by Xenophobe » Mon 31 Jan 2011, 23:52:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Unconventional Ideas', 'S')o the answer is everyone should major in marketable fields, and then everyone will get a job, right?
The unemployment situation is really that simple, isn't it?
Unfortunately, no. American children really have been taught that a college education is the gateway to a better lifestyle. This created a demand for institutions selling "higher education", and corresponding subsidies by the government to make middle class voters happy.
Since you can't create an MIT or Harvard in an afternoon, we got internet schools, community colleges, degrees in womens studies and "leadership", and when the economy was operating under the condition of full employment, things were fine and dandy. A college degree meant you could speak and write passable English and might be able to add, and this being better than a GED holder, and employers needing breathing bodies, they hired these types by the bucketloads.
Alas, these conditions cannot last forever, and didn't. Now, we have a return to what I call "the good ole' days" where quality and experience count and if you want to get and keep a good job you better have skills and experience someone is willing to pay you for.
Or, alternatively, you can start a business, learn to grow your own food and/or become Amish, flip burgers, deliver pizzas, or hang out with mom and dad until...well....you learn that what to those of us WITH training and experience call "the good ole' days", maybe won't be available for shiftless, clueless, never worked a hard day of labor in their lives types.
IMHO.