So Republicans are more knowledgeable than Democrats,
contrary to what many would like to believe.
According to whom? None
other than the Pew Research Center, a left-of-center organization. Moreover,
Pew’s latest survey only reaffirms previous surveys demonstrating the same
result.
In fact, the results weren’t even close.
In a scientific
survey of 1,168 adults conducted during September and October of last year,
respondents were asked not only multiple-choice questions, but also queries
using maps, photographs and symbols. Among other subjects, participants
identified international leaders, cabinet members, Supreme Court justices,
nations on a world map, the current unemployment and poverty rates and war
casualty totals.
In a 2010 Pew survey, Republicans outperformed
Democrats on 10 of 12 questions, with one tie and Democrats outperforming
Republicans on just 1 of the 12. In the latest survey, however, Republicans
outperformed Democrats on every single one of 19 questions.
Amusingly,
the Pew report attempted to soften the stark partisan knowledge disparity:
“Republicans generally outperformed Democrats on the current quiz. On 13
of the 19 questions, Republicans score significantly higher than Democrats and
there are no questions on which Democrats did better than Republicans. In past
knowledge quizzes, partisan differences have been more muted, though Republicans
often have scored somewhat higher than Democrats.”
“Generally
outperformed?” “Somewhat higher?” That’s a curiously charitable way to describe
the surveys, which went from previous blowouts to a complete shutout in the
latest edition.
Those Pew results are confirmed by some surprising other
sources. According to a New York Times headline dated April 14, 2010, “Poll
Finds Tea Party Backers Wealthier and More Educated.” Shattering widespread
myths, that survey revealed that Tea Party supporters were more likely to
possess a college degree than their counterparts (23% to 15%), and also more
likely to have completed post-graduate studies (14% to 10%). Tea Partiers were
also more likely to have completed “some college” by a 33% to 28% margin, and
substantially less likely to have not completed high school than non-supporters
(3% versus 12%), or to possess only a high school degree (26% versus 35%).
Those results will probably come as a rude awakening to supporters of
Barack Obama, but it won’t to anyone paying attention. As just the latest
example, consider the cheap laugh line that Obama keeps repeating on his current
reelection tour thinly disguised as an energy policy apologia. As gasoline
prices continue to rise due in part to his agenda, Obama likens anyone critical
of his failed energy decisions to a modern-day “Flat Earth Society” in speech
after speech.
The problem for Obama is that his attempted slur betrays
historical illiteracy, as summarized nicely by conservative blogger Clayton
Cramer:
“Now, if you attended high school, or college, you would know
(or should know) that there was no educated European who thought the Earth was
flat. None. The dispute that made it hard for Columbus to get funding was that
he insisted the Earth was 18,000 miles in circumference, so the Indies were a
plausible voyage west from Spain. The experts who told the various governments
of Europe that Columbus wasn’t going to be successful thought the Earth was
closer to 25,000 miles around – and sailing west to the Indies was going to be a
failure. Had there not been the Americas in the way, Columbus and crew would
have died of thirst.”
On his current tour, Obama also inaccurately
maligned former President Rutherford B. Hayes as disdainful of the telephone. As
Mona Charen also noted this week, Obama also “told us that America invented the
automobile and that John F. Kennedy had met with Nikita Kruschev when we were on
the brink of nuclear war,” when in fact the automobile was invented in Germany
and Kennedy actually met Kruschev one year prior to the Cuban Missile Crisis.
This is the same President who referred to “57 states,” misstated the
Citizens United decision in an address to the nation, pronounced Navy “corpsman”
as “corpse-man” and blatantly misrepresented that Japanese automobiles now
average 45 miles per gallon to our 27.5 standard.
Meanwhile, gas prices
continue to break records while the Trash-Talker-in-Chief trots out fraudulent
“flat earth” and “Rutherford B. Hayes” rhetoric.
None of this disparages
anyone of any educational pedigree. It does, however, once again debunk the
notion among preening liberals that they collectively maintain a knowledge or
educational superiority.
http://cfif.org/v/index.php/commentary/54-state-of-affairs/1357-pew-research-republicans-more-knowledgeable-than-democrats
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