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		chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..




















		thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.




















		Night Strike wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
You're going to have a breakdown or you're going to breakdown that person? Because I would love to see the latter.




















		thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.

















			Night Strike wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
You're going to have a breakdown or you're going to breakdown that person? Because I would love to see the latter.
natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"








		BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
At my university (yes, "my," because I own it), this is exactly what some of the students' parents have done. If little Timmy has a problem with his teacher and the grade he earned, then the parents complain to the Dean, who then berates the teacher, and suddenly things look great for little Timmy in the short-run.
At first, I was amazed that this was acceptable and that this was actually encouraged by the university (since it acquiesces so often to this). It's... mind-boggling.
I mean, I understand that money is involved, and that these kids can be pampered, but... they're going to suffer in the real world.










		BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
At my university (yes, "my," because I own it), this is exactly what some of the students' parents have done. If little Timmy has a problem with his teacher and the grade he earned, then the parents complain to the Dean, who then berates the teacher, and suddenly things look great for little Timmy in the short-run.
At first, I was amazed that this was acceptable and that this was actually encouraged by the university (since it acquiesces so often to this). It's... mind-boggling.
I mean, I understand that money is involved, and that these kids can be pampered, but... they're going to suffer in the real world.














		thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.


























		natty dread wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
At my university (yes, "my," because I own it), this is exactly what some of the students' parents have done. If little Timmy has a problem with his teacher and the grade he earned, then the parents complain to the Dean, who then berates the teacher, and suddenly things look great for little Timmy in the short-run.
At first, I was amazed that this was acceptable and that this was actually encouraged by the university (since it acquiesces so often to this). It's... mind-boggling.
I mean, I understand that money is involved, and that these kids can be pampered, but... they're going to suffer in the real world.
Interesting.
It seems some people think governments should butt out of everything and everything that needs funding (healthcare, education, etc) can be funded by charities and private individuals.
How do you feel about that, given your recent experiences at "your" university? Do you think market forces will correct the situation?

















			jonesthecurl wrote:Oh, and plagiarism.
Yarg?






















		natty dread wrote:BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:chang50 wrote:I can't think of any group who imagines they are special more than American Christians of any generation..
American Christians? I've met a whole lot of Americans with a different or no religious affiliation who feel the same way.
I heard a similar commencement speech a couple years ago at my sister-in-law's college graduation. I stood and clapped loudly at the end. Dealing with self-entitled little shits is the worst part of my job. On the day that a parent calls me to complain about me berating his or her little Johnny, is the day I'm going to have a breakdown.
At my university (yes, "my," because I own it), this is exactly what some of the students' parents have done. If little Timmy has a problem with his teacher and the grade he earned, then the parents complain to the Dean, who then berates the teacher, and suddenly things look great for little Timmy in the short-run.
At first, I was amazed that this was acceptable and that this was actually encouraged by the university (since it acquiesces so often to this). It's... mind-boggling.
I mean, I understand that money is involved, and that these kids can be pampered, but... they're going to suffer in the real world.
Interesting.
It seems some people think governments should butt out of everything and everything that needs funding (healthcare, education, etc) can be funded by charities and private individuals.
How do you feel about that, given your recent experiences at "your" university? Do you think market forces will correct the situation?




















		huamulan wrote:What a limited imagination you possess.












		thegreekdog wrote:Market forces aren't able to correct universities because universities don't operate under market rules.





		TA1LGUNN3R wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Market forces aren't able to correct universities because universities don't operate under market rules.
Tell me about it. I inquired at my school about lowering the rates for me because it's too expensive. I told them I pay everything out of my own pocket and have to work full time to make sure I can afford tuition and rent and all that other good stuff, whereas everybody else there gets financial aid. I know a few people who got more than they needed and didn't even have to work to support themselves. Anyway, the financial department just looked at me like I was plague-ridden or something. I was like, cool, thanks for trying to negotiate or take an effort in trade.
Cunts.
-TG






















		Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.





		TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.
Well that's silly. You could just teach yourself from books or whatever. In fact, I only go to school to get a degree so I can get a job. I could teach myself anything at less cost than going to school, but I wouldn't get some fancy paper with my name on it.
-TG




















		TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.
Well that's silly. You could just teach yourself from books or whatever. In fact, I only go to school to get a degree so I can get a job. I could teach myself anything at less cost than going to school, but I wouldn't get some fancy paper with my name on it.
-TG






















		Army of GOD wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.
Well that's silly. You could just teach yourself from books or whatever. In fact, I only go to school to get a degree so I can get a job. I could teach myself anything at less cost than going to school, but I wouldn't get some fancy paper with my name on it.
-TG
I don't know, I think interaction with a professor or other students can help someone learn. It helps me, at least.
And I'm not saying pay for school, I'm saying just show up at the classes. Seriously, I've enrolled in classes in three different colleges and some deutschebag literally could just walk in and sit down and the professor wouldn't even know if they were in the class or not.




















		





















		Army of GOD wrote:I've had some experiences with some awful, awful textbooks. About half of the ones I've used have been solid...the writing was always clear, concise and intelligible.
Others have just been complete shit. The questions at the end of the chapter were in no way related to the stuff in the chapter. Just terrible.




















		Army of GOD wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.
Well that's silly. You could just teach yourself from books or whatever. In fact, I only go to school to get a degree so I can get a job. I could teach myself anything at less cost than going to school, but I wouldn't get some fancy paper with my name on it.
-TG
I don't know, I think interaction with a professor or other students can help someone learn. It helps me, at least.
And I'm not saying pay for school, I'm saying just show up at the classes. Seriously, I've enrolled in classes in three different colleges and some deutschebag literally could just walk in and sit down and the professor wouldn't even know if they were in the class or not.





		nietzsche wrote:Army of GOD wrote:TA1LGUNN3R wrote:Army of GOD wrote:
I was thinking that if I wanted to gain an educatioon but didn't have the money, I would just sit in during classes (not pay to sit in...literally just attend the classes, maybe borrow someone's test after they get it back...it could work). OF course you won't get a degree in the end, which I guess is the main point in going to a tertiary school, but if you find lectures that are large enough you could definitely pull it off.
Well that's silly. You could just teach yourself from books or whatever. In fact, I only go to school to get a degree so I can get a job. I could teach myself anything at less cost than going to school, but I wouldn't get some fancy paper with my name on it.
-TG
I don't know, I think interaction with a professor or other students can help someone learn. It helps me, at least.
And I'm not saying pay for school, I'm saying just show up at the classes. Seriously, I've enrolled in classes in three different colleges and some deutschebag literally could just walk in and sit down and the professor wouldn't even know if they were in the class or not.
The best professors write the textbooks. If you read an entire textbook it's like an excellent professor is taking you thru the whole topic.




















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