Economy
In reply to the discussion: STOCK MARKET WATCH - Thursday, 26 January 2012 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)MORE FROM ABOVE
Several years ago, I was speaking to a group of high school seniors, and I mentioned that my experience is that the adult world tries to scare young people about so much crap, that the net effect is for young people not to take anything we say seriously. I told them that most mistakes are useful learning experiences, but that there are two things that should concern them because they are very difficult to overcome, and I then moved on to another topic. A sea of hands went up, and several students shouted out demanding that I tell them what the two things were. So I told them: One, its difficult to overcome driving drunk and killing somebody; and two, it also tends to drag your life down if you have a kid with someone you cant stand....These days, however, Ive had to modify what I say to high school kids. My recent experience is that, for more people, even more depressing than having a kid with someone you cant stand is running up a gigantic student loan debt. So, now I talk with young people in groups, individually, and their parents about student loan debt hell.
Many young people among the 99 percent, in my experience, have been socialized not to have class consciousness. So, we discuss how kids from 1 percent families can go to expensive colleges without any career plans, party, flunk out, go to another expensive college, and have no student loan debtand can fall back on either the family business, a trust fund, or a career in politics. While the 1 percent can affordwithout loansto shell out whatever money is necessary for college, many of the 99 percent will have a debt sword that hangs over their heads for a significant part of their lives. The 1 percent and the corporate media have succeeded in making the terms class consciousness and class war taboo, which is part of the reason why they are winning the class war and enslaving the 99 percent.
College Decision-Making for the 99 Percent
Today, high school students hear repeatedly that they are losers if they dont go to college, and their parents are made to feel like failures if their kids dont go to college. For the 99 percent, the truth is that it may make sense to go college, or it may not. College may make sense if you want to earn a living at something that requires a college-level certification. But college may not make sense, especially if you are not motivated for it, or your career desires dont require a degree and certifications. Exiting from the modern world-religion view that not attending college is sinful and shameful, lets look at it soberly. Colleges offer 1) learning; 2) certifications and accreditation; and 3) partying and potential for meeting people. While learning does take place in college, it is just as easy to gain knowledge outside of college. Most college learning is book learning, and one need not go to college to read books. Moreover, most of us have learned much of what we use to make a living and survive through experience, not through coursework.
It is true, however, that without a college degree and specific certifications, one simply will not be hired for certain jobs. While much of what I learned in my formal schooling was worthless or worse than worthless, I needed degrees for credentialing and licensing. The same is true for teachers and other professionals. But theres little reason not to get that degree as inexpensively as possible.
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