( I doubt that even this online course would help to understand libtardville..... )
Franklin Roosevelt, Lyndon Johnson, and Barack Obama all called themselves liberals, but their ideas and policies differed greatly. In a new free online course, “The American Left,” Hillsdale College Professor Kevin Slack explains the distinctions between these “liberal” politicians and what these changes mean for Americans today.
ONLINE.HILLSDALE.EDU
Reserve your spot now.
Learn how the American Left has radicalized over the past century and why it threatens our rights today.
Discover the Origins and Key Ideas of the Modern American Left
American politics has been transformed in recent years as large portions of the federal bureaucracy, military, the media, and corporate America have embraced the ideas of the 1960s radical Left.
This transformation has brought ideas like transgenderism, identity politics, and global government—which were formerly relegated to the fringes of academia—into the mainstream of American public life. The result of this turn can be seen in the radical gender ideology pushed in our nation’s classrooms, the lawlessness at our border and in many of our cities, and the economic policies that continue to hollow out the American middle class.
Our free online course, “The American Left: From Liberalism to Despotism,” aims to explain the source of these radical movements and charts how they have overtaken America’s institutions.
In this course, you’ll discover:
- the differences between midcentury liberals and the radicals who revolted against them.
- how post-sixties radicals gained power in government bureaucracies and educational institutions.
- the principles of neoliberalism that arose in the late 1970s and how these ideas changed the morality and economy of America.
- the reasons America’s political and business elite embraced the woke ideology of the Left during Barack Obama’s second term.
The course includes 11 lectures, each approximately 30 minutes long. You can receive a completion certificate for the course by watching the lecture videos, submitting a short quiz after each lecture, and passing a comprehensive course quiz at the end. You will also have access to optional materials to aid your learning: supplementary Q and A videos, study guides, and a discussion board. The best part is that you can do all of this at your own pace and in a manner that best fits your schedule.
These lessons are designed to explain the nature and direction of politics today and to provide a path for a return to republican government in America.