Goodbye Brains
I want to mention something and get your take. I do a lot of business...meaning - I work a lot, rely on a lot of different people to work with me. This is above and beyond the waiter we all deal with who screws up our order, and the accountant who fills out the forms wrong, etc. Over the past few years I have noticed that almost nobody does their job right anymore. I actually wonder if people are just getting dumbed down, poisoned by something in the water, generally just pissed off, or if there's something else going on. I work with another business our office has done work with for several years. As I'm learning what this office does I'm now forced to ask them, "What do you do for us?" Because, it appears that they don't do anything. They just have a contract with us (that I'm requesting today so I can read it). I mean...I actually find business arrangements like that which have just degraded into nothingness (with nobody able to say why). Hard to explain (as I just have a few minutes and need to jet). But, in the professional world and general public I'm seeing this mass incompetence. What the hell is going on? Anybody else see this?
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Me? Anti-Intellectual? Nonsense.
I am, however, anti pretentious intellectual. Perhaps it's my writer's training . I follow the Hemmingway school. When interviewed by an adoring female she said, "Your books are so full of...." Hemmingway interrupted, "Short sentences." Plus, if you can demonstrate to me how knowing what a participle is and does will help a writer put together a coherent thought, I'd love to see it. In summation: Anti intellectual thought and behavior on my part depends entirely on the supposedly intellectual expressing it.
One further thought, Mike. Perhaps you don't have a sense of humor.
I consider the service at Walmart fair-to-middling at
best, and awful at worst. But those places sell a
lot of Communist crap (which I don't buy, of course;I look over the merchandise very care-
fully before purchasing it). I consider dealing
in that stuff supporting slavery. But people who
don't mind doing that are likely not to treat their
employees very well, and then it is not surpris-
ing if employees in that situation are not very
nice to the customers.
On the other hand, I trust that your graphics people were good at that. Your problem was that they could not tell stories. They taught themselves how to draw, admittedly, in many cases with the help of good teachers who also were artists. My experience in school is that the art teachers were better artists than the English teachers were writers. English teachers are readers. It would be like finding an art teacher who enjoys the museum but does not draw or paint.
Graphic novels were never encouraged in school, of course. In my day, teachers hit kids who were caught with comic books. However, I confess that i got through literature classes by relying on Classics Illustrated.
Grammar, which used to be a year long endeavor in 7th grade is now nothing but ...
When I was in school in the 1950s and 1960s, Cleveland Public had a 30-year history of "tracks" for general, business, and college-bound students. For all of us, one semester 7 through 12 was grammar and one semester 7 through 12 was literature. For most of it, the literature was general, but specialized to American in the 11th grade and English in the 12th, including options for "academically talented" as well as "advanced placement" for college credit. Grammar followed similar lines of development from easy to sophisticated.
I work as a professional writer. At a used book store, I found our 12th grade grammar book, and was happy to pay the discount price. I mean, I have Chicago, and Columbia, and all those, but styles guides are not grammar books: why it must be that way; just so you know...
I hate to have to say it, but your anti-intellectual attitude is just the other side of their coin. And this is not unusual for you or to you. You have expressed those sentiments before, and other conservatives do, too.
He rocks, in so many ways!
For example... https://www.prod.facebook.com/Astrono...
There are many.
Semi-short story (as usual) from me...
Maybe 20 years ago, my department manager came to me on a Friday Afternoon and said, "Alan, I really appreciate your maturity and ability to solve problems we run into in our department and with our Sales Rep customers and their customers. But I don't see that kind of thinking in many of the others in our group. Can you please tell me how to hire 'more people like you'? What should I look for?"
I replied that that's a tough question... give me the weekend to think it over, ok? He agreed.
Monday morning he walked over and asked me if I'd figured out the answer. I replied,
"Yes... Don't hire anyone under 40 years old."
I've been trying to figure out "what changed" ever since and have come up with several possibilities but no clearly Root Causes.
That's probably why, in MY retirement, I focus so much on blog sites where bitchin' is the Way of Life, trying to teach Critical Thinking as a potential Way Out.
Good luck to us all. Recent developments on college campuses and in political circuses have been very discouraging to me. Probably why I like to sleep alot, though turning 70 may have had some impact, too.
:)
Kids are no longer taught to conjugate verbs. Heck, they don't even know what a preposition is, much less can they tell you what 'past participle' means. They do not graph sentences. Grammar, which used to be a year long endeavor in 7th grade is now nothing but reading, reading, and more reading. No reports are required until at least the 9th grade when its apparent that those 9th graders, like you say, cannot write worth a the price of the sheets of paper provided. Those with signs of some writing skill are permitted to proceed on to 'Advanced Composition' in my kids' district. That's 25-40 kids for a 700-person class size. (~4-6% of the students)
The current generation of Millennials has hardly had to lift a finger to graduate, either. Grade inflation has become the norm as teachers are ghastly afraid to fail any student regardless of ineptitude. They graduate high school with the expectation that effort is not required; that life will just provide stuff. I.e., that the government will give them whatever subsistence they believe they are entitled. Fervor for work, accomplishment, achievement, setting goals are all concepts as foreign as old-folks talking about days sans smart phones.
As a nation, we are in grave danger. You think finding a writer is hard... wait until you need to hire a Millennial.
and keep your options open! -- j
.
having studied for it for 30 years, I aced the PE ... and
worked it for 30 more, then retired. . back off when you
can, sir;;; it's fun! -- j
.
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