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by runako
1058 days ago
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> I think you're suffering a bit from sunk cost fallacy and a little bit of "got mine" No, the youth I typically advise are from the types of backgrounds that need every advantage to get the good jobs. They don't "pattern match" the other staff, so they have to compensate by looking better on paper. I have 100% seen people walk into jobs without any credentials; I have not seen anyone do it who doesn't look like management. > if you have to pay $200k to get your foot in the door then the system is rigged in favour of the elite (again). Should have added that this number is also an outlier. OP possibly works on a team with people who were all-in for $60k over 4 years (in-state tuition, living at home). The giant public university in my city has an average cost after aid of under $20k annually (including room & board). Living at home, a student could make a dent in that working at an amusement park over the summer. Some people choose a luxury experience, which is fine. But most students don't go to those colleges. But yes, college is too expensive. We should resume amply funding state universities. |
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