
ChangYuan wrote:I wouldn't say that people are so uneducated, but they are stuck. If you don't come from a family of means, you have no choices but to either get student loans and go to a public university, getting a hopefully middle class job after; or don't get student loans, and work low paying blue collar jobs and be struggling with making ends meet for the rest of your life.
Luke wrote:ChangYuan wrote:I wouldn't say that people are so uneducated, but they are stuck. If you don't come from a family of means, you have no choices but to either get student loans and go to a public university, getting a hopefully middle class job after; or don't get student loans, and work low paying blue collar jobs and be struggling with making ends meet for the rest of your life.
Exactly, and the cost of college in the US has been spiraling out of control. I'm thankful that I finished college before the costs rose so much and before it became difficult to get good loans.
Education is a service which produces many benefits for society and is worth investing in for the government.
Instead of paying for the Iraq War, we should have put that money into education and social programs.
Huseng wrote:Luke wrote:ChangYuan wrote:I wouldn't say that people are so uneducated, but they are stuck. If you don't come from a family of means, you have no choices but to either get student loans and go to a public university, getting a hopefully middle class job after; or don't get student loans, and work low paying blue collar jobs and be struggling with making ends meet for the rest of your life.
Exactly, and the cost of college in the US has been spiraling out of control. I'm thankful that I finished college before the costs rose so much and before it became difficult to get good loans.
Education is a service which produces many benefits for society and is worth investing in for the government.
Instead of paying for the Iraq War, we should have put that money into education and social programs.
It absolutely astonishes me that a private university in the USA can charge $30,000/year for tuition.
I know they have student aid available, but in principle it is saying to the world, "We're really just here for rich people."
ChangYuan wrote:I wouldn't say that people are so uneducated, but they are stuck. If you don't come from a family of means, you have no choices but to either get student loans and go to a public university, getting a hopefully middle class job after; or don't get student loans, and work low paying blue collar jobs and be struggling with making ends meet for the rest of your life.
Huseng wrote:However, the purpose of post-secondary education -- in particular in universities -- is not to produce higher income earners, but ...
Any educated student, should understand what is a loan ... an engagement to a particular system that they will never quit until they take engagements in the capitalistic system (loans principes).
So they are stuck from the beginning !
Clueless Git wrote:Huseng wrote:However, the purpose of post-secondary education -- in particular in universities -- is not to produce higher income earners, but ...
But the purpose of student loans is.
As Sonam said ..Any educated student, should understand what is a loan ... an engagement to a particular system that they will never quit until they take engagements in the capitalistic system (loans principes).
So they are stuck from the beginning !
It's kinda like that the loan is the systems method of making sure it's investment in education produces a decent return.
Repayment of the loan itself is not the return on investment, obviously. The real return on the loan comes from, 'working for the man' wise, locking those with decent educations in.
The 'arty-farty' stuff that requires a decent education, the stuff that everyone would idealy like to do .. The wealthy have enough kids of their own who can emerge debt free from education, thanks to mum'n'dad, to be taking care of that.
Huseng wrote:Clueless Git wrote:Huseng wrote:However, the purpose of post-secondary education -- in particular in universities -- is not to produce higher income earners, but ...
But the purpose of student loans is.
As Sonam said ..Any educated student, should understand what is a loan ... an engagement to a particular system that they will never quit until they take engagements in the capitalistic system (loans principes).
So they are stuck from the beginning !
It's kinda like that the loan is the systems method of making sure it's investment in education produces a decent return.
Repayment of the loan itself is not the return on investment, obviously. The real return on the loan comes from, 'working for the man' wise, locking those with decent educations in.
The 'arty-farty' stuff that requires a decent education, the stuff that everyone would idealy like to do .. The wealthy have enough kids of their own who can emerge debt free from education, thanks to mum'n'dad, to be taking care of that.
What an uncharitable and capitalist way of looking at things.
Sönam wrote:Huseng wrote:
What an uncharitable and capitalist way of looking at things.
It's like karma, effects may look sometime uncharitable ...
Clueless Git wrote:Sönam wrote:Huseng wrote:
What an uncharitable and capitalist way of looking at things.
It's like karma, effects may look sometime uncharitable ...
Yes, exactly!
Please don't think I was advocating the 'uncharitable and capitalist' motives behind the loan as being good things Huseng. I was simply pointing out that it is so and, very loosely, why.
I mentioned another 'cause and effect' earlier too, btw. That 'cause' being a generation who took an education, paid for by the work of others, with no intention of repaying that via increased productivity so as they could fund free education for the generation following in their wake.
Technicaly they had a moral debt to the society that educated them. A debt on which too many welched. The fruits of that is that the 'paymasters' have switched the debt from an 'honorary' debt over to being a compulsory one.
For that aspect of the student loan the 'free lunch' attitude of the previous student generations is also to blame.
If there is any hope for a return to free higher education it probably relies upon this generation repaying their education many times over. That way education becomes a societal investment, rather than the throwing of other peoples money down the toilet, once again.
??? Does it mean facts of student loan??dukha
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