And yet I somehow doubt you ever considered staying in that group. The problem we have is not that some folks fall into that group (been there myself) but that some then get so comfortable there. It's why Brandon wants to give our hard earned money to pay for other people's educations, when the reason they can't pay is because they didn'…
And yet I somehow doubt you ever considered staying in that group. The problem we have is not that some folks fall into that group (been there myself) but that some then get so comfortable there. It's why Brandon wants to give our hard earned money to pay for other people's educations, when the reason they can't pay is because they didn't go to college to build a life, but to study something ending in studies. These are the kids that end up believing in anthropogenic climate change, windmills and EVs.
The joke goes like this: A group of students went through the truly fascinating Egyptian Studies program, but upon graduating realized that the only career opportunity was teaching Egyptian Studies... the original pyramid scheme. Meanwhile, I worked three to five part time jobs, simultaneously, to get through UCSB (not Harvard). I cut hair, typed term papers, waited tables, sang folk songs at the local pizza joint on Friday nights and played in a rock band on Saturday nights, all while carrying 20 units, because I wanted to get out and get my life started. BTW, back then UC in-state tuition was $500. I even picked lemons with the migrant workers a time or two.
I don't object to unemployment and welfare, although I've never gotten either; I object to people making a career out of them and then voting Democrat because that's whose promising them a raise.
And yet I somehow doubt you ever considered staying in that group. The problem we have is not that some folks fall into that group (been there myself) but that some then get so comfortable there. It's why Brandon wants to give our hard earned money to pay for other people's educations, when the reason they can't pay is because they didn't go to college to build a life, but to study something ending in studies. These are the kids that end up believing in anthropogenic climate change, windmills and EVs.
The joke goes like this: A group of students went through the truly fascinating Egyptian Studies program, but upon graduating realized that the only career opportunity was teaching Egyptian Studies... the original pyramid scheme. Meanwhile, I worked three to five part time jobs, simultaneously, to get through UCSB (not Harvard). I cut hair, typed term papers, waited tables, sang folk songs at the local pizza joint on Friday nights and played in a rock band on Saturday nights, all while carrying 20 units, because I wanted to get out and get my life started. BTW, back then UC in-state tuition was $500. I even picked lemons with the migrant workers a time or two.
I don't object to unemployment and welfare, although I've never gotten either; I object to people making a career out of them and then voting Democrat because that's whose promising them a raise.