To the US Academy,
graduates» blood is on your hands — yours and all your minions», in their infinitely variable guises (the loan officers and administrators, high
school advisors who push - push - push college, university faculty and administrators who ply with spoken promises
of a far better tomorrow post-graduation, and the online «experts» who keep parroting the hackneyed, specious line that college grads earn more (that, I'm confident, is an illusion
of the social backgrounds
of those who're
employed, as the immensely wealthy father
of a good friend
of mine pointed
out when he recently commented when I shared with him about the job insecurity - college degree paradox that he'd simply «manage my children's trust funds and get them placed at friends» companies.»