I would disagree, there is that period of time where you put College instructors on a pedestal and feel like they're the "smartest people you've ever met", and that creates an inclination to want to mimic them in ways that aren't affiliated with their area of subject matter expertise.
I have never met
anybody who felt that way, or at least who expressed it to me. Not in my multiple passes through school. Not among all my friends and co-workers who frequently talk about college (I've worked with a few different groups of people who went to school with each other). Not among my friends and neighbors who teach or otherwise work at universities. Not among my wife's faculty and grad students at her university jobs. Not among all the folks who've come through my different churches that have been within walking distance of elite universities. I've only ever seen that kind of thing on TV.
Actually, that's not true. I also see it among fans of certain media personalities. But I've never seen it directed at a professor. I'm sure it's happened, but IME, it's quite rare.
To be more specific, Democrats have become the party that embodies the HR department of the office environment.
You go into meetings involving the top brass, there's some very cut-throat republican economic thinking, or have an environment where it's "just the boys", there's a lot of that "locker room talk" if you catch my drift.
Not
just the HR dept, though they're definitely included.
I, as a white collar professional, look at the Democratic party and I see something familiar. I see a range of people, mostly trying to accomplish certain things, mostly trying to figure out the right ways to do it, mostly trying to not be jerks about it, often shooting themselves in the foot in one way or another, but mostly well-meaning and trying to head in the right direction. They're largely mission-oriented, or at least they believe themselves to be.
Then I look at the Republicans and I'm genuinely puzzled. I don't even know why anybody finds their whole affect appealing. Romney, McCain, and the other old school guys, I get. I can even understand the appeal of a Ted Cruz or a Rand Paul, even if I think they're full of it.
The whole MAGA culture, though, is about leaning hard into being a sycophantic jerk. Maybe that would fly in upper management, but among the rank and file, it's just bizarre.
For most people, college is only 4 years. That's a fairly small amount of time; and for that short amount of time, most folks are focused on getting through their major so they can get a job. Most people's perspective on the world isn't shaped entirely there. It's shaped while they're working, in jobs. Most of the people polled in that survey were not in college. If the survey was representative of the whole population, then they would have mostly been out of college for a long time.
Republican culture, especially MAGA culture doesn't fly at all in
jobs that require a college degree. I think that's the bigger driver in why college educated folks have turned away from them.
He won the primary because they had a bunch of people up there and the "sanity" vote was split between a dozen other people.
That's not really true - or at least, it's certainly not a given. Trump did very well from the beginning. Cruz and Rubio were the #2 and #3 for most of the race, with the lion's share of the remaining votes; and there were a number of states where he beat their combined tally. And even in the states where he didn't beat their combined score, there were a bunch where he wasn't that far back. They'd often get something like 45-50% while he got 35-40%. If Rubio had dropped out, Cruz would've picked up some of his voters, but not all of them. He might have been able to squeak out a win, but it would've been close. After Rubio dropped out, Cruz did well in a handful of mid-western and mountain states, but then got stomped the rest of the way.
en.wikipedia.org
Basically, what I think is happening is a cultural/ideological capture of what's perceived to be "intelligent", with regards to the modern college environment.
The people who hold the keys to knowledge can shape other people (and societal perceptions) by having a system in which people have to enter their preferred bubble/echo chamber for an extended period of time in order to be the benefactor of a "knowledge hand-off". And after a certain period of time, people start to associate that ideology with intelligence.
It's not unlike the early church. There was a time when the only access for learning to read, getting access to certain books, or attaining other forms of knowledge was isolated to those entering the seminary to become members of the clergy. That was no accident.
If "the smartest guy in the room" is (99% of the time) someone from a particular ideological framework, it's only a matter of time before large parts of the general public associates that ideology with intelligence, and gaining knowledge comes saddled with sitting through years of their overall sales pitch, and like with anything, there is a percentage of people who are susceptible to sales pitches.
I agree that there's a capture of the perception of intelligence. I disagree on why/how.
Frankly, what you described is, IME, how dumb people treat intelligence. That "keys to knowledge" phenomenon is what I witnessed in fans of certain media personalities like Rush Limbaugh and Dave Ramsey. I'm sure it applies to some younger streamers now, but I don't keep up with them. I don't see intelligent people seeing a single person or group of people as having the keys to anything. Intelligent people might have preferred sources or commentators, but they don't treat these folks as some sort of oracle on whose every word they hang.
If college taught us anything, it wasn't that "the smartest guy in the room" was always a lib. What it taught us was the
process for learning and discovering knowledge. How to find and evaluate information; how to construct an argument; how to develop a plan to achieve a goal; etc. And for the last decade+, the only party that has embraced that ethos at all has been the Dems.
Dems have captured the "intelligence" vote because the Republicans have abdicated it.
What was the last real policy idea developed by Republicans? Ignoring the wars, W had No Child Left Behind and Medicare Part D. Those may have had mixed results, but I'll give him an A for effort. Since then, what? (I'm ignoring both parties' responses to crises like the 2008 crash and COVID, since they weren't planned) They were almost exclusively obstructionist throughout Obama's presidency; didn't do anything during Trump1 except tax cuts based on an economic idea that had debunked for ages. They were mostly obstructionist again during Biden; and now in Trump2, they've turned into a personality cult that appoints incompetent drunkards and sycophants to cabinet positions.
If they'd wanted to appeal to the intelligence vote, they would've done something like come up with a health care plan. Modified the transition to electrification so that things could actually get built. Done something about the explosion of tuition costs. Tried to appoint people with expertise. Instead, they just keep leaning on tired old stuff that the "intelligent" people know isn't going to fix anything, like more tax cuts, more fossil fuel extraction, and hiring your drunk buddies. Oh, and tariffs, too. They've destroyed a bunch of stuff without so much as a concept of a plan to rebuild it. Including the East Wing.
There is a way to do stronger border enforcement that would appeal to "intelligent" people. There were ways to handle trans issues that would appeal to "intelligent" people. But they're not doing that. Instead, they're blatantly disregarding the rule of law and being as hateful and as cruel as they can get away with. They're leaning into all the bad things that people used to think about them. That's not how you attract intelligent people.