Category Archives: Education

Mr. Omega to Alpha Male Obama: ‘Quit Your Cr-p!’

Barack Obama, Business, Democrats, Education, Elections, Political Economy, Politics

“If I am not for myself, then who will be for me? … And if not now, when?” said Rabbi Hillel the Elder.

At last a fabulously rich, self-made man has awoken to the fact that it’s time to fight for his life’s work; stand up for his achievements, take pride in his intelligence and graft. Quit pretending an agitator from Chicago, who has lived off the public teat for his entire life, is better than a billionaire who has built a business from scratch. Billionaire investor Leon Cooperman has “made public his letter to the President.” Read it on Gerri Willis’ Fox Business blog.

I like the part where he shows president ponce what real work means, although I am sick of the give-back fallacy or the pleas about divisiveness. That the president is divisive is secondary to the fact that he’s an ass with ears, ignorant of economics and oblivious to rights.

To the letter (I think Cooperman is far more eloquent than Peggy Noonan, Court Courtesan to Bush, whom Cooperman praises):

Just to be clear, while I have been richly rewarded by a life of hard work (and a great deal of luck), I was not to-the-manor-born. My father was a plumber who practiced his trade in the South Bronx after he and my mother emigrated from Poland. I was the first member of my family to earn a college degree. I benefited from both a good public education system (P.S. 75, Morris High School and Hunter College, all in the Bronx) and my parents’ constant prodding. When I joined Goldman Sachs following graduation from Columbia University’s business school, I had no money in the bank, a negative net worth, a National Defense Education Act student loan to repay, and a six-month-old child (not to mention his mother, my wife of now 47 years) to support. I had a successful, near-25-year run at Goldman, which I left 20 years ago to start a private investment firm. As a result of my good fortune, I have been able to give away to those less blessed far more than I have spent on myself and my family over a lifetime, and last year I subscribed to Warren Buffet’s Giving Pledge to ensure that my money, properly stewarded, continues to do some good after I’m gone.

My story is anything but unique. I know many people who are similarly situated, by both humble family history and hard-won accomplishment, whose greatest joy in life is to use their resources to sustain their communities. Some have achieved a level of wealth where philanthropy is no longer a by-product of their work but its primary impetus. This is as it should be. We feel privileged to be in a position to give back, and we do. My parents would have expected nothing less of me.

I am not, by training or disposition, a policy wonk, polemicist or pamphleteer. I confess admiration for those who, with greater clarity of expression and command of the relevant statistical details, make these same points with more eloquence and authoritativeness than I can hope to muster. For recent examples, I would point you to “Hunting the Rich” (Leaders, The Economist, September 24, 2011), “The Divider vs. the Thinker” (Peggy Noonan, The Wall Street Journal, October 29, 2011), “Wall Street Occupiers Misdirect Anger” (Christine Todd Whitman, Bloomberg, October 31, 2011), and “Beyond Occupy” (Bill Keller, The New York Times, October 31, 2011) – all, if you haven’t read them, making estimable work of the subject. …

Read more.

‘Generation Jobless’

Business, Economy, Education, Intelligence, Labor, Outsourcing, Race, Racism, Science, Technology

I wonder about those who claim our math and science students are first rank, and blame the high-tech sector and its greed for the “importation” of South and East Asian talent. Sure, there is an abundance of greed (not necessarily harmful in one of the freer sectors of the economy). There is also a requirement to display diversity, even if imported, so as to comport with the diabolic diversity policies peddled by all companies as zealously as do the state and CNN’s Soledad O’Brien. But neither are there any shortages of unskilled Americans in the sciences. Have the reductionists, who refuse to recognize this dumbing down, ever spoken to senior and serious high-tech talent; people who are employed and always overworked, because there are so few of them?

“Although the number of college graduates increased about 29% between 2001 and 2009,” reports the WSJ, “the number graduating with engineering degrees only increased 19%, according to the most recent statistics from the U.S. Dept. of Education. The number with computer and information-sciences degrees decreased 14%. Since students typically set their majors during their sophomore year, the first class that chose their major in the midst of the recession graduated this year.

Students who drop out of science majors and professors who study the phenomenon say that introductory courses are often difficult and abstract. Some students, like Ms. Zhou, say their high schools didn’t prepare them for the level of rigor in the introductory courses. [She’s more honest than the professors. “My ability level was just not there,” says Ms. Zhou of her decision” to drop out from electrical and computer engineering.]

Overall, only 45% of 2011 U.S. high-school graduates who took the ACT test were prepared for college-level math and only 30% of ACT-tested high-school graduates were ready for college-level science, according to a 2011 report by ACT Inc.”

Science classes may also require more time—something U.S. college students may not be willing to commit. In a recent study, sociologists Richard Arum of New York University and Josipa Roksa of the University of Virginia found that the average U.S. student in their sample spent only about 12 to 13 hours a week studying, about half the time spent by students in 1960. They found that math and science—though not engineering—students study on average about three hours more per week than their non-science-major counterparts.

UPDATED: Miseducation Bubble (The Marketing Energizer Bunny)

Business, Debt, Economy, Education, Government, Welfare

“The housing house-of-cards was not the only ‘bubble in search of a pin’ in the modern-day USA. The intellectual bubble is also begging to be burst.” (May 8, 2009) Students have acquired an empty education—for example, a masters degree aimed at “working with nonprofit organizations”—so as to qualify for work in niche “specialties” which are very often spawned and sustained artificially by state-issued fiat money. “The second highest source of income [for nonprofits] is government grants or contracts.”

New York Post: “John Smith, 31, of Brooklyn, works part time at a Trader Joe’s because he hasn’t found work in his field for over a year, despite having a master’s degree. He has about $45,000 in student loan debt. His girlfriend, Meropi Peponides, 27, a graduate student at Columbia University, will have over $50,000 by the time she graduates. … Smith said he has sent out about 200 resumes in his search. He’s looking mainly for work with nonprofit organizations.”

“For the first time, Americans owe more on their student loans than they do on their credit-card bills, with a tally that could soon top $1 trillion — leaving millions of Americans with a crushing debt burden at a time when decent-paying jobs are scarce.”

MORE.

UPDATE (Oct. 24): THE MARKETING ENERGIZER BUNNY. As JP noted, one needs a formal education for a few highly skilled disciplines and professions. For the rest, the return to a classical, canon and core-curriculum oriented education—what used to be called traditionalist—is crucial in secondary school. Someone who can afford it ought to be encouraged to soak up the Western scientific, literary and philosophical canon as a first degree. But this elusive liberal arts, mind-growing education is rare and expensive.

Conservatives are no different from progressives in this matter. How often do you hear the mantra from Beck, “We need to teach kids how to think, not what to think.” Not you don’t! When you expose a child to the riches of the Western canon through top-down, teacher-focused teaching—his mind develops. Teach a youth of Socrates and his analytical method—and what do you think will happen over and above dendritic proliferation in the brain? Higher-order thinking. Ask a child to distill the central idea in a complex essay (which does not deal with diversity or other brain-deadening constructs). Don’t praise him when he gets it wrong. See how well PROCESS works for his thinking. The same holds with math, science, etc. This is what used to be called an education.

Back to fluffy bunny degrees. Marketing is another. The “marketing” types I’ve encountered know little and do NOTHING. They have various degrees and they write letters festooned with “enthusiasm,” “passion,” adoration for the product, Kumbaya, and the occasional obligatory requests for “feedback”—don’t waste your time; they’ll discard or have a panic attack if your recommendations entail pragmatic, result-oriented steps. That’s too much like work. A lunch meeting to discuss your “concerns” or “options”: now that’s the lingo and “action” they are comfortable with.

The marketing types I’ve encountered are incapable of planing and executing the most basic and logical of plans. In my case, they don’t know what an Alexa rank is, and so are positive that their site, ranked 16 millionth by Alexa is where your book sales originate. (Mine, of course, originate on ilanamercer.com, WND.COM and Amazon, and years of GRAFT.) They have no idea how to look at a client’s reach and product and match her with her target buyers. They are incapable of divining their client’s market and optimizing it. You’ve wasted scarce time and energy if you’ve written practical, logical, point-form suggestions for these types to follow.

Some “businessmen” derive masochistic pleasure from rotating these fluffy bunnies (as my husband calls the marketing persona), at considerable expense, one would imagine.

I believe that as an author who does most of the heavy lifting on these sites (which you all enjoy, and wish to support, I hope), I know more about marketing a book to a niche market than the marketing laggards I’ve encountered.

Alas, they draw the salaries. But economic reality is changing this last fact.

The one extremely bright person I have had the pleasure to work with on my last book project was a 20-year old home-schooled prodigy. No higher education. He learned superb programing skills through a mentoring program in his church. However, his intelligence, quick mind unpolluted by the public school, as well as an ability to think clearly and at a speed enabled him to branch out. Needless to say that such abilities and ethics are rare in our workforce. He was quickly poached for managing far bigger projects.

The latter programmer/developer was the only person I’ve worked with who was able to read an email (I number each task clearly. It’s the kind of methodical habit of mind one once acquired at school vicariously; at least I did), answer it, while addressing each of my points/concerns, and then promptly return a demo.

Frankly, well-structured, logical emails that enumerate tasks to be accomplished and problems to be solved have usually elicited a deathly silence in all other programmers/marketers with whom I’ve tried to engage. That’s scary!

Fortunately, and as I also learned in school, breathing is controlled by the autonomic nervous system. Were this not the case, the human energizer/fluffy bunny would already be extinct.

UPDATED: Scheuer: Big Bad Israel Vs. Poor Little Empire (The ‘Sir’ Thing)

America, Anti-Semitism, Education, Foreign Policy, Israel, Political Economy, Technology

Michael Scheuer is so predicable in his attempts to be unpredictable. I knew right away what Scheuer would say when Judge Napolitano, of Freedom Watch, brought up the matter of US spying on Israel. The Jewish State is no ally; it deserves what it gets, said Scheuer.

Oh the contradictions! The likes of Scheuer see the US as a bad actor everywhere around the world. Except when it comes to the Jewish State. When it concerns Israel, big bad America suddenly becomes poor little Empire.

Inconsistency in thinking is never a nice thing to behold.

Scheuer also claimed that Israel has been stealing America’s intellectual property, an assertion for which he offered no evidence.

Who do you think invented Microsoft’s “Kinect,” which is in the Guinness Book of Records as the “Fastest-Selling Consumer Electronics Device” ever? Scheuer would like to claim the invention for the US, but it belongs to an Israeli outfit called PrimeSense.

Jealously is as ugly as inconsistency. My sources in the high-tech industry confirm that Israel has been on the cutting edge for quite sometime. Significant is the trend. And it is unmistakable: “Emerging markets,” as Israel is, are becoming freer, whereas America is becoming less free. The devil is in that detail.

Moreover, there is the issue of education. Take Germany. It is socialistic like Israel, but has a splendid education system, which remains unburdened by political correctness. The Germans run the same sort of schools I attended growing up in Israel, where, because no pedagogue believes all kids are created equal, students are streamed into different tracks. Israel, I suspect, is unencumbered by the kind of education system that graduates retarded kids as America does.

UPDATE: THE “SIR” THING. Kerry, it’s uncanny. I was thinking the same. Scheuer’s habit of saying “Sir” constantly is his way of appearing like a straight arrow. You know; like man with military discipline. “Take what I say to the bank, Sir.” It’s so phony.