Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

i'd like to see the govt give free college education to everyone.....free university education is entirely possible. all you have to do is become a little firmer with what the definition of a 'degree education' really is (read: actual standards of admission, only intaking actually studious and intellectual types to 'real' universities).
Right, free education to everyone, as long as you redefine 'everyone' to mean the 'already monied elite who have put their kids through private school' and everyone else gets excluded - ie the current Oxbridge system.

I would simply put a low cap on fees, give living grants barely above the dole - as was the case when I went to Uni - and leave it there.
are you thick? i wrote a massive paragraph saying my idea of restricting university to less people would OBVIOUSLY depend on a widespread reform of pre-university education to make access and entry more fair, across the board. i.e. universal comprehensive schooling, or at least the return to a grammar system.

your last system was fine but not really feasible anymore, the cat is out of the bag. the universities have been marketized and the private spheres comparable wages/costs have rocketed. you couldn't send 40% of the youth population to university now on a free grant (even at dole standards) and still expect the universities to run (not to mention it would involve a lot more of the 0.1% of the annual budget that you already bemoan is being spent). blame the politicians.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-09 03:51:08)

Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

yeah fresh graduates in their first 10 years sure make megabucks! will repay those educations in no time.
Not everyone is a hipster you know.

and math/science are all universities are about, ever.
Since the development of the sciences humanities are essentially no more than hobby subjects.
do you sometimes drool on your keyboard and hope sensical things will come out?

an ivy league education is like $60k a year, for 4 years average. show me someone in any profession that makes a quarter of a million dollars spare/to save (without considering interest) before they are 30. cause average salary info in the UK would suggest no science/math grads are making that much. save perhaps people in medicine/dentistry or very specific sub-fields of industry. most 'academic' maths/sciences students do pure math/science, not instrumental or applied. half of the disciplines make no more than humanities grads. the few that do - pure math, pure physics - are still not making so much that they'll have $250k spare by the time they're 30. and that's not even mentioning other potential savings, i.e. for your first house (a consideration i know you haven't ever had to think about in your own rich-boy lifestyle).

but yes okay, the mighty maths/sciences. so profitable. keep dreaming.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX
Why should only 'studious and intellectual' types, ie you, get a free degree?
Maybe only 'hard-working and productive' people should be entitled to treatment by the NHS?

I'm not sure you understand how social democracy works.
Fuck Israel
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

yeah fresh graduates in their first 10 years sure make megabucks! will repay those educations in no time.
Not everyone is a hipster you know.

and math/science are all universities are about, ever.
Since the development of the sciences humanities are essentially no more than hobby subjects.
do you sometimes drool on your keyboard and hope sensical things will come out?

an ivy league education is like $60k a year, for 4 years average. show me someone in any profession that makes a quarter of a million dollars spare/to save (without considering interest) before they are 30. cause average salary info in the UK would suggest no science/math grads are making that much. save perhaps people in medicine/dentistry or very specific sub-fields of industry. most 'academic' maths/sciences students do pure math/science, not instrumental or applied. half of the disciplines make no more than humanities grads. the few that do - pure math, pure physics - are still not making so much that they'll have $250k spare by the time they're 30. and that's not even mentioning other potential savings, i.e. for your first house (a consideration i know you haven't ever had to think about in your own rich-boy lifestyle).

but yes okay, the mighty maths/sciences. so profitable. keep dreaming.
I wasn't thinking of the money, more the actual worth.

Since people realised there is no truth to be found in astrololgy, religion, poetry etc, that its in the sciences, most other subjects are utterly redundant and only kept going out of reasons of historical habit.
Fuck Israel
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
universities are intellectual centres. for scholars. academics. thinkers. researchers. a vast majority of people being sent to university today are largely non-academic, people just going to a low-ranking institution because it's 3 years of drinking and partying, socializing, living in halls, studying a whimsical subject with no real rigour or attainment. this is the way it has become because a whole class of non-intellectual, non-studious sorts have been encouraged to go to university 'just because' it's a rite of passage and a level of qualification that is 'needed' (read: it isn't). why are you making out i'm saying something shocking by saying university should be reserved for those actually interested in hitting the books and studying hard? such a fascist i am, i know.

does 'social democracy' = pointless positive discrimination in your eyes? i thought you were against multiculturalism and other logics of lefty-liberal participation.
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

yeah fresh graduates in their first 10 years sure make megabucks! will repay those educations in no time.
Not everyone is a hipster you know.


Since the development of the sciences humanities are essentially no more than hobby subjects.
do you sometimes drool on your keyboard and hope sensical things will come out?

an ivy league education is like $60k a year, for 4 years average. show me someone in any profession that makes a quarter of a million dollars spare/to save (without considering interest) before they are 30. cause average salary info in the UK would suggest no science/math grads are making that much. save perhaps people in medicine/dentistry or very specific sub-fields of industry. most 'academic' maths/sciences students do pure math/science, not instrumental or applied. half of the disciplines make no more than humanities grads. the few that do - pure math, pure physics - are still not making so much that they'll have $250k spare by the time they're 30. and that's not even mentioning other potential savings, i.e. for your first house (a consideration i know you haven't ever had to think about in your own rich-boy lifestyle).

but yes okay, the mighty maths/sciences. so profitable. keep dreaming.
I wasn't thinking of the money, more the actual worth.

Since people realised there is no truth to be found in astrololgy, religion, poetry etc, that its in the sciences, most other subjects are utterly redundant and only kept going out of reasons of historical habit.
yes the only reason anyone goes to university is to uncover positivistic truths.



and when was the last time astrology was on a university prospectus? the 17th century?

and there are plenty of 'truths' in poetry. you derp. same as all literature. when you read shakespeare are you not reading a certain sort of emotional or human truth? does it not speak of human experience or the human condition? guess not, can't be put to a graph, herp derp. life must be miserable for you, living on an existential occam's razor. bore off, troll.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX
Interesting how the sciences have expanded, evolved, developed, changed the world and the humanities are still basically stuck in the 17-1800s.
Fuck Israel
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
yes, yes they are. for the last 4 years i've been studying robinson crusoe.

tough day at home? mom not cook you your quesadilla? you're taking the stupid to '11' today. guess you're frustrated. i would be too, if i was you.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5598|London, England

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

i'd like to see the govt give free college education to everyone.....free university education is entirely possible. all you have to do is become a little firmer with what the definition of a 'degree education' really is (read: actual standards of admission, only intaking actually studious and intellectual types to 'real' universities).
Right, free education to everyone, as long as you redefine 'everyone' to mean the 'already monied elite who have put their kids through private school' and everyone else gets excluded - ie the current Oxbridge system.

I would simply put a low cap on fees, give living grants barely above the dole - as was the case when I went to Uni - and leave it there.
are you thick? i wrote a massive paragraph saying my idea of restricting university to less people would OBVIOUSLY depend on a widespread reform of pre-university education to make access and entry more fair, across the board. i.e. universal comprehensive schooling, or at least the return to a grammar system.

your last system was fine but not really feasible anymore, the cat is out of the bag. the universities have been marketized and the private spheres comparable wages/costs have rocketed. you couldn't send 40% of the youth population to university now on a free grant (even at dole standards) and still expect the universities to run (not to mention it would involve a lot more of the 0.1% of the annual budget that you already bemoan is being spent). blame the politicians.
I thought you went to college for the love of learning, not because it led to a better paying job... Why do you care how many people go to college? The more the merrier no? Why complain about saturated markets and tightening entrance requirements?
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
i do go for the love of learning. my prime motivation for restricting numbers and redefining the institution is to only be surrounded by those self-same people. to not have a giant mass of people who talk about 'uni students', with it being meaningless. you don't see some of the idiot frats at low-ranking american universities and feel annoyed these people are sharing your 'lifestyle'? i do. i think it's an insult to an ancient civic institution. keep it meritocratic and keep it fittingly elitist, that's my argument. so long as everyone from all walks of life has a fair shot of making the entry exam/grade, then i am fine with universities essentially being selective and only for the "valedictorian" top 15-20% of school leavers.

my point about the job-market being confused is just talking about a wider structural malaise that has opened up in the UK over the last 10 years. i was trying to explain the wider problem that has caused this giant financial mess, i.e. a culture that promotes everyone to go to university and take exorbitant loans. that's just my attempt at an explanation. that has nothing to do with my personal motivations. i can speak for 'the situation' in the UK without necessarily having to be constantly proclaiming my own personal life story. i think a problematic amount of debt is built into the structure of higher-education precisely because higher-education has come to be seen as a loan-worthy necessity for an oversized proportion of young people. it's that simple. in my opinion the financial situation and the educational culture are inseparable.

if you could reduce the numbers who realistically hoped to go to a university to get a meaningful, decent education, then the macro-economic financing would be a lot easier to arrange and manage. it really is that simple.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-09 04:33:57)

13/f/taiwan
Member
+940|5938


brilliant.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

i do go for the love of learning. my prime motivation for restricting numbers and redefining the institution is to only be surrounded by those self-same people.
LOL OK.

Maybe they're putting the fees up to keep hipsters out and not sully ancient civic institutions with unproductive wasters?
Fuck Israel
Jaekus
I'm the matchstick that you'll never lose
+957|5418|Sydney
So much hipster hate in this forum. Small minds...
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494

Dilbert_X wrote:

Uzique The Lesser wrote:

i do go for the love of learning. my prime motivation for restricting numbers and redefining the institution is to only be surrounded by those self-same people.
LOL OK.

Maybe they're putting the fees up to keep hipsters out and not sully ancient civic institutions with unproductive wasters?
to only want to be surrounded in university by people who are interested in being there to study? yes, so hipster. i'm such an elitist, asking that universities be kept for people who are interested in intellectual matters and actual studying.

also why do you keep stereotyping hipsters as poor? hipsters are supposed to be wealthy. they are blamed for gentrifying inner-city areas. poor people don't gentrify inner cities. you keep confusing hipsters with 'struggling artists' or some old stereotype. it's fucking funny. all of my supposedly 'hipster' humanities friends have more expensive educations than you... and don't live at home. wrong stereotype, idiot.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-10 04:40:20)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX
What gives you the right to decide that only people like you, faux-elitists interested only in the esoteric, should be allowed to go to university, and that the average tax-payer should pay you to do so?

You have no idea what my education cost, except the university part - which was free
Fuck Israel
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
you're the son of a civil servant so your 'boarding school' (which has never been named) was probably free too, let's face it.

and what are you talking about? faux-elitists? i want people who are good students to go to university. it's that simple. people who are intellectually inclined. "only the esoteric"? what the fuck are you talking about? physics, maths, engineering - are these esoteric? nowhere have i started talking about esoteric subjects. just that the bottom 50% of the UK's universities could be regraded to polytechnics giving technical diplomas or apprenticeships, and it would be more useful for employment (not to mention student debt). nobody needs a £9k a year degree from the university of worcestershire. nobody. regrade it to a polytechnic and stop deluding people who are not academically apt or 'book-ish' to study for useless degrees. that's all i am saying. right now we send too many people to university who are not 'university students' in any traditional sense, i.e. people who just want to drink for 4 years and study something like "sports science" (to continue with my worcestershire example). pointless.

but okay. wanting traditional universities with learned people at them is 'faux elitist'. what a weird world you live in. let's continue deluding ourselves by giving the non-intellectual non-academic people, who went to a university with open entry grades and no requirements, let's keep fooling ourselves that by getting a 'degree' they'll be justifying the high loans and will get a 'graduate' job. let's pretend the world of grad employment doesn't already burn their applications en mass when they receive 200 applicants per job role. O K.
Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX
Why do people need to be 'intellectually inclined' to meet your test? Why do you sneer so at people who aren't 'academically apt' or 'bookish'? What is so wrong with studying something practical and being a productive member of society?
You don't need to be an 'intellectual' to study Medicine and be a Doctor, or law to be a lawyer etc. its simple hard work and rote learning mostly.

And the govt paying for someone to spend four years studying sports science and drinking is at least as productive as paying for someone to study ancient texts and snort coke.

Last edited by Dilbert_X (2013-07-10 05:28:34)

Fuck Israel
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
where am i sneering at them? show me a quotation where i am sneering at them. every single one of my posts says they would be better put to a diploma or some sort of polytechnic qualification. i'm saying it is useless for them to get into college-levels of debt for a qualification from an institution that won't benefit them at all. nobody gives 18 year olds the honest advice they need: everyone is blithely encouraged to go to university 'just because', and a huge portion of the national student debt ends up being wracked up by less-academically inclined individuals who went to a crap university because of peer-pressure, and realistically boosted their earning potential and employment prospects by nil-%. that is not helpful for them. where am i sneering? i'd just like to see a meaningful demarcation between university and polytechnic again. the whole idea that it's 'shameful' to go to a poly rather than a university is a new labour era invention - not mine. i see no shame in it. nor am i sneering at anyone who would opt to take a decent apprenticeship or a technical diploma, rather than wasting 4 years of their life studying 'communications' at a college in the 100's on the national ranking (which the majority of UK university students do, if you look at the number spread; the bottom-ranked institutions are all fucking huge, like the aforementioned university of phoenix).

again, i never said there's anything wrong with doing something practical. never. my entire argument is that the less-inclined 20% of the 'graduate' pool would be better directed to precisely learning a practical skill. i.e. i am staking a high societal (and pecuniary) value on practical skills. do you read my posts?

and no, it's not as productive. say what you want about humanities (we all know it's the same bullshit), the simple fact is that the institution you go to and the perceived 'prestige' of your course matters 80% for your job application. in the UK/US, if you do a humanities course at a top institution and get your 2:1 or 3.5GPA, you're going to stand a reasonable chance of finding 'good' graduate-level employment. it's that simple. you can make all the arguments you want til you're (already) blue in the face about "wah wahhh ancient texts boo hoo", but these courses regularly put people onto fast-track graduate schemes. all of my 'hipster' friends who have opted to go into private-sector work are all employed at very fine companies earning a great graduate wage. it evidently works. and why is that? it's simple: because graduate recruiters and HR people have already reinstituted, ad hoc, the division between 'university' and 'polytechnic'. plenty of articles out there about grad recruiters basically filtering out their huge application lists into russell/94 group applicants above everyone else (i.e. traditional universities stay at top of pile).

the current system only benefits a political class that can meaninglessly brag they've 'widened access to higher-education'. the worst victims are the misinformed 18yo's who aren't properly wizened up to the stratification in the system. most of them are so bought into the new labour era rhetoric that 'a degree is a degree' that they don't realize their local institution's degree may not be as valuable as one a few cities over. they just aren't told. i think that's a scam, when you're taking nearly £10k a year off them. i'd like a little more honesty and clarity in the university system. no shame in practical or polytechnic. simple.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-10 05:43:45)

Dilbert_X
The X stands for
+1,815|6346|eXtreme to the maX
What you're saying is university entrance should be restricted so there is more money available to pay for the chosen few to study, and that everyone else can have a nice cheap diploma.
Why should the taxpayer invest in some people and not others?

It would be 'fair' to just give everyone a pot of cash at 18 and let them spend it as they like, but that would mean less for your type I guess.
Fuck Israel
Uzique The Lesser
Banned
+382|4494
no i said if the university system was smaller, it would be easier to financially manage. that is the only financial principle i brought up. ditto the polytechnic system. if they were separated, funding could be sourced and apportioned more meaningfully and efficiently. i also said all university should be free - but i didn't exclude polytechnics from this. i invoked the example of several european states where both were free in the same sentence, but i guess the implication wasn't clear enough for you. nowhere am i saying that intellectual uni-students should be funded and plumbing students should get a "tough luck". i want free higher-education, period. it is perfectly possible. you just have to trim the numbers and clean up the system so funding is meaningful. polytechnics could continue the line of association taken up by many decent ex-polys now, i.e. close ties to business and industry, and could even find financing there. return a real apprenticeship model.

It would be 'fair' to just give everyone a pot of cash at 18 and let them spend it as they like, but that would mean less for your type I guess.
uh, that is what happens now? anyone going to any university, attending any course, of any merit... is dished out a huge student-loan, on a term-by-term basis. that's about £3.5k every 2-3 months. that IS a pot of free money for 18 year olds. tuition fees are automatically detracted and billed to a separate account, so no financial management is necessary at all. and most students spend it stupidly. i remember a guy from my first year at university who used his first term installment to buy a brand new macbook and a sound-system for his university room. he ate noodles for the rest of the term. the system already gives a shit-load of (borrowed) money to dumb 18 year olds, regardless of how risky a credit investment they are, or how prudential their actual university/course of instruction is (i.e. how likely is a person from university of nowheresville going to earn above the annual salary tariff to start their repayments).

and what is "my type", exactly? people who worked hard in school to get into good universities? people who worked hard in university and contributed? people who took full financial responsibility for themselves, and have a genuine interest in the system being as fair and effective as possible? oh yes, "my type" of people. horrible, aren't we. i guess it's easy to be disparaging towards students that have a vested interest in how the university admissions and financing systems works, when after all your entire affair was free and provided by the government tit already. you are a typical baby boomer who wants to talk shit about 'entitled youth' or 'hipsters', because your own life was comparatively easy, and you don't like to admit anything that doesn't flatter your own self-image or personal achievement. the simple fact of the matter is that the university admissions/finance process is a far more charged and politicized matter now: it costs a lot more money to go nowadays, and people are asking more of the university system and graduate employment prospects. something you didn't have to worry about. so kindly fuck off.

Last edited by Uzique The Lesser (2013-07-10 06:50:06)

Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5825

New Jersey voters support giving same-sex couples the right to marry by a two-to-one margin, according to a poll released this morning.

The Quinnipiac University poll of 1,068 voters found 60 percent support a state law to allow same-sex marriage, while 31 percent oppose it.

The result is barely different from before the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated the Defense of Marriage Act, which barred married gay couples from getting federal benefits. In March, 64 percent of New Jersey voters said they supported gay marriage while 30 percent opposed it.

The state Legislature last year passed a bill to allow gay marriage in New Jersey. But Gov. Chris Christie vetoed it, saying that although he personally opposes gay marriage voters should decide the issue in a ballot referendum instead.
This is why I'm refusing to ever vote Republican again. If our republican governor didn't want to be president we could have gay marriage in the state. But the right refuses to give up fighting the cultures wars. I'm not saying I am going to vote democrat but I am going to vote against the GOP every time based off of social issues alone. Which is too bad since my foreign policy views line up with the right more than the left.
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|7012|PNW

I wouldn't have a problem with it being put to public vote every couple of years or so in each state.
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5825

It would never pass a referendum vote ever in many states.
unnamednewbie13
Moderator
+2,053|7012|PNW

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_opi … ted_States

The trend for support seems to be on the rise, generally. Also, look at the northeast.
Macbeth
Banned
+2,444|5825

I am sure the 13% of gay marriage supporters/gays in Mississippi can sleep well at night knowing that gay marriage will be made legal in 2030.

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