The occasional, often ill-considered thoughts of a Roman Catholic permanent deacon who is ever grateful to God for his existence. Despite the strangeness we encounter in this life, all the suffering we witness and endure, being is good, so good I am sometimes unable to contain my joy. Deo gratias!


Although I am an ordained deacon of the Catholic Church, the opinions expressed in this blog are my personal opinions. In offering these personal opinions I am not acting as a representative of the Church or any Church organization.

Monday, July 25, 2011

A Changing, Odd World

Here are a few interesting facts about life today, including a few that certainly took me by surprise...

Higher Education. An increasing number of people are receiving master's degrees these days. According to Debra W. Stewart, president of the Council of Graduate Schools, nearly 2 in 25 people age 25 and over hold a master’s degree. This is about the same proportion that had a bachelor’s or higher in 1960. It would seem that grade creep has now expanded into degree creep, as a growing number of employers include an advanced degree among the qualifications for many jobs. Increased specialization has become the desired educational outcome, as students follow a path that begins in middle school and leads them all the way to graduate school. Along the way they receive plenty of job training, but the one thing they no longer receive is an education. To read more check out the NY Times article: The Master’s as the New Bachelor’s.

Fakirs are fakers. Oh, my, another bubble burst. All those yoga masters who for years have been generating all kinds of oohs and aahs with their levitations are actually phonies. Check out this video that's created quite a stir on YouTube:


How old is old? To all you folks who think you're going to live forever, here's some sobering news: Don't expect to live past 114, at the most, 115. Of the past nine people who have held the title of oldest human being all but one reached this milestone at the age of 114, and only two lived past the age of 114. The other two made it to 115 before entering eternity. To read more: The World's Deadliest Distinction.

Economic Freedom and Poverty. Among my favorite organizations is the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, which in their words "is a non-profit, non-partisan, tax-exempt educational organization whose purpose is to further in successive generations of college students a better understanding of the values and institutions that sustain a free and humane society." I especially like their books and journals, which are available online at very reasonable prices. And if you join ISI ($25 for us who are neither faculty or students) you get some very deep discounts. 

In their web journal, First Principles, ISI included an interesting video (see below) from EconomicFreedom.org. The video shows the connection between the degree of economic freedom a nation enjoys and the personal income of its citizens. While it's certainly true that the quality of a nation's economy and the standard of living of its people represent one of the more important elements of a free and just society, it is not the only element. Other freedoms -- religion, speech, press, association, etc. -- are just as important. 


Intercollegiate Sports. I'm not a big fan of intercollegiate athletics, and believe they have generally had a negative effect on the quality of education delivered by our colleges and universities. In most institutions the presence of intercollegiate athletics has led to the creation of two parallel but unequal educational programs, one for "scholarship" athletes involved in big-time (i.e., money-making) sports, and another for everyone else. Most of the arguments in support of intercollegiate athletics are easily countered with facts and common sense, but I suspect this will have no effect on their continued growth. 

Putting all this aside, however, I will descend from my soapbox. This all came about when a friend asked me the other day if I could identify the first intercollegiate sporting event in the United States. I could not, but I guessed anyway and suggested that it might have been a Harvard-Yale football game. Well, my friend didn't know either and had incorrectly assumed I would have this piece of trivia stored in some easily accessible brain cell. And so I was forced to do a little online research. It turns out that I was correct about one thing: it was a contest between Harvard and Yale. But I was wrong about the sport. It wasn't football, or baseball, or basketball, or any of the other big-time sports. It was a two-mile race between the crews of Harvard and Yale that took place on August 3, 1852 on Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire. Now you know.

Dodgeball, an athletic oddity. The subject of dodgeball came up in the same conversation that generated the above question about the first US intercollegiate sporting event. That conversation quickly gravitated from football and baseball to grade school gym classes and the odd sports beloved by P.E. teachers. First on both of our lists was dodgeball. I played dodgeball a lot as a kid, but only in gym class. I never played in or even witnessed a game of dodgeball anywhere else. Back in those days, before the universal availability of organized sports -- e.g., Little League, Pop Warner, Youth Soccer, etc. -- the kids in my neighborhood would join up and head for the school playground or a vacant lot, divide into teams, and play touch football or baseball or whatever other sport happened to interest us at the time. But we never played dodgeball. I suspect we considered it a sport in which fast, little kids had a real advantage and most of us weren't fast and little. It was also boring. Of course, we believed the same about soccer which we considered a third-world sport not worthy of attention by real American boys. (I still feel this way.)

That's enough for now. Blessings...

No comments:

Post a Comment