student disciplines and the figure of the zombie.

13.Far Side Entomology” (Oregon State) – For the last 20 years, a scientist at Oregon State University has used Gary Larson’s cartoons as a teaching tool. The result has been a generation of students learning — and laughing — about insects.

14.Interrogating Gender: Centuries of Dramatic Cross-Dressing” (Swarthmore) – Do clothes make the man? Or the woman? Do men make better women? Or women better men? Is gender a costume we put on and take off? Are we really all always in drag? Does gender-bending lead to transcendence or chaos? These questions and their ramifications for liminalities of race, nationality and sexuality will be our focus in a course that examines dramatic works from The Bacchae to M. Butterfly.

15.Oh, Look, a Chicken!” Embracing Distraction as a Way of Knowing (Belmont University) – Students must write papers using their personal research on the five senses. Entsminger reads aloud illustrated books The Simple People and Toby’s Toe to teach lessons about what to value by being alive. Students listen to music while doodling in class. Another project requires students to put themselves in situations where they will be distracted and write a reflection tracking how they got back to their original intent.

16.The Textual Appeal of Tupac Shakur” (University of Washington) – The UW is not the first college with a class dedicated to Shakur — classes on the rapper have been offered at the University of California Berkeley and Harvard — but it is the first to relate Shakur’s work to literature.

17.Cyberporn And Society” (State University of New York at Buffalo) – Undergraduates taking Cyberporn and Society at the State University of New York at Buffalo survey Internet porn sites.

18.Sport For The Spectator” (The Ohio State University) – Develop an appreciation of sport as a spectacle, social event, recreational pursuit, business, and entertainment. Develop the ability to identify issues that affect the sport and spectator behavior.

19.Getting Dressed” (Princeton) – Jenna Weissman Joselit looks over the roomful of freshmen in front of her and asks them to perform a warm-up exercise: Chart the major moments of your lives through clothes. “If you pop open your closet, can you recall your lives?” she posits on the first day of the freshman seminar “Getting Dressed.”

20.How To Watch Television” (Montclair) – This course, open to both broadcasting majors and non-majors, is about analyzing television in the ways and to the extent to which it needs to be understood by its audience. The aim is for students to critically evaluate the role and impact of television in their lives as well as in the life of the culture. The means to achieve this aim is an approach that combines media theory and criticism with media education.

I have to admit that “Oh, Look, a Chicken!” is my all-time favorite.  I wish that had been offered at my university when I was an undergraduate.

But seriously – what in the world has happened to our system of education?

Our society is rotting and decaying in so many ways, and our colleges and universities are prime examples.  If we don’t get our act together, it is hard to see how our country is going to have any sort of a positive future.

*  *  *

Michael Snyder is a Republican candidate for Congress in Idaho’s First Congressional District, and you can learn how you can get involved in the campaign on his official website. His new book entitled “Living A Life That Really Matters” is available in paperback and for the Kindle on Amazon.com.

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wisehiney's picture

"Becoming an educator because you are too stupid to do anything else - 101"

bamawatson's picture

#38 intercourse 101
all you have to do is come

NoDebt's picture

If you need a course in "hooking up" my guess would be that the only woman you ever "hook up" with will be charging you by the hour.  And even that would be a WAY better investment of your money than taking out a loan to go to college to take that course.

13th grade.

 

 

Automatic Choke's picture

Funny, I don't see any math or physics or engineering courses listed above.  

Perhaps the problem only lies within certain departments.

 

El Oregonian's picture

"How to find Zen in the citizen".

Or, Collecting and Weaving a cherished sweater from naval lint.

DownWithYogaPants's picture

You don't get off easy in Engineeering courses very often.  True story.  Had a class called "Heat Transfer" with Professor Hershey.  He had a massive coffee cup collection and would have a different one in his hand every day.  When he would give a test about 5 minutes in he would say "I'm going down to my office now and will not be back before 20 minutes under any circumstances".   It turned into one big kibbutz and was fun. I had one really square friend that would insist on doing the test himself.  We had to laugh cause he didn't pick up on the obvious cues.  Later he ended up marrying a dyke so yes the cues thing is important and if you are an engineer I suggest you get out more.

RAT005's picture

On Wisconsin!!  One list I am glad to see they didn't make.

True story: 3rd semester engineering after saying look to your left, look to your right, one of you won't graduate to a class of around 50 high school top 5 in their class crowd, they explained that the homework was created to be so overwhelming that no one could do it all themselves.  If you couldn't get yourself into a study group to manage the work, you would certainly fail.

NIRP Diggler's picture

"If you need a course in "hooking up" my guess would be that the only woman you ever "hook up" with will be charging you by the hour."

 

Either charging you by the hour or pressing charges within the hour.

bobbbny's picture

I'll have a venti double espresso machiato college girl.

What? They didn't teach you "Starbucks english and it's relevence in the 21st century"?

wee-weed up's picture

 

 

Yep, college & university administrations know..,

that they must bend over backwards to...

please & cater to the selfish, petulant & ignorant...

desires of their Lib snowflake student bodies...

if they want to keep the obscenely...

over-charged tuition dollars flowing in.

Thus ensuring their continued employment...

in their sanctimonous Ivory Towers...

where the real world does not exist.

Bigly's picture

This is not new. Over 20 years ago Pasadena City College had a course on Keanu Reeves movies.

As you can see, many places are a monumental waste of money and time.

JRobby's picture

SOC208: Careening Toward Imbecility (P/F) (Prerequisite SOC 203: Studies of modern popular fallacies)

This Sociology course seeks to quantify how stupid people have become over the past 30 years.

. . . _ _ _ . . .'s picture

"Why would anyone want to learn Klingon?"

Are you shitting me? This is a joke, right?

New_Meat's picture

how else does a knurd talk to a Klingon babe?

God Emperor's picture

No child left behind ..coz zombies !

chunga's picture

^^^ class valedictorian, Porn Spam University

general ambivalent's picture

"Medieval Sexuality" and "The Bible and Horror". Not sure why these are on the list, they at least offer decent intellectual study.

The rest are unbelievable and sad.

Umh's picture

One of the more interesting electives I took was a 4xx level anthropolgy course, "Religion, Magic and Witchcraft". It was more dificult than I expected and it was an interesting perspective on how people think or perhaps don't think is more accurate.

Does anyone else think the Pope is schizophrenic?

LetThemEatRand's picture

"1. “What If Harry Potter Is Real?” (Appalachian State University) – This course will engage students with questions about the very nature of history. Who decides what history is? Who decides how it is used or mis-used? How does this use or misuse affect us? How can the historical imagination inform literature and fantasy? How can fantasy reshape how we look at history? "

Granted there are quite a few silly sounding courses in this list (and no doubt many are silly), but just taking this first example I fail to see why this is a bad thing.  From the description, the course is about teaching the idea that much of history is fictionalized and/or colored by fiction.   "Who decides what history is" is a legitimate question that college students should know to ask in an age where the vast majority of people think, for example, that the Civil War was entirely about slavery and that Lincoln thought black people were all that.

serotonindumptruck's picture

This same course could be characterized in the syllabus by replacing two words.

Instead of "What if Harry Potter is Real"....

...they substitute the the two words "Harry Potter" with "Jesus Christ".

"What if Jesus Christ is real?"

Imagine the outrage.

Dindu Nuffins's picture

A lot of millenials actually do think Harry Potter is real on some level, though, and this only encourages them.

general ambivalent's picture

Yes, unfortunately this is a somewhat natural outcome. Democracy and capitalism created a society of fools and now the universities are reduced to studying the foolishness. It is largely just a feedback loop, but no one wants to question the origins that created this bind.

'Just blame the teenage liberals instead.'

Don Pancho's picture

Thank god the University of North Carolina didn't make the cut or i'd want my money back...

Oh wait, they're still a bunch of snowflakey unicorns...

NVRMND>>>YMMV...

BidnessMan's picture

At UNC the football players did not even bother to go to to the fake classes.  

Following a lesser scandal that began in 2010 involving academic fraud and improper benefits with the university's football program, two hundred allegedly fraudulent classes offered by the university's African and Afro-American Studies department (commonly known as AFAM) came to light. 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_North_Carolina_academic-athl...

Xena fobe's picture

My local community college is offering "barrio Spanish".

Wouldn't want the homies in the hood to misunderstand you. 

A Sentinel's picture

1970’s or early 80’s Cheech and Chong (it made it into one of their movies:

“Mexican America’s love education
so they go to night-school
And take Spanish
And get a B....

That was a joke.. getting a b in your native language was considered shameful.

This is it's picture

It's America, what do u expect? Dumb and dumber. 

Normalcy Bias's picture

NAVIENT DEBT COLLECTION 101

That'll scare the living shit out of those young minds full of mush...

serotonindumptruck's picture

I can recall the Goth chicks from the early to mid 1990s, with their black nail polish and zombie-like appearances.

They were some of the best pieces of ass that one could lay.

Definitely not marriage material, but certainly worth a few weeks of attention.

I never thought that this particular sub-culture would become mainstream.

Normalcy Bias's picture

Damn straight. The few I came across were up for anything.

Xena fobe's picture

Professors with too much time on their hands.  Need to put a shovel or a wrench in their hands and make them do some useful work. 

general ambivalent's picture

More idiots building for the housing bubble isn't a solution. You're just reacting without understanding the core of the problem.

east of eden's picture

You know, over the last few days I have been watching another Ken Burns documentary, on Netflix, that follows the stories of 4 families in the United States, during the Second World War.

I have been truly humbled by the sacrifices that were made in Guadalcanal, Iwo Jima, Europe, by Americans who once knew right from wrong and stood on the right side of the fence.

But then, Truman brought the CIA and the Deep State into existence, and ever since then, the entire society has been destroyed, from the inside, insidiously and maliciously.

Can you ever get back to where you used to be? I am not sure. But I know that you better try very hard, because the alternative is not attractive.

LetThemEatRand's picture

America became great because it was literally the one country in the world where the average guy meant something.  Where the average guy had the power to do things like create weekends (before the labor movement there was no such thing).  Where the average guy had the power to bargain for paid vacation.  Where the average guy had a voice in his own governance because he got together with other average guys and made sure the politicians were not selling the country to the .01%.

The CIA/Deep State are parasites, but they are not the fundamental problem.  The problem is who they work for.

serotonindumptruck's picture

The social programming is near completion.

Many young people enjoy basking in their own perceived individualism.

They desire, more than anything else, to be recognized, identified and appreciated for their own unique personal characteristics and potential contributions to society.

They are desperate to be accepted, and they are very angry.

 

LetThemEatRand's picture

I feel like the jury is still out on young people.  On the one hand, they seem to understand the power of banding together (e.g., crowd funding, Bitcoin, using social media) to achieve something.  This is absolutely critical to taking down the current power structure which no individual can touch.  On the other hand, many young people seem to think this means banding together just to get free shit from the current power structure so they can play video games instead of advancing themselves.  And then there's the group who are useless SJW's who happily will be ass raped by the system if the system will allow them to piss in any gender's bathroom.  It's hard to know where the propaganda about "socialist" young people ends, and where young people who understand that the system needs to change for the benefit of the average Joe, Jane, or Pat ends.  I tend to the pessimist view, but I hope I'm wrong.

serotonindumptruck's picture

One of my personal philosophical tendencies is to try to avoid overly broad social/political generalizations, which seem to be prima facie logical fallacies.

Nobody likes to be categorized and classified according to their perceived political dispositions.

I like to think that there can always be some common ground between historical generations.

If we can't maintain an open mind, and entertain new concepts, then past mistakes are doomed to be repeated in the future.

The biggest problem seems to be in the efforts to bridge the gap between say, Generation Xers and the Millenials.

When you were 25 years old, did you think that you knew everything necessary for a successful life?

Were you willing to listen to some far out old person who was more than twice your age (who wasn't a parent)?

 

 

LetThemEatRand's picture

I hear you, but generalizations are well earned in some cases even if not fair to all.  Like I said, I feel like the jury is out on young people.

serotonindumptruck's picture

I'm not willing to give up on the younger generation, if for anything else, than the fact that they probably have the means to eradicate us "old people" should we become too uppity in our demands.

There just might be a better course of action than to piss off those younger people who might ultimately be in a position to eliminate any influence that we "old folks" might have offered.

Yeah, I've been a few fistfights, and I know that I can take a good punch, but I'm not completely willing to believe that the financial and economic shitstorm that the Millennials are about to inherit will save me from their wrath.

 

 

Gardentoolnumber5's picture

A few memories came to mind from your comment. One was of my uncle who was in the Omaha beach landing, he was one of 3 from his company to survive the landing. When we'd visit I'd always ask my uncle for a war story when I was a kid. My uncle would get a smile on his face and always reply, "Wine and woman." I'd say, no, no, no, a war story, he'd tell me, "I just gave you a war story. As I got old enough to recognize the smile for what it was, his repressing of horrible memories of death, destruction and lost friends, I quit asking. "Wine and woman." He never had a complaint.

The second is as a child we went up to the local elementary school for a meeting in the evening. There were speakers on the stage, roughly 4-6 as my memory recalls and the auditorium/cafeteria was overflowing with parents. We children were outside running wild as kids will do. I had never heard the sound of an angry bunch of adults. As my friends and other kids were running away down the hall playing I had to see what was going on that made so many parents shout with anger at those on the stage. Some of those shouting comments included, "You are not going to teach our children communism!" "What is wrong with teaching them the values of our Founders!!" "What is wrong with teaching the 3 R's and the Founders?!"  Many of the adults, most I'd say were very upset. What were they upset about? They Federal govt had decided to introduce a new course of study into the classroom, Social Studies. Those on the stage tried to assuage those in the audience with answers of, "We are not going to be teaching communism, we are just going to show how good our kids have it compared to other nations around the world." "We are just going to show other cultures." It can never be said that the introduction of communism was not met without a fight and one can see how this slow moving behemoth works on subtle incrementalism. 

I was some years ago visiting a friend who had drank himself into a nursing facility. While visiting I met a WWII Veteran and we talked a bit about Dr Paul and the state of the nation. A tear rolled down his cheek as he said, "This isn't what we fought for." I had asked my Grandmother how we got into WWI, she said, "No body wanted that war." Less than 4 years after the takeover by the central bankers we were at war to spread "democracy". Spread "democracy" for everyone but Germany guaranteeing the continuation of war to fight Fascism. How does one fight fascism? By becoming fascist. The bankers told us we had to fight communism in Korea; how can one fight communism by practicing communism? They called it "Winning hearts and minds." Providing food and medicine to your enemy, otherwise known as communism. Hitler is long gone but we're stuck with Mussolini's fascism. Marx, Lenin, Stalin long gone but we're stuck with their communism. Who wins? Most ZH'er know that answer, the banksters, who have control of everything now and have perpetual war. War, rumors of war, the fastest way to usurp the rights from the people. My sincere hope lies in a Jefferson quote, "

"Though written constitutions may be violated in moments of passion or delusion, yet they furnish a text to which those who are watchful may again rally and recall the people. They fix, too, for the people the principles of their political creed." --Thomas Jefferson to Joseph Priestley, 1802.

Rallying the people... most in Congress could not elucidate the difference between a well constituted republic and democracy.

please excuse typos, grammar and long fingered (winded) rant.

black rifles are cool's picture

Here's one ... "Why Janie can't read:  The fabrication of worthless curriculum in modern academia."

MrBoompi's picture

You think the Fed gives a shit what courses college students take?

. . . _ _ _ . . .'s picture

Schools being set up like this ensure two things: that only the very most interested and focused students get any benefit; that the wage gap continues to grow.

eduard khil's picture

I would totally take philosophy and star trek.

MaxThrust's picture

I went to a very good private school when I was a kid. I was ok with the science subjects but poor at English. My school offered two English options "English" or "English Literature" The English course consisted of reading fiction stories about fictitious charaters. Then writting esays on what it all meant. I failed English. My spelling was poor and I had no idea of what was being said in these fiction books. It was a total waste of my time and I learned practically nothing. The cousre was taught this way becasue this is what English teachers liked teaching.

A better use of my time would have been to be able to right a report on a report. You read a report about let say a crime an then right your conclusion you obtain from this information.

Or you learn how to write a legal argument or read and understand a legal judgement.

We could also have learned how to read a newspaper article with a critical eye.  looking for bias and suposition and slight of hand by the author.

During these English classes I was also required to study Shakespear. To this day I still have no idea what was being said in those plays. To me a Shakespear play may as well been written in Latin because thats about as much I was and are able to understand.

I left this school (aged 18) no better at English than I had arrived. The school had failed me.

AUD's picture

You're still shit at English

gearjammers1's picture

I went to the University of Arizona. I had a pony-tailed Jew English professor who was teaching us to be pro-Israel zombies. If you took the Arab side, he'd mark you down. If you took the Israeli side, you get an A+ .After that, I avoided all the Marxist Jew courses. I stuck to Math which was my only interest. Eventually I lost my funding because I took only Math courses and avoided the Marxist Jew courses. I don't regret it. Three and half years stuffed with nothing but Mathematics. No bullshit Marxist courses. That waa in the early 1980's. These kids are still being taught by creepy pony-tailed Jews.