OK, I might be living in an alternate universe, but don't you think arguments like this were made when someone proposed free public education for children
through high school? I also realize that our schools are in financial trouble, and we're having trouble affording even that, but somehow, we allot enough money to keep it going, even if it's not as good a system as we wish.
With education more and more a necessity for jobs as business gets more mechanized and computerized, it seems that if you don't have some sort of higher education these days, you'll wind up flipping burgers for minimum wage. And people just can't live on the minimum wage these days. If people can't find jobs, they will have to go on public assistance of some sort, and that costs, too, and gives people plenty of time to get into trouble as well. Wouldn't it be better
sense to provide some sort of career training so even poor people could get it? Maybe not graduate degrees, but some sort of 2-year community college where people could learn skills that high schools don't offer? Or maybe get high schools to offer this?
I don't know how to solve the problem, but there is a problem, and the college kids are trying to make people aware, even if they, too, don't know how to address the problem.
Do you have a solution, Awsum? Should the jobless and untrained poor starve and be homeless? Maybe we have so many wars because the powers-that-be figure they can at least be cannon fodder, though even war is getting more mechanized and more skilled people are needed because of that.
And the unemployed poor, with lots of time on their hands, are pumping out babies, yet certain segments say they shouldn't be given free birth control, but instead, we should support their babies. Does that make
sense?
Sure, poor people should realize they can't afford kids and refrain from having them, but that's wishful thinking, so we can't even consider that as an option.
I think people should have equal opportunity, and if only the rich can afford to have their kids trained for good jobs, that seems unequal to me.