Anonymous wrote:People don’t seem to have a problem with Emory being in a red state and I’ve heard that Wash U is Emory’s Midwestern twin
Anonymous wrote:Wash U is a beautiful campus. St. Louis is fun, and the area Wash U is in is safe and lots to do. However, most college kids stay on campus anyway at most schools. Eduation is top. Better than UVA certainly. Peolple on the east coast are a little ignorant of anything not east coast, but in the midwest, Wash U is know and loved. Certainly no one outside the east coast talks about UMD or th schools in VA besides maybe UVA.
People on this board hate on everything and everyone. Prob because anonymous and they can let their aggression and meanness run amok.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Anonymous wrote:- St. Louis sucks
- games admissions stats
- super Jewish
- not fun
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
The biggest concern is the peer group at these schools.
People who think MAGA is acceptable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
You are overthinking it, and let the kids choose where they want to go to school based on the education they will receive. I’m pretty far left, but I learned a ton about people and life by spending time in red states during my younger years.
I don't disagree that learning about the locality of your college is part of your education. But I have college students and there is going to be sexual activity.
Pay attention to what is going on. State restrictions on birth control could obviously be worked around. Efforts toward criminalization for certain birth control activity is just a hard no. And what does it say to my daughters that they're being educated in a place that treats them like second-class citizens?
Illinois is like 10 minutes away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
You are overthinking it, and let the kids choose where they want to go to school based on the education they will receive. I’m pretty far left, but I learned a ton about people and life by spending time in red states during my younger years.
I don't disagree that learning about the locality of your college is part of your education. But I have college students and there is going to be sexual activity.
Pay attention to what is going on. State restrictions on birth control could obviously be worked around. Efforts toward criminalization for certain birth control activity is just a hard no. And what does it say to my daughters that they're being educated in a place that treats them like second-class citizens?
Illinois is like 10 minutes away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
You are overthinking it, and let the kids choose where they want to go to school based on the education they will receive. I’m pretty far left, but I learned a ton about people and life by spending time in red states during my younger years.
I don't disagree that learning about the locality of your college is part of your education. But I have college students and there is going to be sexual activity.
Pay attention to what is going on. State restrictions on birth control could obviously be worked around. Efforts toward criminalization for certain birth control activity is just a hard no. And what does it say to my daughters that they're being educated in a place that treats them like second-class citizens?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
You are overthinking it, and let the kids choose where they want to go to school based on the education they will receive. I’m pretty far left, but I learned a ton about people and life by spending time in red states during my younger years.
I don't disagree that learning about the locality of your college is part of your education. But I have college students and there is going to be sexual activity.
Pay attention to what is going on. State restrictions on birth control could obviously be worked around. Efforts toward criminalization for certain birth control activity is just a hard no. And what does it say to my daughters that they're being educated in a place that treats them like second-class citizens?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.
You are overthinking it, and let the kids choose where they want to go to school based on the education they will receive. I’m pretty far left, but I learned a ton about people and life by spending time in red states during my younger years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds like the consensus is that it’s Missouri that’s the issue. Yet, people here love Rice and don’t post long missives about how women are treated under Texas laws. Why not?
People do complain about Rice and Texas. Young people like to be in Texas more than Missouri though.
Both these states are extremely aggressive with their abortion bans and involving themselves in folk's reproductive business. There's chatter out here about criminalizing iuds for goodness sake.
Suit yourself but sending your sons and daughters off to college in a state that might criminalize or severely restrict birth control does not seem like the wisest choice.