Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do they usually major in?
Probably some easy bullshit majors?
Such venom. So much jealousy.
DP here. I think posters, and people in general, resent that the athletes are given scholarships and put on a pedestal. Don't act perplexed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case you can’t tell, I don’t hate Harvard as an alum, but I don’t think an already privileged group of students deserve self-perpetuating privileges from alumni. If they are that good, let them compete on the open market.
Newsflash: It’s a rigged market in a systemically racist country.
Newsflash: And always has been.
Newsgladh: you’re a tool
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do they usually major in?
Probably some easy bullshit majors?
Such venom. So much jealousy.
DP here. I think posters, and people in general, resent that the athletes are given scholarships and put on a pedestal. Don't act perplexed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do they usually major in?
Probably some easy bullshit majors?
Such venom. So much jealousy.
Anonymous wrote:I posted this before, but Harvard Varsity Club actively asks alumni athletes to hire the Harvard varsity athletes. So there is definitely a career boost. I don’t do it, even though I could, because it rubs me the wrong way - let everyone compete on merit to get into the recruiting process. But I am sure that many others do provide career help and hiring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they're dipshits -- and they usually are vis a vis the average classmate -- they generally go onto work normal 9 to 5 gigs. It's a fake myth that all these millionaire exec alums just can't wait to hire washed up dipshit athletes and give them tons of cash with no accountability. I would bet the average former D1 athlete is selling insurance or cars at a Chevy dealership. And the average former female college athletes is in some make-work HR role or a fat SAHM.
Yeah yeah cherry pick the few that got into Stanford law or is now some Goldman executive or got rich off government set-aside minority contracts.![]()
We are talking ivy here and other academically rigorous schools but keep projecting
You've never been on an Ivy campus or you'd know many of the athletes are dipshits relative to their classmates who earned their way in. The hardest part about an Ivy is getting in. It's next to impossible to get kicked out or fail out before graduating.
This is true of everyone, not just the athletes, because the dean takes care of the students assigned to them and does everything possible to support them. For example, mine helped one of my friends graduate in 6 year because he had his first schizophrenia attack during freshman year. There were several kids with ED who got treatment and then came back after a two year gap.
Anonymous wrote:So, what I am hearing is that athletes are very successful because they into lucrative careers.
No one has talked about college athletes who have helped the poor and hungry or done anything to make the world a better place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case you can’t tell, I don’t hate Harvard as an alum, but I don’t think an already privileged group of students deserve self-perpetuating privileges from alumni. If they are that good, let them compete on the open market.
Newsflash: It’s a rigged market in a systemically racist country.
Newsflash: And always has been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case you can’t tell, I don’t hate Harvard as an alum, but I don’t think an already privileged group of students deserve self-perpetuating privileges from alumni. If they are that good, let them compete on the open market.
Newsflash: It’s a rigged market in a systemically racist country.
Newsflash: And always has been.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In case you can’t tell, I don’t hate Harvard as an alum, but I don’t think an already privileged group of students deserve self-perpetuating privileges from alumni. If they are that good, let them compete on the open market.
Newsflash: It’s a rigged market in a systemically racist country.
Anonymous wrote:In case you can’t tell, I don’t hate Harvard as an alum, but I don’t think an already privileged group of students deserve self-perpetuating privileges from alumni. If they are that good, let them compete on the open market.
Anonymous wrote:So, what I am hearing is that athletes are very successful because they into lucrative careers.
No one has talked about college athletes who have helped the poor and hungry or done anything to make the world a better place.