| ▲ | Vaslo an hour ago | |||||||
If it’s your own money, college can be whatever you want. When it’s someone else’s, they get to be involved in making a decision as to what college is for. | ||||||||
| ▲ | kelnos 36 minutes ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Collectively, yes, but not individually. The problem is that the electorate tends to not understand the concept of second-order effects. For example, a college graduate in the arts might, directly or indirectly, generate more economic activity than someone without a college degree, regardless of the difference in income level of people in those two buckets. | ||||||||
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