AngryAmish (1000+ posts) Tue Oct-11-11 06:55 PM
Response to Reply #8
11. Are you saying that folks with engineering degrees are not educated?
That is frankly nuts.
The arrogance of people with a poetry degree thinking that they are the only truly "educated" people is pretty galling.
But of course that's exactly what happens with the primitives, thinking an impractical college degree shows an interest in "higher things" than just money-grubbing practical degrees.
Odd, however, that people with such degrees (franksolich is one of them, but franksolich is absent the common attitude of the primitives) lose their interest in "higher things" when it comes to employment, and become money-grubbers, believing themselves entitled to make as much money as those who actually do society good.
True story. My oldest nephew after high school went into the National Guard, and then got a degree in engineering. My third-oldest nephew, his younger brother, after high school went to college to get a degree in "art."
My late sister-in-law was especially proud of the latter kid; he was concerned with "higher things."
The oldest nephew is now 43 years old, and for the past two decades has enjoyed a steady job and a better-than-usual income. The third-oldest nephew is now 37 years old, and for the past two decades has worked at Target, in a vegetarian co-op, and as a waiter in a trendy coffee-house.
When it comes to "higher things," such as an appreciation for art and literature and music and "philosophy," it is the oldest nephew who's been the aesthete, the appreciator, the enjoyer, the dabbler-in.
And the third-oldest nephew, the "sensitive one," has turned out a philistinic barbarian, utterly negative and sour-pussish, concerned only with money, which he can't seem to get enough of.