Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:According to new UNC research…
2022’s fastest growing major cities are on the coasts, Mountain West, and Sun Belt.
The most dying cities include the northern Rust Belt’s Detroit, Milwaukee, Buffalo, and Cleveland.
https://kenaninstitute.unc.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/american-growth-project-10172022r.pdf
What schools in this conversation are in Detroit, Milwaukee, Buffalo, or Cleveland?
Those are the biggest cities in the upper Midwest. They’re all dying because they’re crummy places to live. If you’re an UMC teen, why go to college in a region that’s cold and dying? Please distill the point? There is no point. You’re just biased because you’re from there or stuck there.
Why would it matter to a kid attending Michigan that Michigan the state is not doing well? An OOS student was never planning to live there after graduation, anyway. I mean, New Haven is a pit and no one dreams of starting their lives in Connecticut after graduation, but that doesn't seemed to have hurt Yale. Heck, out of all the Ivies, only Harvard and Columbia are located in places where graduates of those schools might want to stay after they get their degree.
Many top universities aren't really in a place where people want to stay after graduation. It's not really relevant to the students, though, as they tend to scatter all over the country and world after they graduate.
The corollary to the question of why would you want to go to a school in a region where cities are cold and allegedly "dying," is why would you want to go to a school in a region where it's oppressively hot and humid and that contains some of the VERY worst cities in which to live and start a career?
Memphis TN: 145th worst city (out of 150) in which to live
Miami FL: 137th worst city
New Orleans: 136th worst city
Mobile AL: 130th worst city
Montgomery AL: 125th worst city
Jackson MS: 121st worst city
https://realestate.usnews.com/places/rankings/best-places-to-live
Sure, several of the Rust Belt cities are low-ranked as well, but almost none as low as those listed above. And yes, some Southern cities are ranked high, but so are some cold weather college towns: Ann Arbor, MI = #11, Madison, WI = #17