wrote to the New York Times
Many liberal pundits and newspaper letter writers have been bragging about how brilliant they are while bemoaning the supposed stupidity of those who voted to re-elect President Bush earlier this month.------Liberal hubris So it probably should come as no surprise that two college professors wrote to the New York Times to explain why a recent survey found that Republicans were grossly outnumbered in academia: Republicans simply aren't smart enough to teach at the college level.
''Academics are trained to reason using logic, to question evidence and to consider and evaluate several possible interpretations of events,'' Markus Meister, a professor of biology at Harvard, said in one of two letters published yesterday. ''All these activities are discouraged and indeed ridiculed by the present Republican leadership.''
The professor added: ''Academic Republicans must indeed suffer from cognitive dissonance.''
Mr. Meister's view was echoed by John McCumber, a professor of Germanic languages at UCLA.
''A successful career in academia, after all, requires a willingness to be critical of yourself and to learn from experience, along with a lack of interest in material incentives,'' Mr. McCumber said in his letter. ''All these are antithetical to Republicanism as it has recently come to be.''
By Many liberal pundits letter writ
Many liberal pundits and newspaper letter writers have been bragging about how brilliant they are while bemoaning the supposed stupidity of those who voted to re-elect President Bush earlier this month.------Liberal hubris So it probably should come as no surprise that two college professors wrote to the New York Times to explain why a recent survey found that Republicans were grossly outnumbered in academia: Republicans simply aren't smart enough to teach at the college level.
''Academics are trained to reason using logic, to question evidence and to consider and evaluate several possible interpretations of events,'' Markus Meister, a professor of biology at Harvard, said in one of two letters published yesterday. ''All these activities are discouraged and indeed ridiculed by the present Republican leadership.''
The professor added: ''Academic Republicans must indeed suffer from cognitive dissonance.''
Mr. Meister's view was echoed by John McCumber, a professor of Germanic languages at UCLA.
''A successful career in academia, after all, requires a willingness to be critical of yourself and to learn from experience, along with a lack of interest in material incentives,'' Mr. McCumber said in his letter. ''All these are antithetical to Republicanism as it has recently come to be.''
By Many liberal pundits letter writ