If only the students would walk out. Unfortunately many are brainwashed into thinking these shots are good for them. Many won't live long enough to utilize their worthless degrees.
If only the students would walk out. Unfortunately many are brainwashed into thinking these shots are good for them. Many won't live long enough to utilize their worthless degrees.
I'm nearing retirement age with a bad degree. Aka one that has limited employment in my area. No one ever spoke to me about "my degree" and "jobs." In fact, the university lied about it, and touted 100% employment on graduation.
If you have a sensible child who is nearing college age, talk to them:
1. About employment opportunities. How many gender study graduates are employed in small town America.
2. Value for your degree: will their degree give them a high paying job or low paying job?
3. Job competition: will there be hundreds of people vying for the same job they want upon graduation?
4. Values: will their future co-workers hold the same values? This is kind of important, because many people meet their future mates in the workplace.
Just some thoughts. No one ever spoke to me about the above, and I wish they did.
If only the students would walk out. Unfortunately many are brainwashed into thinking these shots are good for them. Many won't live long enough to utilize their worthless degrees.
Wow, this is so sobering. Just a tragedy.
And can't repay their student loans......
Oct. 19, 2024
By: No College Mandates
@NCM4Ever
We created a list of colleges that never mandated C19 "vaccines".
Not coincidentally, many of them also support free speech and encourage critical thinking.
We can rebuild higher education if we elevate them.
https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/u/0/d/1N0EjQ5K29RrkSGv4AzBFBC-oKTYByYUxj8EeQktqDy8/htmlview#gid=1248884496
https://x.com/NCM4Ever/status/1847787291164733561
Good idea. We have to break it, them. Get rid of them and build up the good ones.
I'm nearing retirement age with a bad degree. Aka one that has limited employment in my area. No one ever spoke to me about "my degree" and "jobs." In fact, the university lied about it, and touted 100% employment on graduation.
If you have a sensible child who is nearing college age, talk to them:
1. About employment opportunities. How many gender study graduates are employed in small town America.
2. Value for your degree: will their degree give them a high paying job or low paying job?
3. Job competition: will there be hundreds of people vying for the same job they want upon graduation?
4. Values: will their future co-workers hold the same values? This is kind of important, because many people meet their future mates in the workplace.
Just some thoughts. No one ever spoke to me about the above, and I wish they did.