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Why It’s A Good Thing Coronavirus Will Mow Down Many Colleges
The Federalist ^ | 04/14/2020 | Sumantra Maitra

Posted on 04/14/2020 7:21:29 AM PDT by SeekAndFind

If this virus leads to tightening academic grants, defunding activist departments, making students more fiscally responsible, and shuttering nonessential bureaucracy in higher ed, then that’s a good thing.

An average higher education scholarship is about $2,000 a month. The average salary of a gender studies professor is about $100,000 a year. The average publication cost of an academic journal of women’s or fat studies (yes, it exists) is similar.

The average annual tuition for a student pursuing these courses while borrowing money from taxpayers, much never to be paid back, is about $25,000. The University of Michigan, for example, pays a diversity bureaucrat about $385,000 annually. What do they do, you wonder? They teach compulsory courses on diversity, like this one at the University of Mississippi.

Average home tests for coronavirus, on the other hand, are estimated to be about £6, or about $8, per unit during full production. A seamstress can sew a mask at $5 apiece. Many things make us angry that shouldn’t because we live in some of the most advanced times in human history and our tribulations compared to our forefathers’ are minimal. But if the wastage of academic funds during a pandemic doesn’t bother you, I don’t know what might.

Higher Ed Needs Serious Reform

Twenty-eight different types of scholarships, grants, and part-time campus employment opportunities are listed in the Rutgers University Department of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, including full-tuition scholarships. Likewise, here in the U.K., Sussex University has an array of funding for research such as Queer International Relations.

Why is this seemingly trivial information important? Because these and similar activist departments are the ones that have repeatedly taught that obesity isn’t an underlying condition, but fatphobia kills people, men and women are all the same, and gender is a social construct. These departments are laughable.

Even though the deaths from the coronavirus are overwhelmingly male, you can still read articles about how coronavirus disproportionately affects women and how this plague is a disaster for feminism. Influenced by academic theories, The Guardian is waxing lyrical about how the United Nations is warning that women are most affected by this Chinese virus. There are currently four articles in the BBC about the effect of coronavirus on minorities, ignoring that the underlying cause is obesity and unhealthy junk food consumption, as said by a doctor herself.

Since the 1980s, academia has turned to a self-referencing business racket, duping taxpayers and students. Every meritorious discipline has been hijacked by academic charlatans, frauds, and ideologues. Now universities are already crying that the sector might need a bailout because otherwise they will have to shut down programs after the economic crash.

They do not need a bailout. They need economic pressure. This is a golden opportunity to do what every conservative leader promises to do but never does: reform the education sector. It is not the government’s job to tell a university what to teach, but it is the government’s job to make sure taxpayer money is being spent well.

A lot of teaching can be done online, cutting down the need for elaborate classrooms and lectures. Expendable facilities such as gyms and clubs can be streamlined. For example, while universities might retain a debate club and a football team as they always have, they may not need a transgender support system.

Likewise, counsellors employed to coddle students who cannot take the pressure of higher education and other nonessential bureaucrats will inevitably get the boot. If one is too mentally fragile for higher ed, he or she shouldn’t be at college.

Universities Should Have to Think Before They Spend

Necessity is the mother of prioritization, and with lack of funding must come greater political scrutiny on universities and on which departments and disciplines they are spending grant money on. Disciplines like race studies, ethnic studies, women’s and gender and sexuality studies, and post-colonial studies lack academic rigor, as the debate over the 1619 Project and the blowback from real historians made amply clear. These are not academic but ideological subjects.

If funding tightens, a college would have to think twice before deciding which department it should focus on. If the pandemic has taught us anything, it’s that perhaps those grants should be spent on subjects that help the U.S. economy and national interest. It would cut reliance on China and end student debt acquired with spurious, self-hating, ideological gibberish.

It would also provide an opportunity for students to know which subjects will return their investment and debt. Texas Public Policy Foundation, for example, provides tools to measure college earning and debt by various majors. When the grant tap is tightened, students will be forced to choose their courses not because they “feel like it,” but based on the return they will get from the degrees.

If there’s no feminist glaciology course, no student would spend $20,000 on such nonsense. Instead, maybe they would learn to sew masks for a much lesser cost and a much greater return. Coronavirus and the changes in higher ed might, therefore, help increase a sense of fiscal responsibility.

Higher educatoin is not a right, despite what Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., claims. In fact, as The Guardian stated, only 20 percent of jobs require any undergraduate degree, and about 50 percent of students do not show any cognitive improvement during their time in college, which renders the experience of half the students useless and only clogs up the workforce with degree-holders.

Meanwhile, since universities have turned to businesses and bureaucracy is a self-serving organism only interested in perpetuating its own survival, most money is wasted on nonessential administrative work. In the U.K., for example, admin jobs at universities have increased 221 percent, resulting in rising tuition. The salaries must come from somewhere.

Every devastating pestilence or war in human history changed the economic and political direction of humanity, ever since Thucydides chronicled the plague in Athens. Coronavirus will change a lot as well, but nowhere should the changes be more visible than higher education. If there’s one industry that needs to be torched, streamlined, and restructured to prioritize social needs, it is higher education.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; Health/Medicine; Society
KEYWORDS: colleges; coronavirus; education; genderdysphoria; globalwarminghoax; greennewdeal; homosexualagenda
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1 posted on 04/14/2020 7:21:29 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

Let the Universities float the loan for their gender studies or basket weaving majors and see what happens


2 posted on 04/14/2020 7:22:39 AM PDT by 1Old Pro
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To: SeekAndFind

Thanks for posting!


3 posted on 04/14/2020 7:26:51 AM PDT by Anti-Bubba182
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To: SeekAndFind

My son in law just got a BA in psychology and thought he would be in hot demand. He is still driving a fork lift which pays more than any other job with the degree. He has $60k in student loans. What an a$$.


4 posted on 04/14/2020 7:33:39 AM PDT by IAGeezer912 (One out of every 20 people on the face of the earth are Americans. We have won life's lottery.)
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To: Anti-Bubba182
Some conservatives here postulated that 100's of small towns are propped up by the directional state schools and small liberal arts colleges. That this is a GOOD thing. That the title IV financial aid is what what keeps the colleges open and is the main source of tax revenue and jobs for places like Deland, Florida and Shippensburg, Pa. So basically small colleges are big wealth redistribution centers. F them and their dependent small towns. Let'um rot. Too many soyboys and militant lesbians hiding out from life in college anyways.

World needs ditch diggers

5 posted on 04/14/2020 7:35:48 AM PDT by pburgh01 (It's the FLU!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Make these leftard ivy league schools surrender their endowments if they take federal money.That’ll take the starch out of their ‘gender studies’ departments...


6 posted on 04/14/2020 7:40:20 AM PDT by farming pharmer
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To: SeekAndFind

The biggest problem is Fed.gov debt to students. It puts students in servitude for life, has a lot of corruption, and that money simply pushes the tuition bubble ever-higher.


7 posted on 04/14/2020 7:41:37 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: IAGeezer912
My son in law just got a BA in psychology and thought he would be in hot demand....

The only demand he's in is from the University offering an even higher (more costly) degree.

8 posted on 04/14/2020 7:43:05 AM PDT by gloryblaze
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To: IAGeezer912

I completed a 2nd major in Psychology because I thought it was interesting but never had any intention of working in the field. What I discovered over 40 years ago is, a Psychology undergraduate degree enabled you to do one of two things: either take a low-paying job as a school or mental health counselor, or go to graduate school. A graduate degree enabled you to do one thing: teach psychology to other people who would end up facing the same choices.

Maybe some universities can be converted to prisons, as we may be needing more of them.


9 posted on 04/14/2020 7:43:36 AM PDT by bigbob (Trust Trump. Trust the Plan.)
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To: IAGeezer912
My son in law just got a BA in psychology and thought he would be in hot demand. He is still driving a fork lift which pays more than any other job with the degree. He has $60k in student loans. What an a$$.

You need a PhD in Psychology to have any chance of making money. And by then, the psychologist is so eff'ed up with his/her psychobabble bs.
10 posted on 04/14/2020 7:45:58 AM PDT by Old Yeller (Under construction)
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To: PGR88

We have a lifetime of debt, yer no jobs until we remove the foreign H1B trash from the US. Why would any American want to study a real STEM degree when both parties give out work visas to foreigners like candy on Halloween?

Blue-collar skilled workers is taken up by the other large group of foreigners in this country.

Deport them all.


11 posted on 04/14/2020 7:47:42 AM PDT by Starcitizen (Communist China needs to be treated like the parish country it is. Send it back to 1971)
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Comment #12 Removed by Moderator

To: SeekAndFind

This has become the biggest scam that the MSM will never talk about.
It’s turned into a sham industry fueled by student loan money. Absolutely disgraceful.
I’m glad I don’t have to hire people - what the heck does one think of any college degree from here on out. Now they don’t even need the SAT to get in.


13 posted on 04/14/2020 7:56:37 AM PDT by GnuThere
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To: IAGeezer912

“Only” $60K? Obviously the solution is $200K more of schooling!
/s


14 posted on 04/14/2020 7:59:11 AM PDT by GnuThere
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To: SeekAndFind

I work at a university... there is a lot of questionable expense.

Unionized faculty demands is a good place to start cutting the dead weight


15 posted on 04/14/2020 8:08:28 AM PDT by SMARTY ("Nobility is defined by the demands it makes on us - by obligations, not by rights".)
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To: 1Old Pro

Any degree that ends in the word “studies” is a total waste of time & money


16 posted on 04/14/2020 8:09:16 AM PDT by Jimmy The Snake (Remeber)
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To: Jimmy The Snake

“Any degree that ends in the word “studies” is a total waste of time & money”

I’ve been saying this for years.


17 posted on 04/14/2020 8:13:28 AM PDT by ZirconEncrustedTweezers (Posting from deep within enemy territory - San Jose, CA)
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To: SeekAndFind

Most of them are Marxist indoctrination centers with very little actual education occurring.


18 posted on 04/14/2020 8:18:59 AM PDT by Lurkinanloomin (Natural Born Citizens Are Born Here of Citizen Parents_Know Islam, No Peace-No Islam, Know Peace)
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To: SeekAndFind
Daydreaming. “Activist departments” and “nonessential bureaucracies” will be last to go, after everything useful has been sacrificed first.
19 posted on 04/14/2020 8:42:54 AM PDT by hinckley buzzard (Power is more often surrendered tha)
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To: Jimmy The Snake

But what would the football players take if the “Studies” courses go away? Doesn’t matter to me, but some on here couldn’t take it if there were no college football.


20 posted on 04/14/2020 8:47:52 AM PDT by wrcase
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