I also think that the tendency to try to diminish the term "intelligence" has everything to do with the arrogance of a lot of intellectuals -- it's a sort of back-door means of cutting them back down to size. Whenever somebody loudly proclaims "I am smart!", there're always at least a dozen people who're there to retort "Oh, but what does it mean to be smart?", and they will then proceed to list a hundred different theories on intelligence and they'll talk about how you can't really say that you're smart if you don't have this type of intelligence or that type of intelligence (e.g., you can't really say that you're "smart" if you don't have "kinesthetic intelligence" or "spatio-temporal intelligence" or "gobbledegook intelligence" or whatever). However, if somebody claims "I am a fast runner!", then you never get a dozen people who retort "Oh, but what does it mean to be a fast runner?", and who then go on to say that just because you're an Olympic-class athlete in the 100-meter dash you can't really say that you're a "fast runner" because, c'mon, you can't run the Marathon in world-record time, and you're not very good at hurdling, and a cheetah is still a faster sprinter than you, yada yada.

What I can agree on is that anti-intellectuals attack intellectuals because they think the intellectuals think they are better humans, which intimidates them, especially so since in their specific fields, they cannot compete. However, one can reverse that situation and say that the intellectual will be equally incompetent at their chosen field.
The distinction comes when we start to talk about jobs and roles. A politician, lawyer, writer etc is more open to the intellectuals. The plumber, electrician or bricklayer is more open to the non-intellectuals (by enlarge). The difficulty comes when we fallaciously place prestige in certain types of jobs over others. That cuts little ice with me. Yet I am still getting bullied.
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