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Chartertopia's avatar

You get more of what you subsidize. In the case of students, subsidies draw in more marginal students and more marginal teachers who need easier classes to survive four years. In the case of science, more marginal fields and more marginal researchers.

The solution is obvious, to me: get government out of both. It's one thing for government to pay for the R&D it needs, such as better weapons and radar and so on. It should not be funding anything else. And I do include Mars rovers, the space station, the Hubble and Jack Webb telescopes, the Antarctica stations, and everything else NASA does. The military can fund what it needs, private industry can fund what it needs. Why is NASA paying for research into making supersonic business and passenger planes quieter? Or more to the point, why am I paying for all those things?

Every time I read of studies about Peruvian hookers or some Kazakhstan caterpillar, I wonder who thinks anyone should be paying for that, let alone taxpayers.

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Kurt's avatar

A resounding YES from my perch. 50 years ago, I was that kid that didn't see the sense in university, and I went into a trade. That trade eventually led to a small remodeling business, which eventually led to a very tidy little business doing consulting and analysis on buildings that were falling apart for one reason or another, but approximately 7 times out of 10 it was water intrusion in all its forms. These were/are buildings designed by high end architects that didn't know how to build, and they tapped my expertise because I'd spent a couple decades actually doing the work and knew what they didn't teach in architectural school.

The whole system is entirely out of whack, and your ideas are spot on.

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