Baltimore Sun

The right don’t need no education

- Paul Krugman Krugman is a columnist for The New York Times.

Ron DeSantis, who is currently governor of Florida and wants to become president, has been trying to position himself as America’s leading crusader against wokeness.

And lately, higher education has become his most visible target.

He picked a very public fight with the College Board over its new advanced placement course in African American studies, and has recently broadened that attack into a suggestion that Florida might stop offering AP classes in any field.

What’s going on here? It’s easy to get drawn into debating accusation­s about particular courses or institutio­ns, but that’s missing the fundamenta­l context: the extraordin­ary rise in right-wing hostility to higher education in general.

Is every accusation about left-leaning professors trying to indoctrina­te students false? Probably not: America is a big country, and it surely must be happening somewhere — although the specific charges made by right-wing critics are often ludicrous. In a meeting with the College Board, Florida officials asked whether the new AP course was “trying to advance Black Panther thinking.” Guys, the Black Panthers closed up shop when Ron DeSantis was a little kid; say the words now and most people think you’re talking about Wakanda.

It is true that college faculty members are much more likely to identify themselves as liberal and vote Democratic than the public at large. But this needn’t be evidence of anti-conservati­ve bias. Much of it surely reflects self-selection: What kind of person decides to pursue academics as a career? To make a comparison: The police skew Republican, but I presume that everyone accepts that this mainly involves who wants to be a police officer.

So what’s really driving the attacks on higher education?

Not that long ago, most Americans in both parties believed that colleges had a positive effect on the United States. Since the rise of Trumpism, however, Republican­s have turned very negative. Recent polling shows an overwhelmi­ng majority of Republican­s agreeing that both college professors and high schools are trying to “teach liberal propaganda.”

But what actually happened here?

Did America’s colleges — which a large majority of Republican­s considered to have a positive influence as recently as 2015 — suddenly become centers of leftwing indoctrina­tion? Did the same thing happen to high schools, run by local boards, across the nation?

Of course not. What happened was that MAGA politician­s began peddling scare stories about education — notably, denouncing high schools for teaching critical race theory, even though they don’t. And right-wingers also greatly expanded their definition of what counts as “liberal propaganda.”

Thus, when one points out that schools don’t actually teach critical race theory, the response tends to be that while they may not use the term, they do teach students that racism was long a major force in America, and its effects linger to this day. I don’t know how you teach our nation’s history honestly without mentioning these facts — but in the eyes of a substantia­l number of voters, teaching uncomforta­ble facts is indeed a form of liberal propaganda.

And once that’s your mindset, you see left-wing indoctrina­tion happening everywhere, not just in history and the social sciences. If a biology class explains the theory of evolution, and why almost all scientists accept it — or, for that matter, the theory of how vaccines work — well, that’s liberal propaganda. If a physics class explains how greenhouse gas emissions can change the climate — well, that’s more liberal propaganda.

And so a large segment of the population — the segment DeSantis is courting — has become hostile to higher education as a whole.

As an aside, it’s a familiar fact that

U.S. politics is increasing­ly polarized along educationa­l lines, with the highly educated supporting Democrats and the less-educated supporting Republican­s. This polarizati­on is often portrayed as a symptom of Democratic failure — why can’t the party win over working-class white voters? But it’s equally valid to ask how Republican­s have managed to alienate educated voters who might benefit from tax cuts. And the party’s growing hostility to education is surely part of the answer.

In any case, one sad thing is that this turn against education is taking place precisely at a time when highly educated workers are becoming ever more crucial to the economy. This is especially obvious when you look at regional data within the United States: The college-educated percentage of a city’s population is a powerful predictor of both its current prosperity and its future growth.

That’s not to say that U.S. higher education is perfect. In general, we surely fetishize the standard four-year degree, which isn’t appropriat­e for everyone, and grossly neglect forms of education, such as apprentice­ships, that might be more useful to many people. But that’s a whole other story.

For now, the important thing to understand is that people like DeSantis are attacking education, not because it teaches liberal propaganda, but because it fails to sustain the ignorance they want to preserve.

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