Really, does the WSJ Op-Ed page have any cachet left? I would hold the info my 3 yr old tells me as more credible than what's printed there.
Really, does the WSJ Op-Ed page have any cachet left? I would hold the info my 3 yr old tells me as more credible than what's printed there.
With PAC and superPACs being what they are it should come as little surprise.
This reminds me of some guy, don't know who it was, who was trying to pass legislation to ban fetuses in food because of some article he read.
Charlton Heston?
I am going to post this, and hope that no one NO ONE sees it as an attempt to in any way defend or validate WC. He is so wrong that he has gone past wrong, I don't know what to call it, but it is sub-wrong somehow. That being said Lewis and Clark College is actually an extremely well regarded school and when I graduated high school it was among the top 5 for international business degrees. I received a full ride including room and board to that school because I was so damn smart(then made the dumbest move ever, but in the end we can't dwell too hard on our regrets).
THAT being said, this college would most likely accept UC's history classes as.....HISTORY CLASSES.
Spurstalk delivers - again!
LOL...
Did you read the footnotes for the ones that would count?
"not offered in 2011-2012"
Is it slated to be discontinues?
You can only for 2 seconds?
Anyway, yes. This is one of the three I found that has American History classes. Davis and San Diego also have US history classes.
Man, WC. You are redefining fail with every post.
Yes, I did hear that. I was paying attention.
She gave one example that had US history... Davis... and one that didn't... SF...
I was asking if there were more after I stopped listening.
I don't see that as a 3 digit HIUS number. Do you?
Bingo...
You found what I was looking for. Too bad I only found three of the 10 schools that have this series of classes.
Where are the others besides San Diego, Davis, and Santa Barbara?
Lets see...
I didn't take this new math you guys took, but isn't 10 minus 3 still equal to 7?
You're an idiot.
You're wrong. Man the up and admit it.
LOL...
You're losing it.
Every time I think this loon Wild Cobra has achieved the top level of idiocy, I'm quickly proven wrong.
Impressive.
he's not faking it..
LOL...
still doubling down on the bull .
http://reg.ucsc.edu/catalog/html/und...cad.html#gened
I would point out that smaller colleges might go a semester, or even, it seems, 4 without teaching things that are required to graduate.
The courses are then offered after this gap, and everybody take them.
It isn't as if they don't exist, or aren't a requirement.
Once again, if Santorum didn't mention this in context, he was either ignorant or deliberately deceiving.
Which do you think it is?
Indeed. We are, but not in the way you would like to think.
I try really hard to force myself to have some respect for you. Then you go off and do something like this.
It would be an interesting exercise to cobble together your stupidity here into one post.
Then, the next time you start blathering about the your climate scientist conspiracy theory just link that one post.
No credibility for you.
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Santorum is a bonehead, with some of the things he says, so it's hard to be sure. I think he was probably parroting what someone else had told him, because I seriously doubt that he took the time to research the course catalogs.
Like I said, I don't know, but maybe the person was referencing the fact that the history courses that are taught all come with some peculiar ideological slant. This is one of the few "plain" American history courses at Berkeley. It could just as easily be called "How the White Man Kept a Brother Down". I'm pretty sure that there were some interesting historical things that happened between settlement and Civil War, but they don't teach them.
The United States from Settlement to Civil War -- History (HISTORY) 7A
There are two main themes: one is to understand the origin of the "groups" we call European-Americans, Native-Americans, and African-Americans; the second, is to understand how democratic political ins utions emerged in the United States in this period in the context of an economy that depended on slave labor and violent land acquisition.
110B. Revolutionary America, 1740-1815. S
Explores the political, social, economic, and cultural development of British North America from the first stirrings of resistance to the establishment of the U.S. Course 110A is not a prerequisite to course 110B. Satisfies American History and Ins utions Requirement. G. O'Malley
110D. The Civil War Era. F
Social, political, and economic history of the American Civil War and Reconstruction, focusing on the war's changing nature and significance, emancipation, and the postwar struggle over the future of the South and the nation. C. Jones
110E. What Is a Nation? The U.S. from 1877 to 1914. F
History of the U.S. during what was perhaps its most socially turbulent era, the period following Reconstruction through the First World War. What did it mean to be a nation in the post-Reconstruction era? How did a country that had only recently unified itself under one system of labor now resolve the question of national iden y? Was America truly a nation by 1914? M. Lasar
Did your pappy skull stupid into your head when you were young?
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