It largely depends on the quality of the school and the student body in question. I mean I do thoroughly remember both the bad and the good from public school, and was very much aware of how much worse things might've been if I was attending a particularly shitty school instead.
I'm also aware of the downsides as it pertains to how the curriculum, especially in the US, is "universalized" for convenience and expediency, and how that can muck up gifted minds. I had a high school teacher who mentioned such an experience with his own son, in regards to mathematics.
And I already covered how shitty much social justice and general clownworld make today's public schools an almost certain and probable nightmare.
I think there probably could be a happier and healthy medium, hybrid of the two (IE, some courses being taken in public school classrooms while others being homeschooled). Alas, there's a fat chance of that ever working out in the dumpster fire that is today, and there's not a snowball's chance in hell you can safely negotiate with any politicians or school authorities today.
A hybrid isn't ideal. We want women out of the workforce and back at home caring for children anyway. It leads to a much happier outcome for the men, the children and the women in society. Public education should be 100% abolished and everyone's taxes should be lowered from the cost savings.
I could argue with you further on this, but it's clear we won't see eye to eye. I get where you're coming from, but I personally think it sounds like a horribly dull and depressing setup.
Yes, working 9-5 at some woke corporation that hates you and pushes D&I on everything, ESG investing and constant propaganda pushed down your throat with shitty politics and performance evaluations annually sounds riveting. But yes, we won't see eye-to-eye.
Ah, I see. So you'll just turn to baseless straw-manning and mild Ad hominem, while additionally ignoring how I had explicitly stated that I was basing my opinions on how public schooling used to be, as in 20-40 years ago.
Not once did I ever even imply that public schools today are anything but a fucking nightmare.
It largely depends on the quality of the school and the student body in question. I mean I do thoroughly remember both the bad and the good from public school, and was very much aware of how much worse things might've been if I was attending a particularly shitty school instead.
I'm also aware of the downsides as it pertains to how the curriculum, especially in the US, is "universalized" for convenience and expediency, and how that can muck up gifted minds. I had a high school teacher who mentioned such an experience with his own son, in regards to mathematics.
And I already covered how shitty much social justice and general clownworld make today's public schools an almost certain and probable nightmare.
I think there probably could be a happier and healthy medium, hybrid of the two (IE, some courses being taken in public school classrooms while others being homeschooled). Alas, there's a fat chance of that ever working out in the dumpster fire that is today, and there's not a snowball's chance in hell you can safely negotiate with any politicians or school authorities today.
A hybrid isn't ideal. We want women out of the workforce and back at home caring for children anyway. It leads to a much happier outcome for the men, the children and the women in society. Public education should be 100% abolished and everyone's taxes should be lowered from the cost savings.
I could argue with you further on this, but it's clear we won't see eye to eye. I get where you're coming from, but I personally think it sounds like a horribly dull and depressing setup.
Yes, working 9-5 at some woke corporation that hates you and pushes D&I on everything, ESG investing and constant propaganda pushed down your throat with shitty politics and performance evaluations annually sounds riveting. But yes, we won't see eye-to-eye.
Ah, I see. So you'll just turn to baseless straw-manning and mild Ad hominem, while additionally ignoring how I had explicitly stated that I was basing my opinions on how public schooling used to be, as in 20-40 years ago.
Not once did I ever even imply that public schools today are anything but a fucking nightmare.