gnrlies
Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2003
- Messages
- 781
- Gender
- Male
- HSC
- 2003
Can I just say something about ross gittins.
He is a good writer, he has a good style, and is generally fairly thought provoking (for which case Ive stuck up for him in the past), BUT I wouldn't read his articles to get an objective view on anything economic related.
He is a very left wing economist (by economists standards). This doesn't mean he falls into labor's lap, because he doesn't. But what it does mean is that he is more likely to criticise the government because their ideology is not in line with his. Thats his pereogative, BUT the biggest problem about this is that just about every economics teacher in the state spoonfeeds students his articles.
The HSC economics course is incredibly left wing in nature, and the education system is full of socialist lefties. Whilst teachers are meant to remain politically impatial to their students, this doesn't stop them from drowning their students in socialist propaganda.
See whilst ross is more than happy to point out the negatives, he is very reluctant to provide the reasoning behind government decisions. This weeks budget is by no means a perfect budget, but all I am saying is that the best thing you can do is treat it and everything else that goes on in the economy with the most objective mindset possible.
Reading ross and religiously counting on his everyword is a mistake. He provides a perspective, but only one perspective. Id recomend reading articles from the Australian. They give a far more balanced view (although I acknowledge that most of gittens work is opinion, but this isn't helped by teachers pushing it as fact).
He is a good writer, he has a good style, and is generally fairly thought provoking (for which case Ive stuck up for him in the past), BUT I wouldn't read his articles to get an objective view on anything economic related.
He is a very left wing economist (by economists standards). This doesn't mean he falls into labor's lap, because he doesn't. But what it does mean is that he is more likely to criticise the government because their ideology is not in line with his. Thats his pereogative, BUT the biggest problem about this is that just about every economics teacher in the state spoonfeeds students his articles.
The HSC economics course is incredibly left wing in nature, and the education system is full of socialist lefties. Whilst teachers are meant to remain politically impatial to their students, this doesn't stop them from drowning their students in socialist propaganda.
See whilst ross is more than happy to point out the negatives, he is very reluctant to provide the reasoning behind government decisions. This weeks budget is by no means a perfect budget, but all I am saying is that the best thing you can do is treat it and everything else that goes on in the economy with the most objective mindset possible.
Reading ross and religiously counting on his everyword is a mistake. He provides a perspective, but only one perspective. Id recomend reading articles from the Australian. They give a far more balanced view (although I acknowledge that most of gittens work is opinion, but this isn't helped by teachers pushing it as fact).