
Everyone is entitled to their opinion. I've taken a lot of orders from a lot of dumb son of a bitches, both male and female, who had more "book learning" than I did and if it wasn't for me and people like me they wouldn't be able to tie their own shoes.
I've also observed that the higher levels of education a person achieves the more they discount the value of the opinions of people who didn't acquire that level of education, you start encountering more and more academic snobbery.
Be that it may, it's my personal observation that the general overall intellectual "fluidity" of America is becoming increasing stagnant. By that I mean that natural selection has been eliminated, no longer weeding out the inferior intellect (which used to die of mishap, generally through their own stupidity) and they are, in fact, breeding in higher numbers than the supposed "better minds." Meanwhile, we increasingly reward minds that are very good at retaining an awful lot of information about a comparatively narrow field. We reward people who are good at learning information in a certain prescribed manner but not the ones that think "outside the box." We do not acknowledge creative use of intellect within the public educational system, and the student who may be quite bright but doesn't necessarily have a good rote memory or isn't mathematically strong is often overlooked and rarely encouraged.
I'd be very interested to see what the society is going to be like in another say 500 years.