Well done Red! You effectively used what you term an "inane comment" to convey your point instead of typing your usual thousand or so words. Feels good, doesn't it? And it saves lots of wear and tear on the old arthritic fingers. You're a bright boy. Pretty soon you'll have it down pat.
uh what else can children be lol I have never lost a yes no battle with my wife or can cant. The most committed wins. Now she just gives up quickly cause I have set the precedent for victory. It went on for 30 minutes one time and lets just say I slept on the couch.
As I was saying about things being "better off". "students who enroll in wealthy, elite colleges earn more than those who do not. But the deeper that you delve into the data, the more clear it becomes how perilous the higher education market can be for students making expensive, important choices that don’t always pay off. The national universities producing the top earners are no surprise: Harvard, M.I.T., Stanford and others that routinely top the annual U.S. News & World Report college rankings. The most troubling numbers show up far beneath the upper echelons of higher education. Elite institutions prop up the overall average earnings of college graduates nationwide. Although earnings of college graduates continue to outpace those of non-collegians by a significant margin, at some institutions, the earnings of students 10 years after enrollment are bleak. The Department of Education calculated the percentage of students at each college who earned more than $25,000 per year, which is about what high school graduates earn. At hundreds of colleges, less than half of students met this threshold 10 years after enrolling. .... There is an earnings gender gap at every top university. The size of the difference varies a great deal. At Duke, for example, women earned $93,100 per year on average, compared with $123,000 for men, a difference of $29,900. At Princeton, men earned more and women earned less, for a difference of $47,700. Women who enrolled at Cornell earned more than women who enrolled at Yale." So is Obama in his tenure, helping to enforce the war on women in higher academia? http://www.msn.com/en-us/money/fina...release-of-college-data/ar-AAef5t8?li=AAa0dzB
Uhhh.....yes. We have been told by Obama and all his peeps how much better everything is and that it's the Republicans who are waging a war against women but clearly, in higher academia, there is still a major gap in alumni pay between genders. Let me guess.....it's Bush's fault. Those damn WMD's.