• sunzu@kbin.run
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      3 months ago

      Well we spent 30 years valuing college… How did that work out?

        • sunzu@kbin.run
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          3 months ago

          Anyone who had a social security and blood pulse could go to college and that’s what happened.

          1/3 failed out,1/3 doing jobs which don’t require a college degree.

          1/3 benefited to varying degree.

          Do you think we needed note millennials in college.

            • sunzu@kbin.run
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              3 months ago

              I am not a conservative wtf… my body of work speaks for itself. What are you basing this clown take on?

              they don’t speak to the qualitative benefit of educating a population.

              This is benefit in the room with us right now?

              All I see is increasingly improvised and indebted population, working longer hours, getting less benefits… people are not forming families. People can’t afford rent.

              Now show me this benefit you are talking about, dear!

              What is the qualitative risk of an educated population?

              Debt slavery which solid part of millennials is currently suffering.

              • NeuromancerOPM
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                3 months ago

                All I see is increasingly improvised and indebted population, working longer hours, getting less benefits… people are not forming families. People can’t afford rent.

                Not every job requires a college degree, but since we have made it available to anyone with a pulse, employers are pushing for them even when they provide no value. I have seen a stupid job posting for a master’s degree for a 20-an-hour job. The degree isn’t required for a license or some other practical reason.

                • sunzu@kbin.run
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                  3 months ago

                  , but since we have made it available to anyone with a pulse

                  Who is this “we”? Are you owner of a company? Because I am not, I made not such decisions. Did you you?

                  Employers start pushing for this shit starting 40 years ago and people respond as manufacturing jobs go eroded. so THEY made it a requirement for secretary needing an English major… trying getting that job with out a BA lol

                  • NeuromancerOPM
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                    3 months ago

                    We, as in the collective America. We voted for the people who decided to make loans available to everyone.

            • intensely_human
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              3 months ago

              If we’re talking about altering society on a mass scale, you’re damned right I care about measurable outcomes.

              I value freedom. I value economic consent. If you’re going to use centralized power to forcibly trade me something else for a loss of those two, the the other thing needs to be measurable.

          • NeuromancerOPM
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            3 months ago

            That is the problem—too many unqualified people in the pipeline.

            • sunzu@kbin.run
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              3 months ago

              The problem is that there are not enough well paying jobs to support this “educated” population esp with a ton of debt.

              • intensely_human
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                3 months ago

                China created a booming solar industry by subsidizing it heavily. We can do that too with other industries, and the subsidy can come in the form of trades education.

                • sunzu@kbin.run
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                  3 months ago

                  Obama subsidized solar too… What do we have to show for it?

                  Again, why should impoverished taxpayer subsidize the capex of property owner? In free entperise and private capitalist society why is we paying here?

        • intensely_human
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          3 months ago

          No, we poured tons of government money into making college accessible. I went to college on loans designed for that purpose.

          We valued college and we backed the notion with hard cash. Well, with forced loans.

          It drove the price of college through the roof though. Just like housing, just like medicine, just like all the other things we provide government money to help people get.

          It’s a consistent pattern. People don’t trust the free market, something is deemed too important to let the market handle, so we pump government money into purchasing assistance and, predictably to anyone who’s taken macroeconomics 101, the prices of those things skyrocket and the availability drops.