(07-30-2021, 08:49 PM)ss20ts Wrote:(07-30-2021, 08:46 PM)sanantone Wrote: towers.
Sigh. This is not your average master's student at University of Chicago. This is a commonly seen student at non-traditional schools, though.
This explains the Appeal to Emotion and Ad Hominem fallacies and personal attacks. These are tactics people use when they can't make a logical, factual argument.
https://web.archive.org/web/201410180148...otion.html
Sigh all you want. I said nothing about any particular school. I did provide a factual argument. You just don't like the argument because it doesn't fit into your narrative. Like i said you better hope you're never hit with a curveball.
I've been hit by curveballs. You know what would NOT have helped at that point in time - going deeply into debt. That would have made things WORSE for me, not better. If my kid is hit by a curveball, you know what I'm NOT going to tell them to do? To go deeply into debt hoping that it will someday pan out. You know what advice I do NOT give to anyone struggling? To go deeply into debt.
There's a reason for that. Going into debt NOW in the HOPES that it will pan out someday is not a good plan. What if it doesn't pan out? If you have to quit school before you finish and can't get a job in your field? If the job prospects don't improve after you get a degree (or another degree, or a higher degree)?
What if it does pan out? You're still left with a huge debt that will influence your life for many years to come. You're stuck with jobs that you HAVE to take, because they're the only ones that allow you to pay off your debt - even if you hate your job, or your boss, or whatever.
I just don't see how any of that debt helps. And you're not going to convince me otherwise by telling me sob stories of people who had something happen and they just HAD to go deeply into debt because of it. The country is FILLED with people who are deeply in student loan debt, and the vast majority are NOT people who had something terrible happen to them, they just chose things without counting the true cost and without understanding what a crushing amount of debt they're getting into. For every one person who is in the situation you describe, there are probably 100 who just made a bad choice.
I have some sympathy for some individuals, but really, at what point are people to be held accountable for their lives and choices?
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EXAMS: TECEP Tech Wrtg, Comp II, LA Math, PR, Computers DSST Computers, Pers Fin CLEP Mgmt, Mktg
COURSES: TESU Capstone Study.com Pers Fin, Microecon, Stats Ed4Credit Acct 2 PF Fin Mgmt ALEKS Int & Coll Alg Sophia Proj Mgmt The Institutes - Ins Ethics Kaplan PLA