by spudbuddy » Fri 26 Aug 2005, 14:05:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') see the exact opposite. Many American college students are spoiled, arrogant little brats, who have mommy and daddy pay for everything. They drive around in their $30,000 SUV's. Blab all day on their cell phones during peak time. Dress smartly. Have expensive laptop computers. Eat out all the time. All paid for by mommy and daddy. Then after they graduate, many cannot find jobs, so 60% of all college graduates move back in with mommy and daddy to leech more money so they can maintain their 'lifestyle'
wow.
College kids imitating corporate executives...
(When I was in college, they were the enemy...the absolute apogee of totally uncool.)
Historically-
When we kissed our manufacturing base and all our basic blue collar work goodbye...higher education took off.
(everyone wants that 6-figure salary...absolutely has to have it.)
Every schoolkid is lectured on this:
Society marms in NYC fight like demons to get little junior or juniorette into just the right pre-school. That's right.
The kid's still in diapers...but God forbid they drop behind (except for loads of the stinky stuff.)
And it never lets up.
So all those kidlets were supposed to grow up and acquire their high pay desk job sitting on the phone directing Chinese contractors to build and send us more of that cheap junk.
What really happened was that blue collar turned service industry.
"Hi! Want fries with that?"
-smileys are good for something after all.
In 1960, a good auto worker made as much as a college professor.
In America...a home has become what a savings account used to be.
Beyond that...blue collar overtime paid for everything else.
I would say that no doubt all those 2nd and 3rd McJobs people are taking on...are trying to do the same thing.
Trouble is...the purchasing power has shrunk to nothing.
My son is in third year university.
I hear the stories.
The first question out of a girl's mouth (sounds kinda traditional in a way)
-something about matrimonial prospects.......
But the intent is absolutely double income. So much for independence.
Buying power. Consumer activities. Acqusition replaces inquisitveness.
We taught them well, I guess.
What really amazes me...is that many of the folks that are actually reasonably well off...are stretched thin just like everybody else.
God forbid that they actually come
down to an affordable lifestyle, when they can be stylin' like basketball stars.
All that education going on out there....
Will the garbage collector show up one day with a PHD in waste management? (a doctorate that cost him 150k?)
The last generation that could actually
work their way through college were the tweeners....too young for WW2 and just preceding the boomers...they were all out in the work force by the late 50's.
Education is all about money now...the cost of it, and the projected earnings.
I work in a university library.
I see the absolute fear and loathing, the horror and mistrust on a student's face when they look at a nice big thick fat book, and wonder if what's between its covers = income or not (value added.)
I remember a trend back in the 80's:
A lot of smart kids with smart parents chose to combine a 3-year degree (in whatever) with a 2-year certificate in some hard line skilled techinical skill. That was their fallback when the degree didn't lead to anything...and often paid for postgrad when an MA was necessary.
Few seem to go that route now.