I really just can't understand the "I got mine" mentality of so many right-wingers
Why is it so bad to create a more equal society?
Quote from: Cindy on February 24, 2016, 08:58:12 PMI really just can't understand the "I got mine" mentality of so many right-wingersWhat? I'm a right-wing student who believes he should pay for his own higher education, thus I have a "I got mine" mentality. Maybe it's got nothing to do with the kind of mentalities you want to super-impose on people of a different political persuasion; maybe, just maybe, you arrogant fuck, they have different opinions on the best way to organise the higher ed. system. And, possibly, my own opinions and those of other right-wingers could be disastrously wrong. But as least do us the fucking courtesy of affording us the virtue of intellectual integrity, as I grant those who disagree with me. QuoteWhy is it so bad to create a more equal society?Given that most of the benefits of higher ed. accrue to those pursuing it, and not society as a whole, funding it via general taxation is emphatically not equitable. Indeed, that's almost our whole point.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 25, 2016, 04:47:28 AMQuote from: Cindy on February 24, 2016, 08:58:12 PMI really just can't understand the "I got mine" mentality of so many right-wingersWhat? I'm a right-wing student who believes he should pay for his own higher education, thus I have a "I got mine" mentality. Maybe it's got nothing to do with the kind of mentalities you want to super-impose on people of a different political persuasion; maybe, just maybe, you arrogant fuck, they have different opinions on the best way to organise the higher ed. system. And, possibly, my own opinions and those of other right-wingers could be disastrously wrong. But as least do us the fucking courtesy of affording us the virtue of intellectual integrity, as I grant those who disagree with me. QuoteWhy is it so bad to create a more equal society?Given that most of the benefits of higher ed. accrue to those pursuing it, and not society as a whole, funding it via general taxation is emphatically not equitable. Indeed, that's almost our whole point.AyyyyI love how I always get bashed for being "arrogant" and "intolerant" and etc etc but I have yet to get into a dispute with you where I wasn't blatantly insultedIrony, s'what that is
but I have yet to get into a dispute with you where I wasn't blatantly insulted
Quote from: Cindy on February 25, 2016, 06:04:37 AMbut I have yet to get into a dispute with you where I wasn't blatantly insultedMaybe you should take that as some kind of indicator. Indeed, if you're constantly getting into arguments where people are telling you that you are making arrogant assumptions and casting unfair aspersions, maybe you should consider the possibility that you might be doing exactly that. Although my attention is more drawn to the fact that you didn't have a rebuttal to either of my points. So, allow me to ask again: why do you keep misrepresenting the views of those you disagree with as coming from some warped mentality you can't understand? And why do you think a higher ed. model financed by general taxation is more equitable than some system involving loans and debt to individual students?
Don't think I need to rephrase exactly what Verb's been saying, fam
Are you forming opinions on an area you don't know enough about, or are you too cowardly to stand up for your beliefs when challenged?
So instead of responding to queries directly specifically at your comment, you're going to lazily rely on somebody vastly more intelligent than yourself to fight your battles? Despite the fact Verbatim has neither cast the kind of aspersions you have without making some kind of subsequent apology, nor adequately answered the problem of general taxation being inequitable? Are you forming opinions on an area you don't know enough about, or are you too cowardly to stand up for your beliefs when challenged?
Assuming everyone COULD and was WILLING to pay for it through taxes, would you still believe college shouldn't be free?
Quote from: Verbatim on February 25, 2016, 06:54:36 AMAssuming everyone COULD and was WILLING to pay for it through taxes, would you still believe college shouldn't be free?Yes. At the end of the day, I view the system of loans and debt (structured as it is here in Britain) as fairer and more equitable than general taxation.
I think people are forgetting that the primary purpose of a degree is to gear you up for becoming an effective member of society. It isn't for everyone. Not everybody has the mental capacity to do a degree. It's all very nice saying free college 'educates the population', but what's the point in obtaining said education if it's been rendered useless? How are you supposed to stand out if everyone and anyone has a degree?
what's the point in obtaining said education if it's been rendered useless? How are you supposed to stand out if everyone and anyone has a degree?
In the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage.
Quote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:02:52 AMIn the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage. that's absolute horseshit and you know it.
Quote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 25, 2016, 10:40:52 AMQuote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:02:52 AMIn the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage. that's absolute horseshit and you know it.Even being a receptionist or an office clerk requires a college degree. Not sure how much lower on the totem pole you can get in the corporate world.
Quote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:42:38 AMQuote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 25, 2016, 10:40:52 AMQuote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:02:52 AMIn the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage. that's absolute horseshit and you know it.Even being a receptionist or an office clerk requires a college degree. Not sure how much lower on the totem pole you can get in the corporate world.But I know lots of secretaries who've never been to college...
with compulsory. I also think you're ignoring that college admissions would still exist. If you're a retard with a .02 GPA, you're not getting in.
There are a few that don't, but the vast majority do. A college degree is worth now what a high school education was 60-80 years ago. Things change and it's time to adapt.
Can we please stop this conjectural meme already?
Quote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:02:52 AMwith compulsory. I also think you're ignoring that college admissions would still exist. If you're a retard with a .02 GPA, you're not getting in.Obviously, but the prospect of free college devalues the point of getting one. I know from experience in Scotland because I see lazy fuckers all the time coasting on the idea of obtaining a degree because they can, wasting tax payer money, and flooding more of the job market with it.
QuoteIn the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage.Can we please stop this conjectural meme already? I want to see evidence that the labour market is so fucked that employers refuse to hire anyone that doesn't have a bachelors.
QuoteThere are a few that don't, but the vast majority do. A college degree is worth now what a high school education was 60-80 years ago. Things change and it's time to adapt.Absolute hogwash. What about skill based work? Plumbers, electricians and construction workers are just as important to the facilitation of the economy as uni grads are, and sometimes pay more in some instances. I almost never see emphasis placed on those types of professions.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 25, 2016, 06:57:44 AMQuote from: Verbatim on February 25, 2016, 06:54:36 AMAssuming everyone COULD and was WILLING to pay for it through taxes, would you still believe college shouldn't be free?Yes. At the end of the day, I view the system of loans and debt (structured as it is here in Britain) as fairer and more equitable than general taxation.I asked you a few questions regarding that earlier, and never received a response.
Care to repeat them?
Quote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 25, 2016, 10:45:06 AMQuote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:42:38 AMQuote from: DAS B00T 2016 on February 25, 2016, 10:40:52 AMQuote from: Mad Max on February 25, 2016, 10:02:52 AMIn the US, at least, a college degree is virtually required for any job that pays more than minimum wage. that's absolute horseshit and you know it.Even being a receptionist or an office clerk requires a college degree. Not sure how much lower on the totem pole you can get in the corporate world.But I know lots of secretaries who've never been to college...Nepotism.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on February 25, 2016, 11:52:15 AMCare to repeat them?They were actually in a separate thread, but it's the same topic.
Why should knowledge have an imaginary, meaningless, and completely fictitious price put on it?
College isn't the kind of thing you can coast through. Maybe 100-level classes, but as soon as you make it into your third and fourth years, taking upper division classes, that takes actual work.
Obviously there are some positions that don't require a degree, and even if the job requirements list a degree, a business can hire whoever they want if they think they have the qualifications. One of my coworkers doesn't have a degree, but has a shit-ton of relevant experience. But that's far from the norm.
My sister is job hunting right now, and she's still in college, and nearly every low-level job she applies to has a degree requirement. That's just how things are here.
I literally mentioned trades in the post you're quoting...which you conveniently omitted.