Agnostic.com

11 2

I heard a study that showed stupid people are too stupid to know they are indeed stupid. Should there be a very minimal intelligence test in order to vote? If you can't name at least one country on a world map (including the USA), should you be able to choose a world leader? It's discouraging to think one of these people will cancel my vote. Unless of course that I may be too stupid to know I'm stupid.

These folks all identify as Republican but I'm sure there are some Democrats and Independents that qualify.

Jimmy Kimmel live. Can you name a country?

rogueflyer 8 Mar 2
Share

Enjoy being online again!

Welcome to the community of good people who base their values on evidence and appreciate civil discourse - the social network you will enjoy.

Create your free account

11 comments

Feel free to reply to any comment by clicking the "Reply" button.

0

How can you have an opinion on foreign policy or have your child sent to a foreign war when you can't name a single country on a world map? I remember in the 60s parents had sons in Vietnam but didn't know where Vietnam was.

1

I think there ought to be mandatory intelligence testing of both voters, and people seeking public office.

1

Not being able to identify one country is very bad. Seeing something like this is useful because you would think it would not be true. Maybe we should move to testing voters or requiring voters to take educational classes online. I would think all classes or testing should be uniform and agreed upon by the public.

If testing isn't the answer, then there must be other ways to help people get educated. We also need to harness people's genuine concerns and needs in society to keep ourselves on track. Healthcare is a topic where we are all over the place. Our Presedential candidates, our Presidents, our individual states - there is no sense of uniformity, and agreed upon final goal even though if you looked closer and asked voters their concerns would probably all be pretty similar.

Are there other countries where testing or educational classes are used or available? I thought I remembered reading somewhere there was a country where every citizen was automatically registered to vote. It would be something to compare voting practices all over the world.

1

Ignorance is something that can be changed. Willful ignorance is another matter. It is disturbing how many of these people thought their ignorance was amusing..

1

I saw this recently, and was aghast and amazed.

2

Stupidity fucks all progress.

1

And THAT'S why we can't have nice things! STUPIDITY will be the END of us. SMFH!

"IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH!" -- George Orwell, "1984"

"We LOVE the poorly educated!" -- Trunt, 2016

0

It’s interesting that the orientation of the map is Australiocentric and so also disoriented the subjects.

The person incorrectly identifying Mexico pointed to the position it would be in on a Eurocentric map.

So, rote memorization is not enough to survive in this life? Right.

And, what about their being asked to name some european countries, with poor performance.
I see the same map, and answered each of the questions correctly; just saying.

@BirdMan1 Just an observation. My perception of American education is that it is sadly lacking.

@Geoffrey51 And I agree with you. Related to your comment, having moved to Florida, from New Jersey, 8 moths ago, I am already finding a problem with my local libraries. They are lovely, modern, places, but seem to be too heavy invested in fiction rather than nonfiction, which would be educational, for instance.

@BirdMan1 Oh no, that is a challenge. All the air con and coffee pots in the world don’t make up for science, history and well crafted biographies.

Good luck!

@Geoffrey51 Funny that you should mention "well crafted biographies," as i did just finish one (from a library), "In Search of Bill Clinton," by John D. Gartner, Ph. D. A very good book.

@BirdMan1 I bet that’s fascinating.

@Geoffrey51 It was. I usually do not read biographies, non-fiction all over the place, but not biographies. As a psychoanalyst with a Freudian bent, Gartner, interviewed a large number of people who knew Clinton from his childhood on, both about him and his family of origin. The family was dysfunctional, with an alcoholic male parent, and a wild mother. Gartner seems to have figured out who Bill's real father was: a very intelligent physician who was ALSO hypomanic. The hypomania presents Bill with numerous gifts and some shoot-yourself-in-the-foot issues. It is worth a read.

3

I worry about any barrier to voting. Any test can be manipulated by the powers that be to exclude those who are likely to vote for the other side.

0

Many Americans have no idea of European geography so that, I suggest is not an indication of Inrelligence but lack of knowledge.

IQ tests are limited indicators as they are geared to particular types of intelligence.

Education is a factor in what people know or don’t know.

The narrative here sounds like ‘let’s exclude all those people who don’t think like me’

Sounds like the beginnings of the line for the eugenics train heading into Huxley’s Brave New World.

So, what we have here, then, is a comment on how the Exceptional american educational system has filed these people. But, still, at the moment it is funny to watch the ignorance of these people. Ignorance not being used as a pejorative, ere.

2

Having to pass tests or qualifications to vote has a long dark history of being used for voter suppression. There's countless ways it could be gamed. Better to have a system where everyone is required to vote and take the whole voter suppression game out of the equation.

Write Comment
You can include a link to this post in your posts and comments by including the text q:465982
Agnostic does not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content. Read full disclaimer.