PrivateWHudson said:
This is hard to argue. I just feel that a fun childhood is more important that being the smartest person in the room.
Yah, I can't argue against fun, but it's not about being the smartest person in the room. It's about creating a population that is qualified and ready for the types of jobs that are going to be created in the future which are going to be -- increasingly -- in technology, science, and engineering fields. If we don't invest in education now, we'll fall behind for the next generation. When people complain that they can't find jobs, it's not that there
aren't jobs, it's just that the qualifications for the jobs that are on the market are not being met by a good portion of the population (just a few months back, I read that US enrollment in computer science programs is on the decline...quite shocking and sad).
Sure you can. Privatize SS so my employer and I don't have to give away money that won't make a dent when I retire. Lower taxes in general. Separate medical insurance from employers and group discount shit and let it truly sink or swim in the free market. Teach people responsibility. I'm in PA, not Alabama.
Yah, I have no idea where you are
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but I know it's WAY cheaper to live in PA than in NJ. The same house in NJ is probably 15-25% more expensive than in PA not to mention the hidden cost of much higher property taxes and tolls on the NJTP and Parkway. It sucks because my wife wanted to move to PA, but being in tech, there are more job opportunities in NJ and metro NYC. Since I'm the higher wage earner (by far), we stay in NJ
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(sucks for my checkbook, I know).
I don't get this whole movement to privatize SS. I get a report every couple of months which lets me know how much I'll get from SS when I retire based on my income history. The idea of course, is that it the funds that I chip in to the whole thing will be administered responsibly. SS can work if it's administered responsibly and funded responsibly. Of course, I'm not counting on SS alone to get by. I have a
private 401k, my wife has a
private 403b, and we have
private mutual funds and IRAs as well. It's about balance and I think the current system doesn't need to be scraped; it needs to be tweaked.
The free market doesn't solve everything. I'm not sure why group discounts are a bad thing; you got me there. Seems like a good thing to me if it means I can get lower rates for a group of people and better coverage by leveraging a larger group of contributors. So I'm not sure why group coverage is bad.
And look at that, your mother could do it, why can't people today do it without government aid?
Interestingly, my mother comes from a country with socialized healthcare and a much more emphasized educational system: Taiwan. She could do it because her government gave her the opportunities for education and healthcare in her youth and gave her a chance at higher education.
I suspect the answer to "why can't people today do it without government aid" is that it is specifically because there was no government aid in the past and the economy has transitioned -- in a relatively short period of time -- from manufacturing to knowledge. The last 30 years have been dominated by the conservative movement and moved away from liberal ideals of investing in the pillars of society (healthcare, education, research, etc -- social programs that help people get their footing so that they can reach higher; when you don't have to worry about your son getting sick and not having medical coverage, it makes it a lot easier to focus on education and employment). Look at it historically. There was a pretty recent time period where you could get a decent job even without a college degree. Today? You're not going to get much of a shot at any decent paying white collar job without a college degree.
The problem is that the types of well paying jobs that are out there now are different than the types of well paying jobs that were out there just 30 or even 15 years ago; there has been a tectonic shift away from labor intensive skills and manufacturing to knowledge intensive skills and many people didn't have the capability or weren't given the opportunity to catch up. It's vitally important that we prepare for a future where even more jobs will be in the sciences and engineering fields.
Neil Tyson Degrasse framed it very well in "Death by Black Hole" in the chapter "Footprints in the Sands of Science":
Degrasse said:
In the twentieth century, astrophysicists in the United States discovered galaxies, the expanding of the universe, the nature of supernovas, quasars, black holes, gamma-ray bursts, the origin of the elements, the cosmic microwave background, and most of the known planets in orbit around the solar systems other than our own.... And American astronauts have walked on the Moon. Nowadays most Americans take all this for granted, which is practically a working definition of culture: something everyone does or knows about, but no longer actively notices.
Obviously, the US has not always sat atop the ladder of science. And there's no guarantee or even likelihood that American preeminence will continue. As the capitals of science and technology move from one nation to another, rising in one era and falling in the next, each culture leaves its mark on the continual attempt of our species to understand the universe and our place in it. When historians write their accounts of such world events, the traces of a nation's presence on center stage sit prominently in the timeline of civilization.
Many factors influence how and why a nation will make its mark. Strong leadership matters. So does access to resources. But something else must be present -- something less tangible, but with the power to drive an entire nation to focus its emotional, cultural, and intellectual capital on creating islands of excellence in the world. Those who live in such times often take for granted what they have created, on the blind assumption that things will continue forever as they are, leaving achievements susceptible to abandonment by the very culture that created it.
(Off topic, but this chapter in the book is a particularly good read as it shows how scientific advances outlast the civilizations that created them and how they carry on the legacy of societies past. It's a fascinating look at the strong Arabic influence in the fundamentals of mathematics, the strong English influence in spatial coordinates (geography) and the lingering US influence in nuclear research -- which we are slowly being overtaken in)
He laments how, in the 1930's, the US was the hub of nuclear research. Yet today, we are falling behind to countries like Japan and the EU. Of course, as he states, we only have to look to see where the forefront of particle research is taking place: not on American soil, but at the LHC on European soil. Instead of investing in research and science, we invest in warmaking and defense.
Liberalism is not necessarily a bad thing. We just have to make sure that public funds are directed at the right efforts like education and research as well as providing basics for living as well like cheap and accessible healthcare.