Zhang Xuefeng's remarks have recently made waves again. His sentence "Most of the liberal arts students are engaged in the service industry after graduation" is like a time bomb, which detonated the dissatisfaction of liberal arts students on the whole network. His remarks were undoubtedly a complete rejection of the liberal arts students, making them feel angry and disappointed.
In the live broadcast, Zhang Xuefeng was even more blunt, if he could choose a science major, he would try to avoid choosing a liberal arts major. He thinks that many liberal arts majors just have nice names, but in fact they are difficult to find a job. He even imitated the working state of liberal arts students, and sarcastically ridiculed the work of liberal arts students as "mad dogs" to people.
Naturally, this kind of remark provoked a strong backlash from liberal arts students. They questioned Zhang Xuefeng, who himself was engaged in liberal arts work, how could he make such an attack on others?Some liberal arts students said that they have studied hard for many years, not to be easily erased by someone with a "service" sentence. Some parents also think that Zhang Xuefeng's remarks are inappropriate and are worried that they will affect their children's professional choices.
However, some netizens stood on Zhang Xuefeng's side, thinking that he was not wrong, but was too straightforward. Some netizens shared their children's experiences: "My son is majoring in liberal arts, graduated from graduate school, and it is too difficult to find a job. ”
The controversy has also caught the attention of university professors. A professor from Renmin University said Mr. Zhang's remarks were exaggerated and that liberal arts majors were not as outrageous as he said. A lot of liberal arts knowledge is also very important, and it cannot be said that liberal arts are not good.
Zhang Xuefeng's mouth always seems to be in trouble. Some time ago, he also made a controversial remark: "Now if a girl wants to fall in love, it's better to find a programmer." This kind of rhetoric has undoubtedly sparked discontent among programmers.
Under pressure, Zhang Xuefeng issued two apologies in a row. He said he had said the wrong thing and did not say that the service sector was bad. However, these two apologies did not quell the controversy, but instead made the comment section fall even more. This also reflects the public's sensitivity to occupational biases and differences in employment perceptions.
What do you think about this?