Insensitive
Superstar
I somewhat agree with it but that's ultimately because I feel the approach to education
in America much like healthcare shouldn't be an expensive branded product.
"Progressive" to me would've been the state subsidizing education in general as the next step of the project
with forgiving student loans as peddled when running for office being the first one.
I'm not apart of the "PMC" in the sense that I don't work in MBB, IB or PE nor am I a consultant or FAANG Engineer.
I'm a somewhat well paid professional who has gotten a great deal of his education subsidized
by the state due to being low income (and now my Employer absorbs some of those costs for me).
Had these same programs never been cut down in the first place, I would've gotten the entirety
of my education at a considerably lower cost than what it ultimately cost me.
I don't want to say the Biden/Harris admin was capable of totally upending college education and how it's approached in America (that's an impossible task for just 4 years IMO) but I still think very little of what was promised was accomplished and I sincerely think it came from it not being considered a big enough issue.
Tbh, I think pinning this issue on some nebulous group of "Progressives" is an ahistorical take which
ignores the forces driving the cost of higher education and how we spiraled to this point.
in America much like healthcare shouldn't be an expensive branded product.
"Progressive" to me would've been the state subsidizing education in general as the next step of the project
with forgiving student loans as peddled when running for office being the first one.
I'm not apart of the "PMC" in the sense that I don't work in MBB, IB or PE nor am I a consultant or FAANG Engineer.
I'm a somewhat well paid professional who has gotten a great deal of his education subsidized
by the state due to being low income (and now my Employer absorbs some of those costs for me).
Had these same programs never been cut down in the first place, I would've gotten the entirety
of my education at a considerably lower cost than what it ultimately cost me.
I don't want to say the Biden/Harris admin was capable of totally upending college education and how it's approached in America (that's an impossible task for just 4 years IMO) but I still think very little of what was promised was accomplished and I sincerely think it came from it not being considered a big enough issue.
Tbh, I think pinning this issue on some nebulous group of "Progressives" is an ahistorical take which
ignores the forces driving the cost of higher education and how we spiraled to this point.