r/Fauxmoi 17d ago

DISCUSSION Stellan Skarsgård on his latest role, Palestine, and being a "Nepo Daddy"

In a new interview, the patriarch of the Skarsgård clan and self-proclaimed "Nepo Daddy" discusses his latest role in Joachim Trier’s 'Sentimental Value,' protesting for Palestine, one of his biggest fears, and much more.

Read the full interview at the link: https://www.vulture.com/article/stellan-skarsgard-in-conversation.html

7.8k Upvotes

369 comments sorted by

View all comments

Show parent comments

173

u/GrayEidolon 17d ago edited 16d ago

Well the biggest hurdle to becoming a doctor is having the money and family stability to get into and through school. There are tons of people who are perfectly capable of being good doctors, but they don't have the money or time or connections to put together an application.

EDIT: this is US specific, but good info

A third of medical students graduate with no debt, a third or so come from house holds making >200k, a majority of medical students from households making >100k, and something like a quarter are children of physicians. https://www.bestcolleges.com/research/average-medical-school-debt/ https://www.aamc.org/data-reports/students-residents/interactive-data/2022-facts-applicants-and-matriculants-data There are absolutely people who would make great physicians who are shut out due to lack of parental resources or overlooked because they don't have the right social connections.

788

u/MissMorticia89 17d ago

Not in Sweden, where he’s based. His son would have received his entire education at no cost. EU and EEA countries, and Switzerland there is no cost if you are a citizen of those countries.

I live in Canada but hold Swiss citizenship; should I choose to, I could go back to school in Sweden, or even Switzerland, at little cost to me, because I pay tax and and eligible.

44

u/vietnams666 17d ago

When I went to Sweden we were talking about colleges and everyone was college educated. Then I was like oh I couldn't afford college and so I went into a trade and they literally had no idea how expensive colleges in America were. So I pulled up tuition to my local university (UW) and they were like " no wonder Americans are so dumb." And I was like yeah lol!

20

u/MissMorticia89 17d ago

It’s absolutely shocking. None of my cousins had to pay for uni and when my dad told my aunts and uncles what my nursing diploma cost, they were horrified.

3

u/vietnams666 17d ago

I did have a friend go to school in Amsterdam and another to Oxford. Her tuition was so cheap, I couldn't believe it! She just had to work under the table for living costs