Imploding Turtle wrote:Do you or do you not agree with the following statement:
All else being equal, someone who has demonstrated, in academia, that they are skilled in researching and fact checking information to the level required to gain a degree is more likely to use those skills elsewhere than someone who might even have those skills in the first place.
This is pretty basic probability theory and I'm sure you're smart enough to know that the statement is true. If not then I don't know how to help you.
Hi IT, did you mean to type "someone who might even have those skills in the first place" - or did you miss out the negative, and meant to type "who might
not even have those skills in the first place?"
You don't get it do you. Just because someone has gained a degree and has learnt a bit about researching and "fact checking" doesn't mean that that is the only way to gain those skills. There are many other ways people can learn these skills, they aren't exclusively learnt at uni.
And, I know you've said "all else being equal" even though there are a great many variables in all our lives and opportunities.
Are you claiming that a uni educated 25 year old is a better judge of something than a 30 year old who didn't attend uni? Never mind someone of 40 or 50 or 60 or more years of "life experience." I can never agree with this view.
As I've said, our democracy is too precious to allow any view that someone with a degree is necessarily better at voting than someone who hasn't.
Why do you claim that democracy can discriminate by educational qualification - but would no longer suggest that discrimination on so many other grounds is acceptable?