Perhaps. However, you are splitting hairs here. I am quite familar with the lives and careers of both. I will admit that Einstein was not necessarily thrilled with the classroom setting but he enjoyed the general spreading and discovering of new ideas. He did it primarily through papers and discussions with colleagues but it is still teaching in some way.It's a joke. Would all you teacher types please stop being so hyper-sensitive. Sheesh. I'm have a public education so you should cut me some slack. (that is a joke too).
Actually, if more teachers would challange their marxist peers I think you would be suprised by how quickly all those sterotypes you all complain about dissolve away.
Now back to the topic. Walt loved freedom. Marx and Hitler didn't. End of lesson.
PS- To a previous poster/teacher, Einstein and Newton were primarily physicists. Please don't teach your students they were school teachers.
Most western political philosophy is dark. Plato, Hobbes, Rousseau, Locke, Aristotle, Marx, etc. I would also add the glowing view of humanity that some of America's founders had. Political philosophies are dark because they try and address the proper way to control that flawed but fascinating being known as man. They try and take an honest look at humanity, which is not always pretty.I never said they never taught. I said they were primarily physicists and not teachers by any means. Your comprehension ability is lacking. I have read Marx. It is one dark philosophy and if you think otherwise it is a reflection of my first point.
I feel pity for you. Actual pity.
You are all free to believe what you want and even express such (this isn't Cuba, China or North Korea afterall). Just don't tread on me!
Guilty as charged. But I am trying to keep it civil at least.Bring in the Captian Picard pic!
Man, we've been using that picture alarmingly alot lately...
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