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by cyrksoft
1479 days ago
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Which value and recognition are you talking about? Their papers are almost never cited [0]. Soldiers, and defense in general, are part of the main things a government should provide (we can discuss how much, but that is another discussion). I am not sure why you say nurses cannot produce salaries. Nurses work in the private sector and provide substantial value. I do not have it in for academics specifically. In fact, I used to be one. What I am saying is that they are mostly disposable and think of themselves as some superior value. In the UK in particular, education used to be tuition-free. Now they are running more as a business. I do not see the point of forcing subsidies on people who produce something that not even other academics are interested in. You are basically paying people to sit in a room and discuss something by themselves. Why does a minimum wage worker have to subsidies that? We are all getting hit by inflation, some more than others. Academia is a job with zero risk involved. I don't think it is fair to keep subsidising the dream of a few while having so many better uses for the money, or even reducing the tax burden on society. [0] https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2014/04/23/ac... |
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>Soldiers, and defense in general, are part of the main things a government should provide
So is education. All developed countries spend public money on education.
>In the UK in particular, education used to be tuition-free.
That is my point. There are abundant historical examples of how a thriving university sector can be maintained without each department needing to be run as its own business.
>You are basically paying people to sit in a room and discuss something by themselves. Why does a minimum wage worker have to subsidies that?
In the UK? In the UK a minimum wage worker pays hardly any tax, so they don't subsidise much of anything. If the question is why society should subsidise that, my answer would be that it should do so if it values historical knowledge (assuming that we're still talking about history PhDs). If you are just saying "history sucks, so let's not spend money training people to be historians", then sure, that is a coherent position.