The Democratic Candidates
Comments
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cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:benjs said:I hope I can develop the self-restraint to never play them again with you.Post edited by Spiritual_Chaos on"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0
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Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
DAMN COMMIES - MOVING OUT OF THEIR PARENTS HOUSES AT TWENTY (20) YEARS OLD?
Are you actually attacking the swedish system, and its goal to be fair because kids move out and take the loans I described on the last page, instead of living at home having daddy and mommy pay?"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
And benji says I'm arguing like a troll?
When did I ever come with something like a "let daddy pay" argument to keep paywalling education?"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Everybody come to your god damn senses!
JUMP IN THA FAJA"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
ikiT said:And...Just my opinion, those candidates better find some Unity fast.
Challenge Trumpito to individual debates. Make it about what a corrupt POS he is before they NEEDLESSLY turn on each other.
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0
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brianlux said:ikiT said:And...Just my opinion, those candidates better find some Unity fast.
Challenge Trumpito to individual debates. Make it about what a corrupt POS he is before they NEEDLESSLY turn on each other.Give Peas A Chance…0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:PJ_Soul said:mrussel1 said:Also, a paywall in the states is when you have to pay to access content in a website. I don't understand how you are using it.You don't? It's pretty obvious, right? As a metaphor? He is talking about how the cost of post-secondary tuition in the USA is restrictive for lower income people, so the rich get far better educations while the poor don't get much or any, simply because of the burden of tuition fees at the beter universities. That makes it so the entire post-secondary systems leads to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. Most people support an education system that ideally has equality when it comes to access, or at least doesn't make it impossible for lower income kids to access the high quality education that rich kids can (especially with the whole scamming rich kids into schools thing that the US has going on). The USA has the opposite of that. It has a tiered system that permits the rich to buy the best educations, leaving the poor to slog through community college systems. It confuses me that there are any Americans who are okay with the way things are now, along with healthcare.
It is also about being as fair as possible, wherever you come from or who your family us - your wallet should not determine your chances to education. Like PJ_Sould explained. It is vile to paywall education. I would say that is a better and more noble way to look at it than "fuck em, let the rich buy themselves into the best schools".
Using economic means in society to strengthen equality and making life more fair its citizens should be something to strive for, not run away from.
I also think that is fare that a woman has the right by law to stay home from work after giving birth. No humans right aspect in that I guess either. So I understand why the US would think that "Let the rich be able to stay home, and let the poor get back to work before they even healed up".
Different ways to look at society, and the value of a citizen. I would like to add, your view expressed above is depressing.
Sweden: "The peoples Home" -- Sometimes referred to as "the Swedish Middle Way", folkhemmet was viewed as midway between capitalism and socialism. The base of the folkhem vision is that the entire society ought to be like a small family, where everybody contributes, but also where everybody looks after one another. The Swedish Social Democrats' successes in the postwar period is often explained by the fact that the party managed to motivate major social reforms with the idea of the folkhem and the national family's joint endeavor.
The US: B-b-but why should I have to help out?hippiemom = goodness0 -
cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:PJ_Soul said:mrussel1 said:Also, a paywall in the states is when you have to pay to access content in a website. I don't understand how you are using it.You don't? It's pretty obvious, right? As a metaphor? He is talking about how the cost of post-secondary tuition in the USA is restrictive for lower income people, so the rich get far better educations while the poor don't get much or any, simply because of the burden of tuition fees at the beter universities. That makes it so the entire post-secondary systems leads to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. Most people support an education system that ideally has equality when it comes to access, or at least doesn't make it impossible for lower income kids to access the high quality education that rich kids can (especially with the whole scamming rich kids into schools thing that the US has going on). The USA has the opposite of that. It has a tiered system that permits the rich to buy the best educations, leaving the poor to slog through community college systems. It confuses me that there are any Americans who are okay with the way things are now, along with healthcare.
It is also about being as fair as possible, wherever you come from or who your family us - your wallet should not determine your chances to education. Like PJ_Sould explained. It is vile to paywall education. I would say that is a better and more noble way to look at it than "fuck em, let the rich buy themselves into the best schools".
Using economic means in society to strengthen equality and making life more fair its citizens should be something to strive for, not run away from.
I also think that is fare that a woman has the right by law to stay home from work after giving birth. No humans right aspect in that I guess either. So I understand why the US would think that "Let the rich be able to stay home, and let the poor get back to work before they even healed up".
Different ways to look at society, and the value of a citizen. I would like to add, your view expressed above is depressing.
Sweden: "The peoples Home" -- Sometimes referred to as "the Swedish Middle Way", folkhemmet was viewed as midway between capitalism and socialism. The base of the folkhem vision is that the entire society ought to be like a small family, where everybody contributes, but also where everybody looks after one another. The Swedish Social Democrats' successes in the postwar period is often explained by the fact that the party managed to motivate major social reforms with the idea of the folkhem and the national family's joint endeavor.
The US: B-b-but why should I have to help out?https://youtu.be/6UkrDEnzIS8
"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?Give Peas A Chance…0 -
Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?
AND NOW YOU ARE ARGUING AGAINST THE DAMN ARTICLE YOU POSTED FOR YOUR ARGUMENTATION.
Post edited by Spiritual_Chaos on"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Meltdown99 Posts article named "the high price of free education in Sweden." Says something about nothing being free, because why not?
Spiritual_Chaos: Their conclusion is that the high price is that swedes are more independent and doesn't "sponge" off their parents
Meltdown99: "So now American kids sponge off their parents!?"
Well, your article says so... uses those exact words -- So you should know that is what it says..?
Did you read the article, or just post the first link you could find to defend paywalling poor kids from education?Post edited by Spiritual_Chaos on"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:PJ_Soul said:mrussel1 said:Also, a paywall in the states is when you have to pay to access content in a website. I don't understand how you are using it.You don't? It's pretty obvious, right? As a metaphor? He is talking about how the cost of post-secondary tuition in the USA is restrictive for lower income people, so the rich get far better educations while the poor don't get much or any, simply because of the burden of tuition fees at the beter universities. That makes it so the entire post-secondary systems leads to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. Most people support an education system that ideally has equality when it comes to access, or at least doesn't make it impossible for lower income kids to access the high quality education that rich kids can (especially with the whole scamming rich kids into schools thing that the US has going on). The USA has the opposite of that. It has a tiered system that permits the rich to buy the best educations, leaving the poor to slog through community college systems. It confuses me that there are any Americans who are okay with the way things are now, along with healthcare.
It is also about being as fair as possible, wherever you come from or who your family us - your wallet should not determine your chances to education. Like PJ_Sould explained. It is vile to paywall education. I would say that is a better and more noble way to look at it than "fuck em, let the rich buy themselves into the best schools".
Using economic means in society to strengthen equality and making life more fair its citizens should be something to strive for, not run away from.
I also think that is fare that a woman has the right by law to stay home from work after giving birth. No humans right aspect in that I guess either. So I understand why the US would think that "Let the rich be able to stay home, and let the poor get back to work before they even healed up".
Different ways to look at society, and the value of a citizen. I would like to add, your view expressed above is depressing.
Sweden: "The peoples Home" -- Sometimes referred to as "the Swedish Middle Way", folkhemmet was viewed as midway between capitalism and socialism. The base of the folkhem vision is that the entire society ought to be like a small family, where everybody contributes, but also where everybody looks after one another. The Swedish Social Democrats' successes in the postwar period is often explained by the fact that the party managed to motivate major social reforms with the idea of the folkhem and the national family's joint endeavor.
The US: B-b-but why should I have to help out?https://youtu.be/6UkrDEnzIS8
hippiemom = goodness0 -
cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:PJ_Soul said:mrussel1 said:Also, a paywall in the states is when you have to pay to access content in a website. I don't understand how you are using it.You don't? It's pretty obvious, right? As a metaphor? He is talking about how the cost of post-secondary tuition in the USA is restrictive for lower income people, so the rich get far better educations while the poor don't get much or any, simply because of the burden of tuition fees at the beter universities. That makes it so the entire post-secondary systems leads to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. Most people support an education system that ideally has equality when it comes to access, or at least doesn't make it impossible for lower income kids to access the high quality education that rich kids can (especially with the whole scamming rich kids into schools thing that the US has going on). The USA has the opposite of that. It has a tiered system that permits the rich to buy the best educations, leaving the poor to slog through community college systems. It confuses me that there are any Americans who are okay with the way things are now, along with healthcare.
It is also about being as fair as possible, wherever you come from or who your family us - your wallet should not determine your chances to education. Like PJ_Sould explained. It is vile to paywall education. I would say that is a better and more noble way to look at it than "fuck em, let the rich buy themselves into the best schools".
Using economic means in society to strengthen equality and making life more fair its citizens should be something to strive for, not run away from.
I also think that is fare that a woman has the right by law to stay home from work after giving birth. No humans right aspect in that I guess either. So I understand why the US would think that "Let the rich be able to stay home, and let the poor get back to work before they even healed up".
Different ways to look at society, and the value of a citizen. I would like to add, your view expressed above is depressing.
Sweden: "The peoples Home" -- Sometimes referred to as "the Swedish Middle Way", folkhemmet was viewed as midway between capitalism and socialism. The base of the folkhem vision is that the entire society ought to be like a small family, where everybody contributes, but also where everybody looks after one another. The Swedish Social Democrats' successes in the postwar period is often explained by the fact that the party managed to motivate major social reforms with the idea of the folkhem and the national family's joint endeavor.
The US: B-b-but why should I have to help out?https://youtu.be/6UkrDEnzIS8
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:cincybearcat said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:mrussel1 said:PJ_Soul said:mrussel1 said:Also, a paywall in the states is when you have to pay to access content in a website. I don't understand how you are using it.You don't? It's pretty obvious, right? As a metaphor? He is talking about how the cost of post-secondary tuition in the USA is restrictive for lower income people, so the rich get far better educations while the poor don't get much or any, simply because of the burden of tuition fees at the beter universities. That makes it so the entire post-secondary systems leads to the rich getting richer and the poor getting poorer. Most people support an education system that ideally has equality when it comes to access, or at least doesn't make it impossible for lower income kids to access the high quality education that rich kids can (especially with the whole scamming rich kids into schools thing that the US has going on). The USA has the opposite of that. It has a tiered system that permits the rich to buy the best educations, leaving the poor to slog through community college systems. It confuses me that there are any Americans who are okay with the way things are now, along with healthcare.
It is also about being as fair as possible, wherever you come from or who your family us - your wallet should not determine your chances to education. Like PJ_Sould explained. It is vile to paywall education. I would say that is a better and more noble way to look at it than "fuck em, let the rich buy themselves into the best schools".
Using economic means in society to strengthen equality and making life more fair its citizens should be something to strive for, not run away from.
I also think that is fare that a woman has the right by law to stay home from work after giving birth. No humans right aspect in that I guess either. So I understand why the US would think that "Let the rich be able to stay home, and let the poor get back to work before they even healed up".
Different ways to look at society, and the value of a citizen. I would like to add, your view expressed above is depressing.
Sweden: "The peoples Home" -- Sometimes referred to as "the Swedish Middle Way", folkhemmet was viewed as midway between capitalism and socialism. The base of the folkhem vision is that the entire society ought to be like a small family, where everybody contributes, but also where everybody looks after one another. The Swedish Social Democrats' successes in the postwar period is often explained by the fact that the party managed to motivate major social reforms with the idea of the folkhem and the national family's joint endeavor.
The US: B-b-but why should I have to help out?https://youtu.be/6UkrDEnzIS8
"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?
AND NOW YOU ARE ARGUING AGAINST THE DAMN ARTICLE YOU POSTED FOR YOUR ARGUMENTATION.Post edited by Meltdown99 onGive Peas A Chance…0 -
Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?
AND NOW YOU ARE ARGUING AGAINST THE DAMN ARTICLE YOU POSTED FOR YOUR ARGUMENTATION.
I'll ride the wave where it takes me......0 -
mcgruff10 said:Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?
AND NOW YOU ARE ARGUING AGAINST THE DAMN ARTICLE YOU POSTED FOR YOUR ARGUMENTATION.Post edited by Spiritual_Chaos on"Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:Spiritual_Chaos said:Meltdown99 said:The High Price of a Free College Education in Sweden
https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2013/05/the-high-price-of-a-free-college-education-in-sweden/276428/
This is interesting. There is no such thing as FREE from the government unless you never pay taxes.
"So why do Swedish students end up with more debt? It's pretty simple, actually. In Sweden, young people are expected to pay for things themselves instead of sponging off their parents."
What is the interesting part? That swedes are more independent? We should live off our parents more? Is that your takeaway?
AND NOW YOU ARE ARGUING AGAINST THE DAMN ARTICLE YOU POSTED FOR YOUR ARGUMENTATION.
So my guess is, you didn't read shit but just posted something based on the headline."Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0
This discussion has been closed.
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