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Government shuts down ITT Tech
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Government shuts down ITT Tech
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 11:55:00 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/7/16 11:43 AM, wrote: I understand the university will teach you plenty of things with no practical purpose. It is reflected in the unemployment and underemployment rate of college graduates. That manifests itself in the miserable rate that the trillion plus dollars worth of student loans are being repaid. Hehehe. Your anti-intellectualism is just hysterical. You think "trade school" is the answer for everyone. Your sort of rigidity leads to a dumbed-down nation full of worker drones incapable of abstract thinking and supportive of, oh, Donald Trump. We have a whole generation of people thinking abstractly while sleeping on their parent's couch and watching TV all day because they can't find a job. (94 million as we speak) Maybe a little trade education is what we need. I know you are infatuated with the Europeans, particularly the Germans and Scandinavians. That is how they do it. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 12:03:30 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/7/16 11:47 AM, wrote: On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 08:10:17 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Why do you seem to insist that there is only *one* path to education? I suppose for the same reason he thinks the only path to anything is the one he took. Yet he ended up sitting on a bus for a couple hours a day going to work at a time in his life when he should be retired and enjoying his boat. And once again, you demonstrate your inability to comprehend... I never have thought or stated that the educational path I took is the only one. I do indeed take about one round trip bustrip a week to downtown DC to see clients because I like working and my clients still think I have the skills to help them in their endeavors. As I have stated several times here, I have many friends and colleagues my age and older who are still actively working part-time because they like it and they still have the ability to contribute. In other words your plan is to die at your desk working. Why do you think your way is the only path? I'd go nuts if pretty much all I had to do in life was work on a never-ending "honey do" list, take my dog boating, and go on the occasional out of town vacation. It is called having a life that goes beyond having a job. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
On 9/7/16 12:21 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 12:03:30 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/7/16 11:47 AM, wrote: On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 08:10:17 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Why do you seem to insist that there is only *one* path to education? I suppose for the same reason he thinks the only path to anything is the one he took. Yet he ended up sitting on a bus for a couple hours a day going to work at a time in his life when he should be retired and enjoying his boat. And once again, you demonstrate your inability to comprehend... I never have thought or stated that the educational path I took is the only one. I do indeed take about one round trip bustrip a week to downtown DC to see clients because I like working and my clients still think I have the skills to help them in their endeavors. As I have stated several times here, I have many friends and colleagues my age and older who are still actively working part-time because they like it and they still have the ability to contribute. In other words your plan is to die at your desk working. My plan is to work part-time for as long as I feel like working part-time. I enjoy the work, the intellectual stimulation, the meeting with clients, the production of work product that helps people. I'm not the sort of guy who would like to fill his day with your jar of honey-do jobs. I'm a candidate to be named to a board of an NGO that helps locals in Africa and Central and South America build and hold onto sustainable communities. To me, that is a lot more worthwhile and interesting than rebuilding an outdoor bar. To each his own. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
On 9/7/16 12:19 PM, wrote:
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 11:55:00 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/7/16 11:43 AM, wrote: I understand the university will teach you plenty of things with no practical purpose. It is reflected in the unemployment and underemployment rate of college graduates. That manifests itself in the miserable rate that the trillion plus dollars worth of student loans are being repaid. Hehehe. Your anti-intellectualism is just hysterical. You think "trade school" is the answer for everyone. Your sort of rigidity leads to a dumbed-down nation full of worker drones incapable of abstract thinking and supportive of, oh, Donald Trump. We have a whole generation of people thinking abstractly while sleeping on their parent's couch and watching TV all day because they can't find a job. (94 million as we speak) Maybe a little trade education is what we need. I know you are infatuated with the Europeans, particularly the Germans and Scandinavians. That is how they do it. I hear there is really good money in rebuilding tiki bars. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
wrote:
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 11:55:00 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/7/16 11:43 AM, wrote: I understand the university will teach you plenty of things with no practical purpose. It is reflected in the unemployment and underemployment rate of college graduates. That manifests itself in the miserable rate that the trillion plus dollars worth of student loans are being repaid. Hehehe. Your anti-intellectualism is just hysterical. You think "trade school" is the answer for everyone. Your sort of rigidity leads to a dumbed-down nation full of worker drones incapable of abstract thinking and supportive of, oh, Donald Trump. We have a whole generation of people thinking abstractly while sleeping on their parent's couch and watching TV all day because they can't find a job. (94 million as we speak) Maybe a little trade education is what we need. I know you are infatuated with the Europeans, particularly the Germans and Scandinavians. That is how they do it. Worse thing we did, and the California college leaders admitted it a couple years later was to drop industrial arts courses and make all paths College Prep, and to learn a trade go to Community College or a state university. One of the major reasons for high drop out rates from primary schools. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
wrote:
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 12:03:30 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/7/16 11:47 AM, wrote: On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 08:10:17 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: Why do you seem to insist that there is only *one* path to education? I suppose for the same reason he thinks the only path to anything is the one he took. Yet he ended up sitting on a bus for a couple hours a day going to work at a time in his life when he should be retired and enjoying his boat. And once again, you demonstrate your inability to comprehend... I never have thought or stated that the educational path I took is the only one. I do indeed take about one round trip bustrip a week to downtown DC to see clients because I like working and my clients still think I have the skills to help them in their endeavors. As I have stated several times here, I have many friends and colleagues my age and older who are still actively working part-time because they like it and they still have the ability to contribute. In other words your plan is to die at your desk working. Why do you think your way is the only path? I'd go nuts if pretty much all I had to do in life was work on a never-ending "honey do" list, take my dog boating, and go on the occasional out of town vacation. It is called having a life that goes beyond having a job. Big problem for a lot of people. No life outside work. My dad was management at UC Berkeley in building and grounds and during a strike he was kept busy fixing the normal broke stuff and the sabotage by the union strikers. After the strike, he took early retirement at 55 due to animosity at fixing sabotage. Problem he retired to his lake property, and other than the 3 months of summer, most of the social activity was at the local bar. Cancer may not have killed him at 68, if he had stayed local to where we grew up. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 12:28:01 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote:
I hear there is really good money in rebuilding tiki bars. Certainly good money in not paying other people to do all sorts of things. I am not a one trick pony. |
Government shuts down ITT Tech
On 9/7/2016 11:55 AM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 9/7/16 11:43 AM, wrote: On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 10:51:54 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/7/16 10:50 AM, wrote: On Wed, 7 Sep 2016 06:33:36 -0400, Keyser Soze wrote: On 9/6/16 11:43 PM, wrote: On Tue, 6 Sep 2016 23:01:28 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: wrote: On Tue, 6 Sep 2016 21:49:23 -0400, Keyser Söze wrote: wrote: Why would I want Navy electronics training? I know, it is a science, you are an artist. I took and got A's in a good number of university math and science classes. As I have and had no interest in being in the navy, why would I want navy electronics training? I suppose if you want to spend 2 years learning what you could learn in 6 weeks, go for it. Ahh. Your anti-intellectual nonsense Why is learning things faster anti intellectual? It seems to me they dumb down schools to the lowest common denominator and call it being intellectual. How is that right? It is funny that the only schools who operate that way are the ones that charge you by the hour so it is not all that amazing. Schools run by people who have an interest in teaching you quickly, go much faster with classes 7 or 8 hours a day at a much faster tempo and if you can't keep up, you get kicked out. Personally I prefer going fast. Even the IBM schools and the navy school was not really challenging me. Public school was a joke to me and my private school was barely holding my attention. Give me the books and a little nudge in the right direction and I will ace your test. Fortunately, for the good of mankind, there are ways to learn other than by rote. Who said anything about "rote". The best learning is "experience" and you do not get that in school . . . Sure you do. Well, maybe not in the courses you took. I understand the university will teach you plenty of things with no practical purpose. It is reflected in the unemployment and underemployment rate of college graduates. That manifests itself in the miserable rate that the trillion plus dollars worth of student loans are being repaid. Hehehe. Your anti-intellectualism is just hysterical. You think "trade school" is the answer for everyone. Your sort of rigidity leads to a dumbed-down nation full of worker drones incapable of abstract thinking and supportive of, oh, Donald Trump. You forgot something. They are also racists. |
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