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by DiscourseFan
630 days ago
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This is what happens when Silicon Valley execs, trying to make their employees more replaceable, call for more STEM education; suddenly, tons of funding and institutional resources go into STEM research with no real reason or motivation or material for this research. It's like an gerbil wheel: once you get on the ride, once you get tricked into becoming a "scientist" just because a few billionaires wanted to cut slightly thicker margins, there's no stop. Bullshit your way through undergraduate education, bullshit your way through a PhD; finally, if you're good enough at making up statistics, you get a job training a whole host of other bullshitters to ride the gravy train. |
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I do believe that there exists an insane amount of (STEM) questions where there exist very good reasons to do research on - much, much more than is currently done.
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And by the way:
> This is what happens when Silicon Valley execs, trying to make their employees more replaceable, call for more STEM education
More STEM education does not make the employees more replaceable. The reason why the Silicon Valley execs call for more STEM education is rather that
- they want to save money training the employees,
- they want to save money doing research (let rather the taxpayer pay for the research).