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This professor needs a kick in the teeth
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One comment brought up a more rational comparison: the molestation of a one-year old--who wouldn't remember the assault-- as opposed to an older child who would.
And if that needs debating...I have a drawing of an orange, which proves I am a semi-tangible collection of pixels forming a somewhat coherent image manifested from the intoxicated mind of a madman. Naturally.
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See, at first I thought he might be an ethics professor, and I'd have kind of given him a pass on that. Ethics professors say things all the time that sound really horrible, because that's their job. It's the same as the mathematics guy who devised the proof for "1 + 1 = 2" They're making a statement that sounds horrible, because they want to be proven wrong.
But he's an economics professor.
So he's just a fuckhead."Nam castum esse decet pium poetam
ipsum, versiculos nihil necessest"
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he also thinks the poor don't deserve life support
In my experience, econ professors are the most boring and opinionated people you'll meet, but as bad as the ones I had were, they would never stoop this low.
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Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostWhy does he still have a job?
I will also say that I wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt based on the original story, as in, that he was simply proposing a thought experiment and challenging people's outrage to see the reactions, and that he wasn't actually saying that rape wasn't a big deal. But based on his agreement with Rush Limbaugh on the birth control fiasco last year, and the article about him thinking the poor don't deserve life support, I will withdraw that benefit. He's a jackass.Last edited by Jaden; 04-04-2013, 03:47 AM.
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Sorry; for some reason I'd got the impression he *was* speaking in his capacity as a professor of that school. Much as I hate it sometimes, no, people shouldn't be fired for opinions expressed off the job.
As a thought experiment, it's interesting. As anything not clearly, explicitly, inarguably labeled as not for real-world purposes, it's horrifying."My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostSorry; for some reason I'd got the impression he *was* speaking in his capacity as a professor of that school. Much as I hate it sometimes, no, people shouldn't be fired for opinions expressed off the job.I am a sexy shoeless god of war!
Minus the sexy and I'm wearing shoes.
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Originally posted by Nyoibo View PostIn this case though, if he's is letting his personal views, which he is rather outspoken with, affect his teaching or encroach on his teaching then he should be fired, that being said, there's not a huge amount of room for personal feelings soley in economics.
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Originally posted by Rageaholic View PostIronic since the econ professors I've had were some of the most opinionated people I've ever met.
But econ profs tend to see the whole world in terms of econ anyway. So, to an extent, his analysis is right...from a cost/benefit point of view. There's limited/no cost to the victim, and major benefits to the attacker. It's a win situation in econ.
The only major problem is, as a Slate columnist points out, he is going off the assumption that a person doesn't control their body when they are knocked out like that. He likens it to a "property dispute".
That's a definite what the hell moment for me.
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Economics... so, if I, a total stranger, stay in your house while you're on vacation, using the key you left on the windowsill rather than breaking in, not making a mess or anything, and leaving before you come back, that should be legal because you'd never know about it?"My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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