#HBC | Acrostic
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- Joined
- Jan 31, 2010
- Messages
- 2,452
Don't you agree that it is more difficult to get a good education if you grow up in poverty/low income?
A degenerative economy leads to a degenerative culture with degenerative habits.
On the other hand the amount of student aid scholarships for high performing low income and minority groups has spiked. Not to mention pell grants, stafford loans, and work study programs have seen surges to reflect dependency on the programs to subsidize increasing costs of education or just the raw influx of income that comes from initiatives like S.T.E.M. to increase the overall aptitude of the United States with respect to enriching themselves with the sciences.And I think that it is becoming increasingly difficult for many people to attend college because of increases in prices for college tuition. Some colleges are even trying to make it a requirement that freshmen live on campus, which costs even more money.
Colleges are also incredibly diverse in what they offer in terms of financial aid or scholarship, especially whether they are a public or private institution. There is a solution for students who get into schools that force them to live on campus their freshman year when they can't afford it... the solution is to attend a different college that you can afford given how your academic profile is awarded and leveraged against financial costs. This is common sense.
Let's not wallow in self-pity on the education spike when most developed countries have been controlling inflation to a 2-3% annual spike. Life becomes increasingly difficult for everyone the more time passes demanding that people find solutions to increase their own income and means of living. Affording college is sadly one of the easier financial problems in life to personally broker for those who sincerely tackle the financial side of the problem with genuine concern. The fact is that most students don't have the acumen to make a rational and calculated decision because they don't do sufficient research or work hard to give themselves enough options to work with in negotiating student tuition. People fail to realize that there are hundreds of private benefactors that want to literally throw money at you and all you need to do is write them a one page letter indicating an interest as to what you think you will be doing with the degree.
To be frank, if someone attended a top notch school, say an Ivy League school for $40,000 and they are worried about coming out with compounded interest, they should do themselves a favor and not eat into the pity pie that most delusional college graduates are putting in front of them. There are frankly so many funding options and so many investors that require absolutely no actual returns aside from requesting individual success that it's embarrassing. A lot of students willingly choose to remain ignorant because they eat into that pie rather than actually do something about it. It's sickening.
This portion is completely unnecessary because it's followed by a conjunction. When people use conjunctions in contested conversation on forum boards, the statement prior to the conjunction has no bearing to the individual typing it because their real point lies after it. In other words, your acknowledgment 'I sounded like an idiot' is either insincere or has no bearing to you... 'I sounded like an idiot'... but I don't care. Which is a shame, not to me personally but to users like @Empty Number who try to sincerely engage your phrasing with the belief that it makes a difference. I personally feel that any sincere attempt by me to engage in a conversation with you will just end up contested because your frequent use of conjunctions connotes to me that you feign 'acceptance' over a mistake to generate the impression that a conversation is viable, but still attempt to justify or contest the point you just conceded on. Like wtf man.Yeah, I sounded like an idiot when I said, "I've seen it happen", however haven't you ever read or heard accounts of people who came from the depths of poverty yet they were determined to succeed, pursued an education and became successful? It's something that appeals to people, because it enforces the feelgood idea of "you can do anything if you try hard enough". Also, If you find anything wrong with my posts, just PM me. I'm more than happy to edit them. And if you're going to quote my post, at least explain why you did so, or what it is about my post that you disagree with.
My use of the image from "The Sixth Sense" wasn't to belie the point that "... some low income people can be smart though, I've seen it happen..." but rather to poke fun at you for having the need to state that you being a personal witness to such events had to be shared to establish credibility to the statement that 'low income people' can 'be smart.' The reference is to the actor Haley Joel Osment who makes the statement, "I see dead people" to establish context to his emotions for Bruce Willis. This embodies what I found to be ludicrous as people use personal explanations to appropriately explain personal opinions, thoughts, motives, and thought process as demonstrated even in absurd movies like "The Sixth Sense." However, when someone uses a personal explanation to legitimize a global event, truth, or situation without impunity... it's absurd.
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