Your
worldview is initially formed from your reaction to your family, teachers,
neighbors and friends. Much of what they believe politically influences what
you believe. How you are treated and how you see others being treated offers
positive and negative examples. What is important is how you react to these
examples.
My
family was affluent. The grandpa I spent the most time with was a physician, my
other grandpa was a chemist, an executive and an investor; we called him Daddy
War-bucks. My parents were smart and
fun, with good looks and were good money managers. They were all conservatives
and understood economics.
All
were well educated and verbal. I heard about the civil war from my great
grandmother. My grandparents told me about the inventions they saw developed
from the Industrial Revolution. My aunts
and uncles told me about the Roaring 20s and the Great Depression.
When I
was age 10 they gave me a book titled American Communist Party Goals published
in 1920. I read it and understood that we were vulnerable. I determined that most of what my family said
was true. We are still in danger of losing our Constitution, our freedom and
our economy. All of the goals in that book have been accomplished.
My
brain was wired to consider what sounded true and discard what sounded false.
If information sounded true, I would look up more to confirm that it was true.
If it was false, I just ignored it.
I was
totally “self-directed”. I had no heroes. I was interested in what was said,
not who said it. This was useful in
school. I became a “self-learner. I taught myself how to play the bugle,
trumpet and guitar.
I paid
attention in school and did enough homework to keep up, but I was not motivated
to get straight As. School was easy for me and my schools were good, so I liked
it. . I always scored 2 grades ahead of
my age group on standardized tests.
The
kids in my grade school and high school were a riot. The teachers were
tolerant, but really knew their subjects and very few were boring. I did all of
my extra-curricular activities in high school.
By the
time I entered college, I had good judgment. My college was conservative, but
the courses included all viewpoints. Minors in Philosophy and Theology were
required. I added English as a Minor to round out this “Classical Education”
regimen. Psychology was the required Major for a Personnel career, but most of
my Psychology courses were graduate seminars for undergraduate credit. I
actually took more physical science and math courses than anything else.
My approach
was to capture what sounded true and discard what sounded false. It was easy to
see that what conservative philosophers said rang true and what others said
rang false. It was the same for theology and psychology. I quickly identified
the quacks and ignored them. I attended all lectures and read all required
reading, but never crammed for tests, but concentrated on building my long-term
memory. I was not planning to go to graduate school, so my GPA was irrelevant.
I did become a “Fellow” in strategic studies in 1986.
I took
20 hours per semester and worked 6 nights a week as a musician. I was a
commuter student and lived at home. I got married at age 21 and graduated from
college 6 months later. I completed my BS degree in 3.5 years with a high score
on the Comprehensive Exam.
My
worldview was conservative. I understood the US Constitution and endorsed the
private sector, free market economy. I endorsed very limited government. I
endorse self-learning, personal responsibility and self-reliance. I believe the
family is the essential economic unit in all economies as it has always been
throughout history. I believe governments are corrupt and their powers should
be limited. I believe government in the US needs to return to compliance with
the US Constitution (as written).
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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