Posted on 02/21/2012 3:42:21 AM PST by Cronos
hand her a legal pad and send her on over to
wearethe99percent.com
Well, in a civilization, in the urban civilized society of this era, that is indeed the "older generation" which is raising the young, and in this case "exploiting". Our generation has entrapped the young in great shackles of debt, in order to buy a wasteful, desultory, emotionally disabling, morally destructive, and intellectually ruining four, five, six years of "Higher Education".
Too many parents are caught in the still rampant societal delusion that college is a necessity, that college is a good, that college improves, that college is worth the huge cost burden.
>>>Maybe she should buy a ticket for North Dakota. If she can stay sober and drug free she could probably move up the ranks fairly quickly.
But All one can do for recreation in NoDak is drink.... :D
rampant societal delusion
Yes, but that delusion is so deeply inculcated by the governmental/media/educational authority that it simply isn’t productive to rant on the entire *older generation*.
This is JMO, but it may be essential for the present generations to experience the obvious results of this delusion in order for the coming generations to draw the correct conclusion.
It has been over 40 years since anyone was really taught to think, let alone think critically. I fear it is going to take catastrophic times for most to reclaim their abilities to reason.
If you just look around, there is indisputable evidence that the majority of those who have succeeded in our present society did obtain a university credential. Others succeeded because of university experiences that allowed them to meet *the right people* or to marry *the right person*, meaning those with elite connections. Now, that obviously doesn’t automatically mean that everyone who has this experience will benefit to the same degree. But it is difficult to condemn the parents who draw that conclusion.
Often, change takes place just because conditions change. Young people are hard-wired to rebel against parents and authority. At some point, one can expect the young to get it. Many will be chewed up and spit out by the system they blindly follow. Those are the sorts of lessons learned at a very basic level.
The private companies pay the gov for these folks.
That is not just your opinion, and it seems a very wise one! The "older generation", at least some of it, can help by ensuring that the younger generation does learn, re-learn, re-discover, the corrections. To point them to Kipling's "The Gods of the Copybook Headings", or more basically the truths of Divine Law and the good ways of human operation which ensure that the fruits and blessings of Divine Providence pour forth.
Yes.
Did the private company reimburse the government for her dole?
No.
She has a point: but not, I suspect, the one she intended.
If that is an accurate depiction of what government does, she may be correct.
Geology has applications in lots of businesses and industries; if she is willing to relocate, she'll be more likely to find a match.
As far as her marriage prospects go, contact lenses and a smile wouldn't hurt! (Unless she's got the typical Brit bad teeth...)
I can happily assure you that it’s not
Update on this story -
It now seems that Tesco and other retailers are pulling out of this scheme after adverse publicity:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/2012/feb/21/back-work-scheme-disarray-tesco
Her looks aren't that bad. Her attitude of entitlement is likely to send prospective boyfriends running (at least the ones with any sense).
Try again - dude !
My daughter and I had more than one long and frank discussion about "would you like fries with that" degrees.
SHE chose to go to an expensive (liberal) private college and study art and history. Her mother and I split the cost of room & board.
SHE made the choices, against my advice. Now she can live with 'em.
Her geology degree was totally worthless in the job assigned. She should have been perfectly suited for digging ditches, however.
Or digging holes and filling them back up, after examining the diggings for signs of precious metals or petroleum.
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