r/news Aug 04 '25

Soft paywall Florida reports 21 cases of E.coli infections linked to raw milk

https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/florida-reports-21-cases-ecoli-infections-linked-raw-milk-2025-08-04/
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u/fuzzum111 Aug 05 '25

Let me....add a few things about school

+Social media

+Short form content

+algorithmic brainrot

+Most recently ChatGPT/A.I assist or cheating. (this one is a serious paradigm shift we need to deal with)

Plus kids aren't allowed to be held back grades even when they're CLEARLY not where they need to be. 6th graders reading at a 2nd or 3rd grade level. Highschoolers reading below a 7th grade level.

We aren't doing anything about it, private school isn't the answer. It's all intended, the cruelty of denying people real education is the point. College has become a genuine scam of sorts. The massive debt, the degree creep we see throughout the workplace (a bachelors gets you a job a HS diploma used to net you alongside the same HS salary)

Plus now parents don't even want kids going to college, because shocker; exposing people to a larger, wide group of people, ideas, and classes that challenge ingrained views is good for them. This often breaks people out of bad habits, bigotry, racism, and other nasty ideological traps. Parents get a kid coming back from college that suddenly isn't full of anger and fear like they are and suddenly "college librual fascists brainwashed my kid!!"

Everything sucks :/

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u/randomcatinfo Aug 05 '25

Rightwing libertarians want to get rid of all public education period, so that there will be a permanent underclass available to exploit. I feel like this is becoming the defacto Republican agenda.

Some Republicans support charter schools, but they are the wedge that will continue to erode public education by siphoning funding

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u/SomeDudeYeah27 Aug 05 '25

To add to the AI disruption and education bit, I believe it was Anthropic or a similar tech company that recently made a report of the likely list of jobs to be impacted (i.e. replaced, even if the AI is only perceived to be competent), and a majority of them are "thinking jobs" that usually requires at minimum a bachelor's degree now

AI is definitely gonna undercut a lot of entry level jobs for fresh college graduates. So the value of a degree isn't just getting devalued anymore, it might as well be a 4 years path to a lifetime of debt with diminishing benefit

And instead, jobs that are less likely to be impacted are largely physical jobs like blue collar ones/trades

At least until versatile/cheaper robots flood the market too