Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the most singularly stupid post I’ve ever read on so many levels. Who cares about your anecdote. A life time of college debt is debilitating.
So true. An uber to CVS is so much cheaper than SLAC debt after four years. If you can easily pay that tuition, have at it but if your kid would struggle with loans, no way. I'm eternally grateful that I went to my state flagship and came out with no undergrad loans. I did pay for law school and can't imagine what life would've been like had I paid for both undergrad + grad.
Uber to CVS all the way.
Who the hell pays $70,000/yr for 3 years to become an ambulance chaser?
What is your problem? People can do what they want with their money and time. You have a problem. All you can see is the $. I pity you for your short-sightedness.
(DP)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the most singularly stupid post I’ve ever read on so many levels. Who cares about your anecdote. A life time of college debt is debilitating.
So true. An uber to CVS is so much cheaper than SLAC debt after four years. If you can easily pay that tuition, have at it but if your kid would struggle with loans, no way. I'm eternally grateful that I went to my state flagship and came out with no undergrad loans. I did pay for law school and can't imagine what life would've been like had I paid for both undergrad + grad.
Uber to CVS all the way.
Who the hell pays $70,000/yr for 3 years to become an ambulance chaser?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the most singularly stupid post I’ve ever read on so many levels. Who cares about your anecdote. A life time of college debt is debilitating.
So true. An uber to CVS is so much cheaper than SLAC debt after four years. If you can easily pay that tuition, have at it but if your kid would struggle with loans, no way. I'm eternally grateful that I went to my state flagship and came out with no undergrad loans. I did pay for law school and can't imagine what life would've been like had I paid for both undergrad + grad.
Uber to CVS all the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP’s point is very obvious but is getting lost among ROI people. Not everything in life is about ROI.
Having a kid is the worst ROI experience, ever. They are a resource sink. If all you care about is ROI, your best decisions are, 1) not getting married; and 2) not having kids. Life’s ROI problem solved.
I’m not sure if small private schools, or even small, selective, rich private schools, are all better at handling Covid than big public universities.
But the health of our children actually has an obvious financial value. Say, an average of $3 million to $5 million in 2021 dollars, simply in terms of future earnings. Maybe 50 percent more than that if you include cleaning, parenting and other family services provided without cash compensation. Maybe $30 million to $50 million if you include our kids’ value to their employer, assuming the value of earnings is about 10 percent of the value the kids generate for the employers.
So, saving $250,000 on tuition by going with a reckless in-state public may not be a great deal, financial ROI for society wise, if you think there might be a 1 percent chance it will ruin your kid’s ability to work.
Anonymous wrote:OP’s point is very obvious but is getting lost among ROI people. Not everything in life is about ROI.
Having a kid is the worst ROI experience, ever. They are a resource sink. If all you care about is ROI, your best decisions are, 1) not getting married; and 2) not having kids. Life’s ROI problem solved.
Anonymous wrote:This is the most singularly stupid post I’ve ever read on so many levels. Who cares about your anecdote. A life time of college debt is debilitating.