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Actually, I think that if you're not willing to actually put your college education to use, don't take the spot of someone who will. |
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Hell, I don't "use" my college education in my profession. In your eyes, I shouldn't have gone to college? Sorry, that just seems a little weird to me. |
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Not maddening to me. Helps them save up for the necessities of they are just waiting on having a baby. Their life |
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If your ultimate goal is to stay at home for the next 20 years after having your first kid, you aren't utilizing those skills; you're using college to marry up via a bait and switch technique, and you're taking the spot of someone else who actually intends to use the things you learn at college. That's quite a bit different than staying at home until the kids are toddlers, then rejoining the workforce. |
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I can sense that you're a bit jaded on this matter, but surely some of these women just meet someone that changes their plans, right? |
There's no expiration date for a college degree.
If a woman decides to stay at home, good thing to have in your back pocket down the road. |
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You should stop projecting what you want to be beneficial for your argument and actually focus on the issue at hand. You can certainly meet someone that changes your plans, but that's entirely different than, "I plan to work until I have my first kid, then stop and stay at home." The people that were brought up aren't changing their plans; they're acting them out. You've got it completely wrong. |
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Imagine if you got a degree in Computer Science in 1994, left the workforce in 1995 after you got pregnant, had two kids, and just sent the second one off to college. How relevant are those skills now? |
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I really don't have an argument, other than to apparently counter yours. You seem to believe that there should be a "use it or don't come" requirement for college students. I just don't see what you have against someone getting an education, whether they use it directly in their chosen profession or as a parent. I don't see the difference. |
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You can learn for the sake of learning on your own. You can also do it at colleges with open admissions. But if you're going to a semi-competitive school with limited spots and your full intention is to work in that field for as long as it takes you to get impregnated, you're not really intending to use your degree as anything more than a rung on the social ladder, or a quasi-dowry. Those seeking out Mrs degrees also **** over other young women, because there is an implicit assumption of risk among their employers that they made need to train a replacement within two years because they never really had any intention of pursing a career, just a placeholder job. That makes the women who actually want to put in the work appear less valuable to prospective employers. |
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