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A Teachable Moment: The Young Person Complaining About Her Job Discovers Real Minimum Wage Is $0
Zero Hedge via Of Two Minds ^ | 02/25/2016 | Charles Hugh Smith

Posted on 02/25/2016 10:03:21 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith vis OfTwoMinds blog,

You identified two problems but do not propose any solutions to either one; and you missed the two real problems.

This open letter from a young customer support employee of Yelp in San Francisco to her CEO has garnered a variety of comments that display a common bifurcation: some are sympathetic to her struggle to get by in a very costly region on a modest salary, while others wonder if the letter is an Onion parody of clueless entitlement: An Open Letter To My CEO.

I am sympathetic to anyone who arrives in a very competitive "big city" with no local contacts and not a lot of experience or specialized training. That describes me when I arrived in the San Francisco Bay Area a few decades ago.

My B.A. is in philosophy, which has a similar market value to your degree in English, i.e. near-zero. But this doesn't mean my training in philosophy has no value; it simply means you can't walk up to a potential employer and say, "Hi, I have a degree in philosophy, hire me."

The value is only reaped by applying what you have learned. Studying philosophy taught me a number of specific analytic skills: to seek out false assumptions and identify problems and potential solutions. If you can't frame the problem accurately and coherently, it's impossible to identify any useful solutions.

These skills have served me well, despite my "worthless" degree. Though nobody had any sound reason to pay me a lot of money simply because I had a B.A. in philosophy, life presents a constant flow of problems that need to be analyzed in ways that enable the development of solutions.

In other words, there is a super-abundance of opportunities to apply what I learned.

Taking my own experience as an employee, employer, business owner and entrepreneur, I've condensed what I've learned about creating value (i.e. earnings) and the emerging economy into a book: Get a Job, Build a Real Career and Defy a Bewildering Economy.

It is less a career-guidance book and more of an explanation of how the economy actually works. It covers the eight essential skills you need to successfully navigate the economy as it is, not as we wish it was.

Rather than tell you the book is useful, I'll apply what's in it.

I don't think your age, gender, ethnicity, etc. is relevant. Anyone can apply what I'm sharing.

You have identified what you perceive as your two big problems: the cost of living in the S.F. Bay Area is very high, and your pay is too modest to enable the lifestyle you anticipated/expected.

You identified these two problems but do not propose any solutions to either one; and you missed the two real problems. Problems don't solve themselves; problem-solving requires analysis, diligence and a willingness to learn from others, to experiment and fail--not once, but continually.

You did not identify the third problem: your expectations are completely mis-aligned with reality. The S.F. Bay Area is one of the most attractive, stimulating, dynamic urban regions in the world, and it attracts capital and talent from all over the globe.

The demand to live and work here outstrips the supply of dwellings and high-paying jobs, so the costs of living are very high and the pay for labor is low unless you're able to take advantage of specific skills or social contacts.

Many of the people who come here seeking work are highly educated, experienced, creative, ambitious, hard-working, dedicated, etc., and many possess enviable social skills (social capital).

If you intend to find work here (i.e. if you don't have a large monthly income from a trust fund), you will be competing against extremely competitive, ambitious people, many of whom focus not on the hardships but on the opportunities. Expecting to outcompete these people for a high-paying job is unrealistic unless you have competitive skills, a strong work ethic, abundant social and human capital, etc.

Whatever you lack, you will have to acquire in order to be competitive in this environment.

if you want a degree that opens doors, earn a PhD in EE/CS from UC Berkeley or Stanford, or get top marks in your Stanford/Haas School (UCB) MBA program.

For the rest of us mere mortals, credentials don't offer much advantage, as this is one of the most over-credentialed locales on the planet.

The question is: what can you do to create value? It's not so much a matter of having job skills or experience; it's how those can be applied to create value--either for your employer or for your own enterprise.

So the real problem you have is: what can you do to increase your value creation and thus your earnings? "Unfair" doesn't count. Labor has a market value, end of story. Unfortunately, there is an oversupply of labor around the world and a scarcity of high-paying jobs.

It may seem like there is an abundance of high-paying jobs in the Bay Area because we're in the bubble factory of the world, but this is only a reflection of frothy VC-fueled valuations of zero-profit companies and highly paid employees' ability to make their employers obscene amounts of money.

if you want to earn $100,000, you need to bring in $500,000 in revenues for your employee, minimum.

The second problem you have is: what can you do to dramatically lower your cost of living? Since you didn't properly identify the actual problems, you were incapable of finding solutions. Now that we've identified your real problems, we can seek solutions.

As for living costs: your goal should be to live on one of your two paychecks a month: $733. Immigrants often get by on low-paying jobs and yet manage to buy a house and pay the mortgage off in five years. They do this by sharing expenses. If you want a very low-cost lifestyle, try befriending immigrants in your social circle (or add them to your circle). Someone will likely know someone in their extended group who has a room for rent (in a house they're buying by pooling six adults' modest wages).

As for food--shop only in Chinatown or ethnic markets. If you are careful and observe what the older ladies are buying, you will not be able to carry $20 of groceries. Just recently, I bought two pounds of beautiful tangerines for $1 in Chinatown and wonderfully fresh yao-choy veggies for less than $2. Many fish are available for $2 or $3 a pound; if you're vegan, pressed tofu is a cheap substitute for meat.

Asian-style cooking only uses a few ounces of meat/meat substitute anyway.

A carton of black beans used for seasoning (it adds umami) will cost you $1.29, and last you a year. A jar of chili bean sauce (a teaspoon enlivens a dish most wonderfully) costs $2.29.

You get the point: learn to cook vegetable-based meals and your costs to eat gourmet food will drop under $100 per month. A pound of beans and some Asian veggies will feed you for a week, and with some cheap seasoning, it will be delicious.

We eat better at home for $150 than people who spend $2,000 a month eating out. Anybody can learn how to cook with low-cost ingredients on YouTube University. Make a pot of spicy dal, experiment.

If you don't have any family to share expenses with, form a family-type group of responsible, honest friends. Rent a house with them, make some basic good-neighbor rules, and kick out whomever fails to fulfill their duties and responsibilities. It will be good experience for running your own enterprise.

Here is my version of a letter you could have sent Yelp's CEO:

Dear CEO:

 

I know you're busy, but I have two ideas that will immediately lower the costs of providing customer support while boosting productivity and employee retention.

 

After three months in customer support, I've observed that a few employees have developed ways to handle customer issues quickly and with relatively few coupons. Others solve customer issues by throwing coupons at everyone.

 

I've developed a brief, concise training program that would give every customer support employee the tools to resolve customer problems more efficiently and at lower cost than the present system.

 

If customer support teams were able to earn bonuses based on their improved productivity and lower costs, this would immediately improve employee retention, at a modest cost that would be more than paid for by higher productivity.

 

The benefits from these two ideas would be immediate. I am hoping you can get me fifteen minutes with the V.P. of customer support to present my training/productivity ideas, and I'm excited by the possibility that we could make dramatic improvements with a modest investment of time and virtually no capital costs.

 

Sincerely,

Yelp Employee

cc: V.P. of customer support

Which letter do you think would be more effective in accomplishing your goal of earning more money--your letter or my letter? As management guru Peter Drucker noted, businesses don't have profits, they only have expenses. Value creation boils down to cutting costs, boosting revenues and increasing productivity.

This is as true of a sole proprietorship as it is of a major corporation.

If the management of Yelp failed to show interest in your letter/proposal and did not even hear you out, you learned a very important lesson:

Yelp's management is incompetent and/or dysfunctional, and there is no opportunity for you at Yelp. This new knowledge clarifies your solution: find a job at a company/agency that is open to new ideas and is thus a place where you might be able to contribute value and grow your own human/social capital--and your earnings.

If you want to be in PR/media, start designing media/PR campaigns for small businesses for free. Most won't have any social media exposure; they will welcome your efforts to boost their revenues/customer base.

This is your job from hour 41 (after your full-time gig) to hour 55. Convincing small businesses to give you, an inexperienced person with no track record, hard cash, will be difficult; convincing them to let you design and produce a social-media campaign and share any increase in revenues with you is a much easier sell, because you're taking the risks: if the campaign flops, you earn nothing, and the business owner isn't out any cash.

But you will have learned a lot by the time you run 10 or 20 such campaigns, and if you do a good job, are honest, forthright and do what you say you're going to do, you'll assemble a useful network of contacts that will lead to opportunities you cannot anticipate.

There is much more in my book, but I hope you've learned something that can be applied to your future endeavors from this Teachable Moment.



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: jobs; mentalillness; minimumwage
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1 posted on 02/25/2016 10:03:21 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Color me impressed that a philosophy major actually knows something about economics.


2 posted on 02/25/2016 10:11:54 AM PST by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: SeekAndFind

tl;dr

It’s surprising the traction her open letter got. They did a segment on it during yesterday’s The Five. By traction, I mean derision.


3 posted on 02/25/2016 10:15:35 AM PST by sparklite2 ( "The white man is the Jew of Liberal Fascism." -Jonah Goldberg)
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To: sparklite2

She wants to live the “life of Julia”
But Baraq failed her....


4 posted on 02/25/2016 10:17:16 AM PST by nascarnation (RIP Scalia. Godspeed)
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To: SeekAndFind
The author, Charles Smith, did a really good job here. Instead of just mocking the girl, he offered her solid, practical advice. I hope the girl, and all like her, get a chance to read this article.

As a side note, I'm a bit put-off by those who are content to just mock her. The girl is certainly very unrealistic, but at least she was trying to hold down a job somewhere. Contrast that with the folks who'd rather sign up for welfare benefits, then just sit home watching TV all day.

5 posted on 02/25/2016 10:20:53 AM PST by Leaning Right (Why am I holding this lantern? I am looking for the next Reagan.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Definitely a Sanders follower. What a clueless little girl she is.


6 posted on 02/25/2016 10:27:37 AM PST by txnativegop (Tired of liberals, even a few in my own family.)
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To: Leaning Right

Well, she’s also a fraud: http://thatsalotofrice.com/


7 posted on 02/25/2016 10:28:35 AM PST by Huntress ("Politicians exploit economic illiteracy." --Walter Williams)
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To: SeekAndFind
I like this letter better.

An Open Letter to Millennials Like Talia…


Dear Talia Jane,

After reading your article detailing the absolute struggle you dealt with while working for a Bay Area based corporation (see here: https://medium.com/@taliajane/an-open-letter-to-my-ceo-fb73df021e7a#.4ds8wym2b), I felt it imperative to address your concerns and above all, your obvious need for financial assistance. It sounds like you’ve hit some real post Haitian earthquake style hard times, so maybe some advice will help while you drink the incredibly expensive bourbon you posted on your Instagram account and eat that bag of rice, which was the only other thing you could afford!

My name is Stefanie. I’m not much older than you. I will be turning the big 3–0 in three weeks time. It seems like a lifetime ago I sat in my sophomore year apartment crying about how I would never again be able to relate to Baba O’Riley or Scenes from an Italian Restaurant. But here I am, having survived my 20’s with some grace and a lot of humility.

However, despite our less-than-a-decade difference in age, it seems we are worlds apart in the concept of work ethic. But somehow, I’m not surprised. Those five little years are incredibly important.

When I was 22, I was let go from an office job. My first post college job. I was sent out into the employment-seeking word three weeks after Lehmann Brothers crashed and two months before the economy went into absolute free fall. But on that Halloween when I was let go, young and confused and scared, I wandered into a bar where the old Irish bartender was a family friend, hoping he’d give me a drink and some advice about my plight. I, too, was an English major. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to do with that. Work in marketing? Try my hand at journalism again? PR? No clue. All I knew was my dreams of being able to move out and live in the City with my friends had just been dashed.

Listening to my problems, like most bartenders do, Mike walked away and came back with the General Manager of the restaurant. After coming in for an interview several days later, I was offered a hostessing shift two days a week that paid fifteen an hour (which worked out to a weekly paycheck, after taxes, of $168.00). I agreed to it. It would be temporary, but it would be better than making nothing at all. I’d do that while looking for another job that was more my speed, something my mother could be proud of, something worthy of my English Language and Literature degree and my Chaucer reciting mind. Little did I know that in just about a month’s time, I would be looking for a job alongside thousands of men and women who had been in the industry for ten, fifteen, thirty years. And the positions I’d be offered would all be unpaid internships. Something I simply could not afford. Sure, it’d be great to tell people I was working for Conde Nast or Vogue, but what wouldn’t be great would be the fact that I couldn’t afford to be slave labor, even if it helped my resume. Reality had to take over and I accepted that. So I worked in a restaurant.

Nine months later, after living at home with my mom and commuting on the LIRR each day to stand at a hostess desk and bring patrons to their tables, running into old high school classmates who were working in finance or PR and eating my pride when they detailed (and usually lied about) their “amazing” jobs, I was offered a cocktail waitressing shift at my restaurant. Sure, it was on the worst night of the week. Sure, I had never made a drink before. But it would potentially be an extra $200 to $400 increase a week. I jumped at it. And the extra money I was making did in fact make dealing with the high school classmate I served (who worked for Barclays Capital), who made rude comments about how I “seemed to being doing great in life”, worth it. Even if I went and cried in our private party room after and questioned how I had ended up clearing the plates of people I went to high school with.

Six months later, I was offered the weekend bartending shifts for the month of December. Long hours, lots of stress, I smelled like bad citrus and stale beer most of the time, I had to miss Christmas Eve, Christmas Day and New Years Eve with my family and friends, but I jumped at the opportunity. And all of a sudden, after about a year, I was making enough money to live. And after several years, I was making enough money to live well.

A year later, I was making enough money to move into the City with my best friend. I worked four days a week making anywhere between $50,000 and $60,000 a year — more than many of my former classmates with much more flexibility and far better hours. I was able to travel three times a year, go out with my friends, pay rent, pay for groceries. Above all, I was able to write. And at 26, I signed to United Talent Agency in LA and began my journey into television screenplay writing.

All of this was afforded to me not in the first month I was working at a restaurant, but after I put in the hours, made the sacrifices and sucked up my pride in order to make ends meet and figure out what I wanted to do and how to do it. I gave up holidays with my family in order to work extra shifts and make the good tips. I put up with people making rude comments, assuming I was just a wanna-be actress, assuming I didn’t go to college, all to make money. I lived with my mother, my first roommate, and then moved in with two others soon after because living in New York by yourself is a luxury, not an affordable option. I commuted 40 minutes each way each day at first, sometimes missing the late night train and having to sit in Penn Station for an extra hour or two waiting to get home. I dealt with the pitying looks of my former classmates or their parents when they would see me at the hostess stand or walking into the service station in my heels, laughing to myself knowing their child was addicted to coke and hating their “amazing” job. I paid my dues. I did what I had to do in order to survive, with the help of my family. I was gracious and thankful and worked as hard as I could even if it was a job that sometimes made me question my worth. And I was successful because of that.

Had you ended your whole whining disdain about full health coverage and expensive copays by saying you had taken a job at Starbucks, or a waitressing job in order to make money while you were on the search for a new job that requires the basic knowledge most teenagers with a Twitter account hold these days, I’d have maybe given you credit. Saying you moved in with several roommates to cut costs, tried to budget in a way that was more practical, and applied for jobs that were more about salary and growth than bragging rights and trends, I’d say hey, she’s making an effort. But you are a young, white, English speaking woman with a degree and a family who I would assume is helping you out at the moment, and you are asking for handouts from strangers while you sit on your ass looking for cushy jobs you are not entitled to while you complain about the establishment, probably from a nice laptop. To you, that is more acceptable than taking a job in a restaurant, or a coffee shop, or a fast food place. And that’s the trouble with not just your outlook, but the outlook of so many people your age. You think it is somehow more impressive to ask strangers for money by writing some “witty” open letter than it is to put on your big girl pants and take a job you might be embarrassed by in order to make ends meet. And as someone who not only took the “embarrassing job”, but thrived at it, made bank from it and found a career path through it, I am utterly disgusted by your attitude.

Being an English major isn’t the problem. Minimum wage isn’t the problem (in this case). Do I like Yelp? Not particularly. Do I like that CEOs make pathetic amounts of money? Not particularly. But turning this girl’s inability to work for what she wants into a conversation about poverty (Poverty! She lives in the Bay Area alone and has a corporate job and can afford fancy bourbon! Not exactly the picture of a third world crisis!) and wage issues, it’s utter bullshit. This is about this girl’s personal responsibility to be an adult and find a job, or two (God forbid she have to give up a weekend day to be a waitress), an an affordable living situation and an affordable city in which to work. Yelp, as bad as they are and as much as I hate the assholes who use it to pretend they are New York Times food critics about the Applebees on Walnut St., is not the issue in this moment. The issue is that this girl doesn’t think working a second job or getting roommates should be something she has to do in order to get ahead after three months of an entry level job in the most expensive city in the country. She believes Yelp should cover the cost of the financial decisions she’s made which include living alone and accepting that salary, two options that any sane person would never make. She believes she deserves these things that most of us would call luxuries. You expected to get what you thought you deserved rather than expected to work for what you had to earn. And that’s the problem entirely.

Work ethic is not something that develops from entitlement. Quite the opposite, in fact. It develops when you realize there are a million other people who could perform your job and you are lucky to have one. It comes from sucking up the bad aspects and focusing on the good and above all it comes from humility. It comes from modesty. And those are two things, based on your article, that you clearly do not possess.

Trust me when I say, there are far more embarrassing things in life than working at a restaurant, washing dishes, or serving burgers at a fast food window. And one of them, without one shred of doubt, is displaying your complete lack of work ethic in public by asking for handouts because you refuse to actually do work that at the ripe old age of 25 that you think is unworthy of your witty tweet creating time.

You wanted to write memes? Darling, you just became one.


 


8 posted on 02/25/2016 10:30:53 AM PST by Bratch
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To: Bratch

Good stuff, thanks for posting


9 posted on 02/25/2016 10:36:31 AM PST by nascarnation (RIP Scalia. Godspeed)
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To: SeekAndFind

College, and arguably High School, should be teaching that your salary will ALWAYS be between end points.

An employee is never paid more than what it costs to replace them.

A person will never work for anything less than what they are willing to accept.


10 posted on 02/25/2016 10:36:58 AM PST by taxcontrol ( The GOPe treats the conservative base like slaves by taking their votes and refuses to pay)
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To: SeekAndFind

From a lib perspective that’s OK.

Their ‘moral’ point is about ‘exploitation’ by employers not paying their fair share.


11 posted on 02/25/2016 10:37:32 AM PST by sickoflibs (Trumpetir : 'I don't care what he says, or ever said. He is the onlywith brillant neg one I trust"')
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To: Vigilanteman

As he says, he doesn’t really know economics. He does know how to analyze a problem, break it down into individual components and derive solutions by understanding the motivations of everyone involved. This kind of person is a benefit to any company for which they work.


12 posted on 02/25/2016 10:38:32 AM PST by Personal Responsibility (We need a separation of press and state!)
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To: Vigilanteman
Color me impressed that a philosophy major actually knows something about economics.

Not all of us are idiots. Just the one's who try and get a job in the field.

13 posted on 02/25/2016 10:42:47 AM PST by Tijeras_Slim
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To: taxcontrol

I went to a public high school in the 1950s and, in addition to science classes bereft of human evolution, had no classes in economics. Although, to be fair, since I didn’t do well in geometry, I was put in a course of business math. That was almost as good as economics. In later years, someone asked someone else why there were no economics classes in K-12. The response what that economics, the study of scarcity, was too depressing.

That was my generation’s version of participation trophies and self-esteem. We just didn’t discuss it.


14 posted on 02/25/2016 10:59:52 AM PST by sparklite2 ( "The white man is the Jew of Liberal Fascism." -Jonah Goldberg)
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To: SeekAndFind

Just to be devil's advocate here:

Was it this difficult for a young person to earn a living for themselves 40 years ago?

50 years ago?

The entire notion that a person needs to develop an elaborate "campaign plan" to simply earn a living is good advice, but why is it necessary?

Is anybody asking the question, "Why is it this difficult for young educated Americans to earn a living?"

Everybody bashes this young lady for writing her complaints, but does anybody deny that there is real frustration and desperation there?

Our economy and manufacturing has been gutted by terrible global trade deals.

Mexico got our jobs, we got their illiterates.

Our side should be reaching out to the millennial and Occupy Wall Street crowd.

There is a huge amount of untapped voters. Why do our politicians and pundits mock them? Ask for their vote!!!


15 posted on 02/25/2016 11:01:09 AM PST by IDontLikeToPayTaxes
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To: Tijeras_Slim; Vigilanteman

Now liberal arts is too often a soft major designed to provide a way for kids to party away college cash and still come away with a participation trophy. Way back when Liberal Arts were for smart people who wanted to hone their critical thinking skills and use the wisdom of past cultures to do so. It doesn’t surprise me at all that a philosophy BA from the 60’s or 70’s was able to grasp economics so thuroughly.


16 posted on 02/25/2016 11:19:51 AM PST by RightOnTheBorder
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To: Personal Responsibility
Your best economists also know how to analyze a problem, break it down into individual components and derive solutions by understanding the motivations of everyone involved. Think of Milton Freidman, Walter Williams and Thomas Sowell.

If more people in psychology has that common sense, then transgenderism and homosexuality would still be classified as a mental disorder rather than as a protected minority entitled to special treatment.

17 posted on 02/25/2016 11:21:13 AM PST by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: RightOnTheBorder
You are right. Liberal arts used to be a very honorable degree for exactly the reasons you mention. There are still a handful of colleges where this is still mostly true because they have not allowed themselves to be submerged into the leftist sewer.

Hillsdale College in Michigan is probably the best known example, but there are a few others.

18 posted on 02/25/2016 11:25:20 AM PST by Vigilanteman (ObaMao: Fake America, Fake Messiah, Fake Black man. How many fakes can you fit into one Zer0?)
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To: SeekAndFind
As for food--shop only in Chinatown or ethnic markets.

I remember reading of one successful college grad who said he worked his way through those four years and lived on next to nothing. He took a couple of courses in Chinese cooking and was able to do wonders (eat well) on that food. He said that he could often make a couple of pork chops last all week by a little wizardry with a wok and Chinese vegetables.

That came to mind the other night when the wife did the wok thingy and I left the table STUFFED. I asked her how much meat she used and she said "one thin pork chop". The damned thing tasted like half the hog was in there.

Same thing with Top Ramen. Many kids today would profit from that knowledge.

19 posted on 02/25/2016 12:04:26 PM PST by Oatka (Beware of an old man in a profession where men usually die young.)
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To: RightOnTheBorder
Now liberal arts is too often a soft major designed to provide a way for kids to party away college cash and still come away with a participation trophy.

Well said !

20 posted on 02/25/2016 12:42:58 PM PST by Mopp4
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