The case against college.

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by KINGOFSHORTS, Dec 14, 2009.

  1. College education is perhaps the biggest scam in human history.
     
    #11     Dec 14, 2009
  2. jprad

    jprad

    Jeez, this article was written in 1975, that's even worse than that Tudor Jones video from the 80's.

    Can you at least get something from this century to moan about?
     
    #12     Dec 14, 2009
  3. jprad

    jprad

    Check that.

    A 4 year degree is a minimum to get an interview these days. It's the post-grads that usually end up with the job.
     
    #13     Dec 14, 2009
  4. College is a holding tank. The majority of 18 year olds are no where near ready to enter the work force. Gotta' keep them occupied somehow. Four more years of turning their minds in to mush seems appropriate, especially if you're preparing them for 40 years of the mind numbing tasks they'll be doing to keep the powers that be fat and happy.
     
    #14     Dec 14, 2009
  5. l2tradr

    l2tradr

    Let me guess, you were too smart to fall for this scam?
     
    #15     Dec 14, 2009
  6. Depends on your motivation as a student. You can make it worthy of your time, or you can spend four years screwing, drinking, eating pizza and collecting textbooks you never cracked open but that you must sell back to the bookstore as used.
     
    #16     Dec 14, 2009
  7. A re-occuring theme I've read in a few biographies, people make contacts in college. You may be a flunkie, room or befriend another flunkie who has connections or money, whatever. You graduate, then get the phone call from the past for a job offer, project, etc.
     
    #17     Dec 15, 2009
  8. ElCubano

    ElCubano

    and yet that pizza eating ass banging textbook collecting student can earn multiple times more in their lifetime than the bookworm...it's just the way life works. Nothing and I mean nothing guarantees you anything in life...
     
    #18     Dec 15, 2009
  9. If you're smart, and we assume everyone on ET is, you should've had access to some scholarships. Furthermore, you don't choose the most expensive college, you choose the one that lets you remain liquid. That's what I did with my masters degree, no debt coming out of it and I have further education.
     
    #19     Dec 15, 2009
  10. But then they get the diploma for doing nothing but slacking off.

    90% of grads do this.

    What they need to do is actually make College hard and if you slack off you get no diploma.

    All this does nothing but dilute the value of a degree.
     
    #20     Dec 15, 2009