Lost Generation, wow sucks to be young today.

Quote from ksmetana:

Hi I am a member of the Lost Generation. I will never afford to get married and I will never afford my own house, Hi

I shouldn't say "never." All us lost generation kids get our baby boomer parents' homes when they pass away.

What makes you think your parents' home(s) won't already be mortgaged to the hilt if not sold outright well before they're dead?
 
Quote from FireWalker:

I agree. Nascar was designed for cars with a max speed of 130 or so. Time for an upgrade if you ask me.

Don't even get me started about the interstate highway system.

+1 for the NASCAR reference.

+1 for the interstate highway reference.

Using a "congressional calculator", that equals plus five. I threw in a few extra for the "cost overruns." :D
 
Quote from Humpy:

The problem of youth is that they think they know everything

The tragedy of old age is that you get to slowly realize you know next to nothing.

To coin the great German phrase:

"Too soon old, too late schmart."

Thanks to Brian Roberts, I knew those tapes would pay off some day.
 
Quote from Tightsqueeze:

Eventually someone will figure out how to attract the brightest minds in their fields and consolidate them into an online university. Low overhead cost plus the ability to reach millions of (paying) students would be win/win. Cheap education, coming from the leading thinkers, for a fraction of the cost, straight into your home. Go to your local lab for hands-on work, the rest of the time just stream education at your leisure 24/7.

Ummm, that's happening already, it's called Univ. of Phoenix, WGU, or any number of "online institutions." Problem is, hiring managers don't recognize these schools as "legitimate universities."

So we have online colleges spending millions to get students to borrow billions to create a deficit in the trillions.

How's that for "new math"??
 
Quote from FireWalker:

You need to understand co-ed education to understand that. The Spenglish definition of "tenure" is important too. I prefer not to talk about such things as why tuition outpaces inflation. Rich people tend to have hotter daughters of course.

If you're in college, look around the room and do a little accounting. How many people? How much was your tuition for that particular class? Multiply. Arrive at that large number. Now. How much is that professor and "TA" paid? Do a little a cost estimation on the building. How old is it? When was it built? Throw in supplies for labs and science stuff. What number do you get as profit?

All you really have to do is look at some of these enormous endowments to get a good idea of where all those excess "reserves" go. Obviously, the largest Ivy League schools have the biggest endowments (alot of alumni donations as well). Ironically, or maybe not, but the endowments of these schools I believe took the most heat a few years back during the sub-prime meltdown. Turns out they were heavily invested in all the illiquid junk that the i-banks were offloading.

On the other hand, even some of the lesser known schools are swimming in cash, knocking down buildings just to re-build them again. It's one of the last standing bubbles, IMO.
 
Quote from keeptradin':

Ummm, that's happening already, it's called Univ. of Phoenix, WGU, or any number of "online institutions." Problem is, hiring managers don't recognize these schools as "legitimate universities."

So we have colleges spending millions to get students to borrow billions to create a deficit in the trillions.

How's that for "new math"??

It's an unpopular opinion around these parts, but alot of the "name" institutions function as much on their academic reputations as they do on their alumni networks. Go to any of those pedigreed prop firms and look at where they do their on campus recruiting. The same names pop up over and over again. Not to say it's fair or even efficient, but it's become the norm.
 
Quote from denner:

It's an unpopular opinion around these parts, but alot of the "name" institutions function as much on their academic reputations as they do on their alumni networks. Go to any of those pedigreed prop firms and look at where they do their on campus recruiting. The same names pop up over and over again. Not to say it's fair or even efficient, but it's become the norm.

Very true. As a resident of Florida, I have seen that firsthand.
 
Quote from jprad:

What makes you think your parents' home(s) won't already be mortgaged to the hilt if not sold outright well before they're dead?

good point, they're all screwed. my parents' homes are paid off though so I am one of the lucky few.

and I'm not moving to South America lol

If I moved out of the US I would move to either Spain, Italy, or Czech Republic
 
From Tightsqueeze

"Universities aren't there to teach you anything; they're businesses with the sole purpose of bringing in students for money. How is watching my professor at home different from sitting in a classroom with 250 other people? We're stuck in brick & mortar schooling when we have the capability for interactive digital learning."

Right on Tightsqueeze !

The Professor can record his/her lectures one year and play back
over the internet for the next 5 years, Algebra etc. will be the same
in 5 yers. I'm going to ask my state legislature why we are dumping
money every year for the same lectures.

The state college system can play the lectures for the other colleges
in the system. This will save millions. Anybody know a college that
teaches common sense?

BTW my brother-in-law is a college professor.

GS
 
Quote from GS19:

From Tightsqueeze

"Universities aren't there to teach you anything; they're businesses with the sole purpose of bringing in students for money. How is watching my professor at home different from sitting in a classroom with 250 other people? We're stuck in brick & mortar schooling when we have the capability for interactive digital learning."

Right on Tightsqueeze !

The Professor can record his/her lectures one year and play back
over the internet for the next 5 years, Algebra etc. will be the same
in 5 yers. I'm going to ask my state legislature why we are dumping
money every year for the same lectures.

The state college system can play the lectures for the other colleges
in the system. This will save millions. Anybody know a college that
teaches common sense?

BTW my brother-in-law is a college professor.

GS

Tell me more about this guy who's fucking your sister.
 
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