| richardhutnik said:
Even then, it isn't about the skills or going to college. It is about being in a place where you don't get buried via globalization and can have your job outsourced. A system where the "bottom 60%" ends up falling way behind means an end to the middle class, and is primed for there to be uprisings happening. |
No, it is 100% based on skill differences ...
The person who enters into Engineering, Computer Science or some other in-demand field in University earns significantly more than th person who studies English Literature or Women's Studies; and all university graduates have a much lower unemployment rate and far greater earning potential than those who only have a high-school education or less. There are similar patterns in trade schools, which are far more accessable that University being that you can get into a co-op or internship program that helps pay your tuition, the tuition is far lower in price, and the education is much shorter.
We have known since the 1970s that a high-school education simply wasn't enough for the average person to have a decent career, and that being a high-school drop-out was almost ensuring you would be a "failure", and yet our education system has chugged along producing the same mediocre results (or worse) completely oblivious to the destruction they would cause.







