I'll give props to UT. My sister-in-law was educated there. She's an exec at mid-sized company in Dallas. I don't mean executive secretary either
. Her sister is an executive in a Fortune 500 company. She was educated there (started liberal, left conservative), and my niece will be a freshman there in the fall. She's in the top 10 of her class, privately and publicly educated in the Dallas area, and is conservative. She's a delight and I don't think anything at Texas will change her. She's a smart girl. I'm sorry that she's not going to Baylor like my brother (her dad), my sister, and I did, but she's been a Longhorn fan since she was a child. I can't fault her for following in her mom's shoes.
I work at a Fortune 500 company as well. My red state education didn't seem to slow me down.
I would be interested to hear what Bainsbane course of study was for her PhD. It confuses me to hear someone who has been through such a program have such basic faults in her argument. Bainsbane, did you grow up in Texas? You mock red state education, yet there are many great schools in Texas and other red states, and so many successful people who come out of those states. Your comments on here sound very uneducated and straight out of a joke book on conservatives and what they believe.