Well, I'm going to take neutral ground for a moment.You are correct, but you're talking to an avowed communist, who isn't going to agree to your terms. Communists are well known for calling "liberal" a "right-wing" position, because anything that opposes communism is right-wing to them.
The US does seem to be an oddity compared to other similar countries in that "liberal" is regarded as left-wing, whereas if I called myself a liberal here, people would probably think of the Liberal Party, which is centre-right. However, I'd argue that liberalism is left-wing in the social sense, if not the economic sense (doesn't help that it's a very broad term). So I guess if I had to call myself anything, it would be "socially liberal, economically leftist" (though I guess I'm a Greenie in that the Greens get my primary vote most of the time, followed by Labour).
However, I've never seen any evidence, statistical or otherwise, that university faculty doesn't lean left. But if we're dividing universities between left, right, and centre, here's the stats from a 2018 Gallup poll.
46%: Moderate
44%: Left
9%: Conservative
Basically, it doesn't matter how you define liberalism and place it on the political spectrum, the trend remains the same. Universities are overly left-wing. It's, like, the most obvious thing you can say, because as I mentioned, some careers tend to attract some kind of people more than others. And again, I'm not even saying that's inherently a problem, because I don't believe universities should be obliged to head-hunt people of certain political beliefs.
It is?This thread is largely about China's human rights record,
Fuck, I don't know anymore.