Agreed.
While the myth of american success has certainly brought many immigrants to its shores - 'streets paved with gold', only to have its weaker groups end up in sweatshops and tenements, or worse, there has always been that 'dream'.
The problem is that when the dream becomes only that. It used to be, work hard, save your money, have a little luck, do well, give your kids an education so they can do better. Now its work hard, get into debt, load up your kids on student loans, hope for the best. Does that sound like a good plan to you?
10 years ago, it was a well know statistic that 25% of college graduates made less than an equivalent high school graduate without the college education. And that individual didn't have the crushing student loans to pay back. I wonder what the number is now? Its not like we have a lack of unskilled labor in this country (illegal americans, with regrets to that underrepresented population here on ET).
At a certain point, the costs do not yield sufficent returns. The value of education is diminished. And we have a big mess.
We have already diminished the value of a scientific and technical education in this country. Those people are hard to replace. And we export those brains to china, elsewhere, in the form of graduate students who take the positions that would have been offered to american students (if they had only wanted them, which they don't. Our society has embarrased most smart kids out of going into the technical fields and instead steered them into finance, business, law, and medicine.)
When the middle class begins emigrating, that's the last straw. As much as I love this country, for my children's sake, I may choose a more stable situation.