Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
Right??! It’s so rich (ha) to expect us to feel sorry that these kids training to be capitalist masters now face the downside of the free market. Like literally, zero sympathy. Particularly to the PE choads whose entire business model is to take over companies, strip the equity, and fire people. Nope, not even getting my tiny violin out for these baby vultures.
+1 hate to say it, but this is what capitalism is about. There are boom times and bust times. If you expected the party to last forever, you were ignorant.
I have been laid off twice, been through two recessions, including graduating during a recession. I told my kid to NOT go to such an expensive college such that we would have to take out huge loans. The ROI is just not there, and you never know what kind of economy you will be going into after graduation.
There had better not be another student loan forgiveness in the horizon for these graduates.
There’s PSLF for nonprofit hospital admins
please, most business grads don't major in it "to help people". And most hospital admins only care about profit even as the hospitals are nonprofit. Hospital admins don't actually care about the people it serves. They care about making sure the hospital is profitable.
btw, I was also a business major.
Anonymous wrote:Look at this con job published by HBS. These folks got snowed.
https://www.hbs.edu/mba/financial-aid/tuition-assistance/Pages/cost-of-attendance.aspx
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
I'd bet my entire 401K that you're a clueless boomer who put themselves through college with a part time job when tuition was $2,000
a year, and got handed a cushy job immediately upon graduation.
Times have changed old man.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
No med school grad is unemployed!! And they are training to HELP people. So yes, I fully support helping young med students financially. Particularly since some specialties like pediatrics really are difficult financially with the student loans now.
As do MBAs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
Right??! It’s so rich (ha) to expect us to feel sorry that these kids training to be capitalist masters now face the downside of the free market. Like literally, zero sympathy. Particularly to the PE choads whose entire business model is to take over companies, strip the equity, and fire people. Nope, not even getting my tiny violin out for these baby vultures.
+1 hate to say it, but this is what capitalism is about. There are boom times and bust times. If you expected the party to last forever, you were ignorant.
I have been laid off twice, been through two recessions, including graduating during a recession. I told my kid to NOT go to such an expensive college such that we would have to take out huge loans. The ROI is just not there, and you never know what kind of economy you will be going into after graduation.
There had better not be another student loan forgiveness in the horizon for these graduates.
There’s PSLF for nonprofit hospital admins
Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
Right??! It’s so rich (ha) to expect us to feel sorry that these kids training to be capitalist masters now face the downside of the free market. Like literally, zero sympathy. Particularly to the PE choads whose entire business model is to take over companies, strip the equity, and fire people. Nope, not even getting my tiny violin out for these baby vultures.
+1 hate to say it, but this is what capitalism is about. There are boom times and bust times. If you expected the party to last forever, you were ignorant.
I have been laid off twice, been through two recessions, including graduating during a recession. I told my kid to NOT go to such an expensive college such that we would have to take out huge loans. The ROI is just not there, and you never know what kind of economy you will be going into after graduation.
There had better not be another student loan forgiveness in the horizon for these graduates.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
No med school grad is unemployed!! And they are training to HELP people. So yes, I fully support helping young med students financially. Particularly since some specialties like pediatrics really are difficult financially with the student loans now.
Tons are. Not everyone matches into a residency.
Don’t they have other options like working in research or working for insurance companies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
No med school grad is unemployed!! And they are training to HELP people. So yes, I fully support helping young med students financially. Particularly since some specialties like pediatrics really are difficult financially with the student loans now.
As do MBAs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
No med school grad is unemployed!! And they are training to HELP people. So yes, I fully support helping young med students financially. Particularly since some specialties like pediatrics really are difficult financially with the student loans now.
Tons are. Not everyone matches into a residency.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Good. Kids need to learn that life has ups and downs and it's not all laid out for them like a platter of food.
Time to be humbled and take that wait staff job.
That doesn’t pay off loans.
Funny, you’d never say the same thing to an unemployed med school grad.
No med school grad is unemployed!! And they are training to HELP people. So yes, I fully support helping young med students financially. Particularly since some specialties like pediatrics really are difficult financially with the student loans now.
Tons are. Not everyone matches into a residency.
Anonymous wrote:This post brought the SJWs out of the woodwork OP
Someone’s got to do the making