T Town Tommy
Alabama Bag Man
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How old are you roughly? Not saying you can't lift yourself out of poverty in today's world but I would argue today's millenial generation have a tougher climb than previous genarations. In 1968 you could walk down to the factory and tell the manager I'd like a job and get hired. In the 1970s state universities had a greater percentage of their cost government, tuitions have sored. Student loan debt is over a trillion dollars. Student was unheard of in the 50s, 60s, and 70s as you used to be able to work your way through college on a minimum to low wage job. Sometime graduate and doctoral students would acrew student but it was rare for a four year degree.
I no clue how old you are perhaps you are a millenial that has beaten the odds. I assume being in poverty you went to public school. Without public education you don't make it. Today's conservative philosophy is gut public education go with charter schools. Would you have been able to afford going to a charter school growing up? The other thing about charter schools is that there is a hidden agenda to ensure "conservative values" mainly no evolution, climate change doesn't exist kind of values are taught in schools.
I am 46 years old. Graduated from college in the late 80s. Since you ask about my early childhood I will tell you a little. Grew up in a very rural part of Ky in a three room house with no indoor plumbing. Took my first shower in a bathroom with running water when I was a sophomore in high school. Lived off primarily what we grew on our land. Attended a small school where basic educational needs were met. The only real thoughts to the "real" world is what I saw on black and white TV or whenever I saw an airliner fly by overhead. I had dreams of becoming a pilot when I saw that and knew at an early age that I wanted more than what I had at that point. Long story short, against a lot of odds, and a lot of people telling me I couldn't. I decided I could. Went on to college through scholarship, graduated, and have tried like hell since that day to give to those "less fortunate" than me.
Now, I am a proponent of school vouchers. If you live in an area where the school system underperforms, then by all means, you should be able to send your child to a school that can meet their needs. I see what the public school systems offer today and how their unions protect even the worst teachers. Grad rates in Alabama public school systems are atrocious. So yes... I should have the right to pick and choose for my child based on that.
End of the day, kids today have way more opportunities to make it than I did. Way too many programs in place, even for the worst of environments for kids. All it takes is for them to step up and decide they want different for themselves than they currently have. And it is up to us to support them in their endeavors. Not social engineering or income redistribution.