26 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 30-Oct-2011 16:46:06)

Re: students not getting jobs.

Generally said: art & social studies are a waste of college funds.

Why don't students get jobs? because they study the wrong things.



/me is mad because they're lowering my student aid and making aid during masters a loan rather than grants because of these [darn] wastes of money.

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

Re: students not getting jobs.

Lol - don't get me started on this.

I'll post something I'll regret.

Let's just say, I believe working in used car sales is more ethical than working in academics these days.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"social studies are a waste of college funds"...seriously, I am doing Social Studies, and I can gaurantee it was not a waste of time or funds. In fact there was a call for more people to do what I am doing because in Australia there is a severe shortage (professionals that can speak Mandarin)...and also, it is not always about getting a decent job, I for one didn't do my degree for a kickass job, but a kickass lifestyle...I like travelling, and knowing a second language is very handy.

So before you diss the "arts" make sure you watch your words carefully, because my study history is a perfect example where my studies will be making a contribution and is creating the lifestyle that I want tongue

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

29 (edited by Cardboard Robot 31-Oct-2011 16:43:34)

Re: students not getting jobs.

" it is not always about getting a decent job, I for one didn't do my degree for a kickass job, but a kickass lifestyle...I like travelling, and knowing a second language is very handy."

see? no return on investment = complete waste of student aid. If you're not actually gonna use your study, then you may as well pay for it yourself: you do not deserve any student aid in my opinion, or at the very least just less.

Plus, what is your study gonna do for you (I take it is a study in Mandarin language & literature?) that a simple intermediate Mandarin course that you could've done while having a real job at the same time.

Although I do see the usefulness of your study at this moment in time, since Mandarin translators may be useful. However there is only a limited amount you will need of them and this amount will probably run out fast. There is only a momentary need for this profession, once it is fulfilled the next generation of students will be out of work.



Sorry if my point on this subject is very extreme (which it is), but here I am, a med student, getting the same amount of student aid (if not less) than the guy/girl who spends his day making ugly ass paintings, or the one figuring out the evolution of the word ǵʰelH-ro, or the one who is trying to calculate how to invest your free time most efficiently without knowing how to operate his calculator, who are gonna end up being office workers for a phone company, cafeteria employees or truck drivers (if not worse), or the obvious teacher in their own subject to ensure the survival of another useless topic!
Even though my tuition fees are 3 times theirs and my study is atleast 10x harder/more intense/going to have an actual return on investment...

And now they are cutting our aid collectively because "there isn't enough money". Why is my aid getting cut by the same amount as theirs?

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"intermediate Mandarin course that you could've done while having a real job at the same time."...yeah you try that and get back to me tongue...it is alot harder than simply doing a course...to be honest, being at uni full time for 2 years wasn't enough...I am now starting a new degree in China so I can learn faster tongue (this will really piss you off, but since we are having a spirited debate, everything is paid for and I dont have to pay it back, or even do anything for it...all of my accom, tuition, books, healthcare, and they even give me living expense money...all because the Chinese government wants to promote foreigners learning Chinese). Learning Chinese is alot harder than you could imagine. Seriously, I swear that sometimes even Chinese people don't understand it, because things can be spelt the same, sound the same, but mean completely different things...also I looked at one of the Mandarin courses at a college and the level was too basic. It was pronunciation of some basic Mandarin and no writing characters which is very important (and also very hard)...

"Sorry if my point on this subject is very extreme (which it is), but here I am, a med student, getting the same amount of student aid (if not less) than the guy/girl who spends his day making ugly ass paintings"...in Australia, the government pays for all of the student fees, but when that person starts working (doing whatever job) they pay all of that money back...so really no student is ever worse off than any other...if you do something that pays big bucks, your loans get paid off faster, and if you do something with no prospects, then you will spend 10 years paying off your debt...

As for the original point of this thread, students not getting jobs, it is noones fault but the student. They should know full well what they are getting into BEFORE they undertake that field of study. It is a lack of foresight by students. I know that my chosen career will not last (well it will if I stay in China permanently tongue)...there is still also an aspect of "I like this field" to everyone's choice to study that field, otherwise why don't you as a "med student" decide to study medicine and not engineering?

"Even though my tuition fees are 3 times theirs and my study is atleast 10x harder/more intense/going to have an actual return on investment..."

If the tuition costs bother you, you should look at what is needed for the course...studying a language just needs a lecturer and a room. Doing medical studies requires equipment, same with Engineering. "Arts" students in Australia have to pay less because less is required for them to study (except maybe media studies...painting and such all require the students to pay for the equipment and such)...

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

Re: students not getting jobs.

I'll give you that learning Mandarin is harder than any Western language, that is true. But the chance that you as an adult will learn to speak the language perfectly without having learned it while growing up mean the effort you'll have to put into it is out of proportions. As you say yourself it is a difficult subject to learn. However, are you stating that the Chinese government is funding your study (partly)? If so, you are probably part of the lucky few who get (additional?) funds from foreign countries. However, are you still receiving full aid from the Australian government? Are Australian taxpayers still paying for your study even though the Chinese taxpayers are contributing to it as well?

If people are going to choose a subject without any prospects of a job then I believe they should be charged adequately. It is their choice to study the particular subject, they shouldn't use tax payers' money for their own enjoyment when they provide no return. At least you know for sure medicine will have a return: in the netherlands there's always been a shortage of doctors and there always will be, not only in the hospital but in the labs/pharmaceutic industry as well (although I would very much prefer to work in the hospital than for those greedy clowns who claim they're helping humanity...). Same goes for engineers, innovation is a continuous process.


"If the tuition costs bother you, you should look at what is needed for the course...studying a language just needs a lecturer and a room. Doing medical studies requires equipment, same with Engineering. "Arts" students in Australia have to pay less because less is required for them to study (except maybe media studies...painting and such all require the students to pay for the equipment and such)..."

That is true but then again they make me pay for the difference. However, my point is that the money put into me is an investment when the money put into most art/social students is a waste, since they won't find work in their fields they studied anyways. As I've stated before: if they want to be egotistical in their choice of subject, do things solely for their own enjoyment, then let them do that on their own bills.
See how many of them are left once tuition fees become inversibly proportional to return on investment (or government aid directly proportional to return on investment).


"As for the original point of this thread, students not getting jobs, it is noones fault but the student. They should know full well what they are getting into BEFORE they undertake that field of study. It is a lack of foresight by students."

I completely agree with this statement, however the point we draw from it is different.
Tell me if i interpret what you're saying correctly, but do you mean: "Yes the students should have seen beforehand that they wouldn't get a job in their field of study, however they enjoy this particular field, so it isn't a waste of other peoples' money"?
My point is: "If they see that they're not gonna get a job in their field of study beforehand, and are solely doing the study out of their own enjoyment, let them pay for it themselves, so that the aid may go to students who will actually make use of their study. If they do not see it beforehand, then the higher tuition fees/less government aid should act to deter people from choosing this study, before they start complaining they couldn't get a job in their field of study".

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

Re: students not getting jobs.

Are you really trying to claim that studying foreign languages is not economically important?

Do you think international trade happens through a series of points and grunts?

It is economically favourable to a country such as Australia to educate people to speak Chinese because this will give Australia an advantage in trade with China (the world's next superpower) compared with countries which don't train as many people in the Chinese language(s).

tweehonderd graden, dat is waarom ze me mr. fahrenheit noemen, ik reis aan de snelheid van het licht, ik ga een supersonische man van u maken

33 (edited by Cardboard Robot 31-Oct-2011 23:09:05)

Re: students not getting jobs.

No, I am however saying that the market for translators is sedated and that therefore the return on investment for the large amounts of new students currently studying these subjects is incredibly small.

Plus unless you do a really specialized course you won't learn most economically relevant jargon either.

Then it might be better to follow a course provided by your job that specializes in teaching the appropriate parts of a language. No need to follow a broad study.

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

34 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 01-Nov-2011 00:03:15)

Re: students not getting jobs.

Remember, the market isn't stagnant if you're talking about languages in emerging markets, because new industries will create the new demand.  Plus, old employees in the industry retire, giving openings for new workers (not really an expansion, but still a new job demand).

That being said, I doubt Chinese is a very good language for someone pursuing that career.  Specifically, the problem is that since most international business does occur in English, the market is ripe for a high supply of Chinese people learning English, rather than the other way around, necessarily.  But I could definitely be wrong here....

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: students not getting jobs.

If you're going to learn a foreign language as a career, learn more than 1. Being trilingual will benefit you greatly and can open doors being bilingual will not. I went to high school with a girl that is of chinese decent, so she learned all the chinese dialects from her family so they could communicate, she also became fluent in spanish while in college. Upon graduation, she had no less than 10 major companies chomping at the bit for her employment.

Modestus Experitus

Arby: A very strict mod, reminds me of a fat redneck who drives a truck around all day with a beer in one hand. I hated this guy at the start, however, I played a round in PW with him where he went as an anonymous player. Our fam got smashed up and everyone pretty much left. Arby stayed around and helped out the remaining family. At the end of the round he revealed himself.... My views on him have changed since. Your a good guy.....

Re: students not getting jobs.

"However, are you still receiving full aid from the Australian government? Are Australian taxpayers still paying for your study even though the Chinese taxpayers are contributing to it as well?"

Nope, they only fund me whilst I am in Australia. And any money they give me, I have to pay back eventually, so it doesn't matter about returns because the tax payer is not footing the bill on a permanent basis. It is a loan. The only support I get is living costs from the government, which is the same as everyone else at uni (and not far off the amount that people get from just being unemployed). I understand your position, but you shouldn't get upset at the student, but more the support your government offers (and I still agree that it should be standard across whatever subject you undertake). I like the idea of loaning a student the money, as it stops these sorts of arguments, as well as still making those students who decide to bum around and drop out/fail their units still accountable for their own tuition fees.

"If you're going to learn a foreign language as a career, learn more than 1."

Am taking the oppurtunity to learn Korean and Japanese whilst living in student accom. I know I won't be fluent, but knowing some will help tongue

"the market is ripe for a high supply of Chinese people learning English, rather than the other way around, necessarily."

I find very few people here can speak English, and when they can, it is very broken. Sure, I am not dealing with business men/women, but still English is not of a high priority or exposure here. All Chinese people do learn some English in primary school, but very limited. Also, even if Chinese people can speak English, there is more to business dealings than just knowing the language. I will give a perfect example, Chinese business is often run on a series of networks that is called "Guanxi wang". A supplier/buyer relationship is built on a relationship of gift-giving and reciprocation, and a greater emphasis on developing a relationship than just doing business in a formal environment within the rules/laws specified in business dealings. This is certainly a problem when foriegn firms start doing business in China, as they will work off formal rules/laws, whereas the Chinese company will focus more on building a relationship.

Also, even if the Chinese company has English speakers, why would it be disadvantageous of the Western business to have Chinese speakers? In fact it would build smoother relations between the 2, and would even be showing "limao" (maintaining social heirachy/harmony).

Also wish to point out that their was a call for more people in Australia to learn Chinese just earlier this year because there is a severe shortage. I also wish to point out that the Chinese class at uni was very small, to the point that they were protecting the numbers in the class from dropping too low and cancelling the units (ie. by preventing exchange to China...I was lucky enough to work around it smile). But sure, there are enough native speakers of Chinese in Australia, some of these are my friends, but often (and this is a sad fact) companies will cull the resume list by looking for foreign names in an effort to cull people who can't speak English. I have a friend who graduated uni and can't find a job because companies won't give her a chance because of her language skills (although her English is good, she has a Chinese name and so her resume is automatically cut from the list).

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

37 (edited by xeno syndicated 01-Nov-2011 08:40:44)

Re: students not getting jobs.

> Cardboard Robot wrote:

> " it is not always about getting a decent job, I for one didn't do my degree for a kickass job, but a kickass lifestyle...I like travelling, and knowing a second language is very handy."

see? no return on investment = complete waste of student aid. If you're not actually gonna use your study, then you may as well pay for it yourself: you do not deserve any student aid in my opinion, or at the very least just less.

Plus, what is your study gonna do for you (I take it is a study in Mandarin language & literature?) that a simple intermediate Mandarin course that you could've done while having a real job at the same time.

Although I do see the usefulness of your study at this moment in time, since Mandarin translators may be useful. However there is only a limited amount you will need of them and this amount will probably run out fast. There is only a momentary need for this profession, once it is fulfilled the next generation of students will be out of work.



Sorry if my point on this subject is very extreme (which it is), but here I am, a med student, getting the same amount of student aid (if not less) than the guy/girl who spends his day making ugly ass paintings, or the one figuring out the evolution of the word ǵʰelH-ro, or the one who is trying to calculate how to invest your free time most efficiently without knowing how to operate his calculator, who are gonna end up being office workers for a phone company, cafeteria employees or truck drivers (if not worse), or the obvious teacher in their own subject to ensure the survival of another useless topic!
Even though my tuition fees are 3 times theirs and my study is atleast 10x harder/more intense/going to have an actual return on investment...

And now they are cutting our aid collectively because "there isn't enough money". Why is my aid getting cut by the same amount as theirs?


I wouldn't get too upidy, Box. Docs - most of them do monkey work:

<doc pokes patient in stomach>

"How's that?

"It hurts, doc!"

"Looks like its Ultrasound time!"

<Doc scribble whatnot on paper>

"There ya go.  To the lab with you, then."

"Thanks, doc.  Here's $2000"

"No, thank, YOU!" 

<Doc winks, counts his money.  Thinks this is alright.   Yeah, a monkey could do it, but I make $2000 / 30 seconds of work.>

Who's the deadbeat, then?  The guy on welfare, or the doctor doing monkey work?  Who drains the purchasing power of the nation more, I wonder?"

38 (edited by Cardboard Robot 01-Nov-2011 09:12:38)

Re: students not getting jobs.

xeno, not in this country where everyone is obliged to have healthcare insurance and referals are tried to be kept at a minimum (which at times may even lead to negative consequences when a referal would've been necessary... but that's aside the point). I'm sure there'll still be a few of those bad, lazy doctors out there who just do it for the money, but I can say that in my entire cluster, if not my entire year, I have yet to met someone who is in it just for the money. People who are just out for the money will generally study physiotherapy here.

In the Netherlands the people who gather info for the anamnesis have a "specialization" with "generalization" as his subject, called a "huisarts" (housedoctor). About 40% of med students who finish their master choose to do this specialization. However, if that's the way the doctor is treating you, without making any effort to attain a good anamnesis or investigate the body thorougly to scout out other symptoms, then I would definitely file a complaint. Even in the field of housedoctors these people should be an exceptian, and if they aren't there is something seriously wrong with your complaint system, because I know that here in the Netherlands there is legislature that provides patients with the right to complain, which can lead to the sacking of a doctor.

If the bad seeds in medicine form an exception, when those in art & social studies comprise almost the entire studies... what would be the result on the return on investment?



Wornstrum, I can see how in the current economical situation, with a strong, growing China and a (relatively) weakening West, how there would be a call to Western students to learn Chinese. Regarding Zarf: It is an enormous advantage if you are able to speak Chinese, to be able to get close to them. The hierarchy in Chinese economics is a system based on trust and respect, more than the Western system, so getting the Chinese to trust you is key. What easier way to get them to trust you than to show you are willing to put effort into your relationship with them by learning their language? In some cases, NOT learning their language may even be seen as an insult.

Maar doodslaan deed hij niet, want tussen droom en daad,
Staan wetten in de weg en praktische bezwaren,
En ook weemoedigheid, die niemand kan verklaren,
En die des avonds komt, wanneer men slapen gaat.

Re: students not getting jobs.

Okay... that makes sense.  *drops his argument*

Carry on.  smile

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: students not getting jobs.

> Cardboard Robot wrote:

> xeno, not in this country where everyone is obliged to have healthcare insurance and referals are tried to be kept at a minimum (which at times may even lead to negative consequences when a referal would've been necessary... but that's aside the point). I'm sure there'll still be a few of those bad, lazy doctors out there who just do it for the money, but I can say that in my entire cluster, if not my entire year, I have yet to met someone who is in it just for the money. People who are just out for the money will generally study physiotherapy here.

Healthcare, and thus doctors' OUTRAGEOUSLY INSULTING salaries are subsidized with tax-dollars, and the average doctor makes NO more of a difference for the better to society than your average teacher, or, for that matter, probably less so.   The absurd salaries they feel entitled to for having paid so much in dues, yet, ultimately, because they have such little ultimate effect for the better of society and yet get paid so much more for their PITIFUL contribution, they are FAR more of a drain on society than virtually anyone else.  Don't you DARE think you actually deserve the outlandish salary you will get.  Be humble and appreciative, and know that your good life comes at the expense of those whose economic opportunities have been DIMINISHED by the outlandish dictates of the school of medicine, who live in Ivory towers, blatantly ignorant to the negative effects their policies and lobbying has on the lives of the rest of us "common folk".  The last thing I can stand is a med student who diminishes or otherwise bashes the contributions social sciences have on society.  Don't be daft.  You enjoy the freedoms and liberties you do because of the heroic sacrifices of liberal arts graduates in their respective positions and without them, you would probably never have had the opportunities you did in your life.  We are talking journalists, artists, philosophers, writers, film-makers, teachers, who in spite of the absolute HORROR which is the academic establishment in generally, still find a way, in spite of the moral degradation of society we are experience, to instill at least some of the virtues, morals, and values in the next generation, without which our society falls into an abyss.  Think of that the next time you are lancing a boil on homeless-man's ass, and come to the realization that your ultimate contribution to society as a doctor is worth about the same your patient's, about as much as the boil itself, at that.


>>In the Netherlands the people who gather info for the anamnesis have a "specialization" with "generalization" as his subject, called a "huisarts" (housedoctor). About 40% of med students who finish their master choose to do this specialization. However, if that's the way the doctor is treating you, without making any effort to attain a good anamnesis or investigate the body thorougly to scout out other symptoms, then I would definitely file a complaint. Even in the field of housedoctors these people should be an exceptian, and if they aren't there is something seriously wrong with your complaint system, because I know that here in the Netherlands there is legislature that provides patients with the right to complain, which can lead to the sacking of a doctor.  If the bad seeds in medicine form an exception, when those in art & social studies comprise almost the entire studies... what would be the result on the return on investment?

Your incessant return to the issue of return on investment in economic terms is greatly disturbing, for as a med student, you must be fairly smart, and thus I am astounded that you cannot see how it is that graduates of social science disciplines and who actually get a chance to work in their fields, are the ones whose contributions to society matter most, contributions with incalculable economic value to society at large, rarely, unlike the medical establishment, for themselves.  What would you have if cultural anthropologists, for example, weren't willing to live lives of virtual poverty in order to study the last remaining tribes of whatever various last bastions of sustainable human society there are to be found in the world today; anthropologists who, for the sake of the so called values of human dignity and justice for which our civilization is supposedly moving forward, sacrifice dearly to research for a magazine article about a people who live sustainably, which virtually no one in our sociopath-dis-utopia even believes is possible anymore, let alone cares about.  The lessons to be gleaned from such a tribe about how to solve the most pressing problems of our civilization might very well be lost without the social-science graduate, who due to his study of how modernity causes the loss of knowledge, languages, and culture from which we could possibly learn how to save our future generations is lost will be be a topic learned by future generations, whose awareness of today's generation's crimes against humanity they will be far more aware than us.  Your grandchildren will learn, and, hopefully, will take measures to protect indigenous cultures still remaining in their time, and some of the art, stories, languages, life-styles, knowledge that would otherwise have been rendered extinct might be saved.  For us, it is too late.  I suppose, then, you want to measure the investment of the social-science degree of anthropologist in question in economic terms, then, since it won't effect our lifetimes, and, ultimately, you are as much a sociopath as most of us: products of our environment.  Money NOW is all you (and most of us) seems to care about.  Fine.  Well, here is a monetary gain then to our generation and your medical establishment, then. Let's say a tribe studied by an anthropologist uses a species of flower for medicinal purposes and this flower is deemed to have properties your pharmaceutical companies can ear millions with.  Happy? 

>>Wornstrum, I can see how in the current economical situation, with a strong, growing China and a (relatively) weakening West, how there would be a call to Western students to learn Chinese. Regarding Zarf: It is an enormous advantage if you are able to speak Chinese, to be able to get close to them. The hierarchy in Chinese economics is a system based on trust and respect, more than the Western system, so getting the Chinese to trust you is key. What easier way to get them to trust you than to show you are willing to put effort into your relationship with them by learning their language? In some cases, NOT learning their language may even be seen as an insult.

Both the Chinese and the Westerners are about as equally prone to insulting one another.  The problem is due to the religious / cultural / sociological / psychological differences inherent between people who are brought up in one of the two different civilizations: the West has had the experience of the Enlightenment and the majority of people who grow up in Western societies have passed down to them values resulting from liberalism and the democratic process.  The Chinese didn't experience this, and instead function within their society according to Confucius thought.  For this reason there will always be diametrically opposed viewpoints on many issues which, sadly, are irreconcilable in this generation or any other.  Westerners learning Chinese or Chinese learning English will create more awareness of the differences between each others' civilization.  Ultimately, the return on the investment, or rather the 'contribution' to society, in learning Chinese or English will be negligible, although the individual sociopath who wants to exploit people of one or the other civilization will more easily be able to do so.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"The problem is due to the religious / cultural / sociological / psychological differences inherent between people who are brought up in one of the two different civilizations"

That could be said between any 2 cultures if you want to go down this path.

"Ultimately, the return on the investment, or rather the 'contribution' to society, in learning Chinese or English will be negligible, although the individual sociopath who wants to exploit people of one or the other civilization will more easily be able to do so."

I think before you start throwing around insults like this, you should be telling us the "great contribution" you are giving to society. Your argument about doctors is rather narrow minded (unless you don't go and see a doctor when you are sick/injured). Doctor's in Australia need to do at least 6 years at uni, which is a rather large contribution to their academic future. GPs, slthough acting as the contact point of clients, still play a crucial role in healthcare, however not all doctors become GP's. What about the doctors that worked on the vaccine for Small Pox, Polio, Tetanis, and this list could keep going, do they not count as contributing to society? How do you measure contribution? You state "Your incessant return to the issue of return on investment in economic terms is greatly disturbing", yet you also critisize me on my choices even though "What would you have if cultural anthropologists, for example, weren't willing to live lives of virtual poverty in order to study the last remaining tribes of whatever various last bastions of sustainable human society there are to be found in the world today" really doesn't provide any help to anyone else. It would be more of a fascination of the anthropologist, and would still come back to a similar form of work that I will be seeking (relations...the only difference is I would be maintaining a 2 way bridge of communication through cultural boundaries, whereas the anthropologist only communicates back to society with interesting stories in magazines). I find your argument to be very shallow, as well as contradictory, and your argument is nothing more than an attempt to get involved in an argument (and you have the ordacity to call me a sociopath that wants to exploit people)

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

Re: students not getting jobs.

I see Aussies are a cosmopolitan bunch. At least us Americans have some value in Western civilization left.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"I see Aussies are a cosmopolitan bunch"...you make it sound like it's a bad thing?

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

44 (edited by Justinian I 02-Nov-2011 04:10:38)

Re: students not getting jobs.

Yes. Cosmopolitanism is the greatest evil that challenges the world today. It ranks with up National Socialism and Stalinism.

45 (edited by Harry Plopper 02-Nov-2011 04:48:26)

Re: students not getting jobs.

And so isolationist communities are better?

"Definition for arrogance:
- overbearing pride evidenced by a superior manner toward inferiors."

Western civilisation, based on democracy, is about giving individuals more of a right to have their say. It's based on freedoms, freedoms that everyone should have. Last time I checked, Australia was a democratic nation. Now what right, under your own "us Americans [that] have some value in Western civilization". have you to tell me that I cannot endeavour to improve relations between 2 nations (in either business, political, etc). Your view point of "Cosmopolitanism is the greatest evil" is about inclusivism into your ideals, and rejection of any other ideal in the world. To tell me that I am evil because I find China interesting and fascinating, and that Australians don't reject anything that is not "the american way" (may as well include "liberal way") is ARROGANT (hence why I included the definition earlier).

America has its own problems, some of them are quite serious, so the US is by no means a utopia that the rest of the world should mirror, and it is by this action that the rest of the world SHOULD adopt the same values as the US IS THE PROBLEM!!!

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

Re: students not getting jobs.

Part of Western civilization is about having well established Liberal institutions that guarantee outcomes including:
1. The rule of law
2. Equal opportunity/meritocracy
3. Transparency in government
4. Personal freedoms and civil rights

Cosmopolitanism means the death of those values, which is part of the reason why I say it is evil. While Western governments may nominally be democratic, they are really plutocracies that can effectively purchase politicians and manufacture consent due to the domination of media networks by mega corporations.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"Personal freedoms and civil rights"

So what right does anyone have to say "adopt these values"? I value my rights, as well as value the rights of others, how is that bad? Also wish to point out that does the US cover those 4 points for everyone? No, because you still feel that it is internal. I agree with your opinion to the extent that it does have some benefits, but there is no international heirachy in which a global system could manifest. I respect every countries right to self-determination, that is not Cosmopolitanism...I focus more on an international perspective, where using your ideals, requires global centralisation (which sounds more Cosmopolitan than self-determination to be honest). Countries on the international scale have the same rights to self-determination as any other nation, and I respect that enough to make an effort to understand their perspective, whilst respecting my own. You respect your own ideals, and feel the rest of the world should adopt them. Personal freedoms needs to extend to community freedoms, otherwise you are merely manipulating communities to follow your idea of freedoms.

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~

Re: students not getting jobs.

No one has the right to tell anyone to adopt values, because no such right is ever stated or implied in a legal code. Rights come from laws and the powers that enforce them, and I value the civil rights I have according to the laws of my country.

A lot of what you are saying implies that some rights come from some abstract source that makes no sense to me, so I can't comment on them too much.

However, I maintain that Cosmopolitanism is evil because:
1. People with contradictory values outnumber those sharing Western values.
2. Non-Westerners will demand justice for the historical misdeeds of Western imperialism.
3. Resources are scarce, and a world government will redistribute them more equitably.

In other words, I stand to lose with Cosmopolitanism. Only a fool surrenders their gun when facing an angry mob.

Additionally, everyone stands to lose eventually. Since resources are scarce, global investment (like in China) is causing rising consumption and thus rising prices for resources. We can either exploit the world's resources and continue to enjoy our standard of living, or downsize in favor of some abstract concept called "morality."

Cosmopolitanism would make sense with unlimited resources, but is in fact a false hope that will collapse in to a state of ruthless competition as the gap between consumption and sustainability grows wider and doom comes closer.

Nationalism and anti-globalization is thus a matter of self-preservation.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"I think before you start throwing around insults like this, you should be telling us the "great contribution" you are giving to society."

Irrelevant.  You were discussing how social sciences was useless, and I countered by showing how your major was useless.  You took offense, did you?  You were insulted, were you?  Well, you started it by bashing social sciences.

"Your argument about doctors is rather narrow minded "
Useless statement.

I could just toss it back and say your argument about social sciences is narrow-minded.  So what?

"Doctor's in Australia need to do at least 6 years at uni, which is a rather large contribution to their academic future."
So do social science majors who pursue their doctorate.  So what?  I'll answer: their respective contributions to SOCIETY, not their individual futures, is what we are discussing here.

Stay on topic.

"really doesn't provide any help to anyone else."

I just showed how an anthropologist's discovery might save BILLIONS of people and ear pharmaceutical companies BILLIONS of dollars by actually CURING a disease with a flower, and you say it doesn't provide any help to anyone?

I just showed you how the studies of the sustainable-living of tribal hunter gathers might allow us to find ways to live sustainably, and you say it doesn't help anyone elsE?

LOL

"the anthropologist only communicates back to society with interesting stories"

Well there's a narrow-minded view of anthropologists if I have ever seen one.

"I find your argument to be very shallow, as well as contradictory"

I find you to be a pompous, privileged, wanna-be-sellout-boffer sociopath.  Actually you'd fit in with the diplomatic core and the transnational corporate interests they represent.  You'll be despised by historians.

"and your argument is nothing more than an attempt to get involved in an argument (and you have the ordacity to call me a sociopath that wants to exploit people)"

The reason I got involved is because I am not going to stand by and watch you bash the ones who contribute most to the world, especially while your aspiration is to join the ranks of those leaching on human civilization's potential.

Yes, clearly you are a socioath whose aim is to get rich and represent the aspirations of other sociopaths who also want to get rich, by, of course, exploiting the rest of us and ruining the future of our grandchildren and justify you actions on the blatantly incorrect principles of neo-malthusianists.

Re: students not getting jobs.

"However, I maintain that Cosmopolitanism is evil because:
1. People with contradictory values outnumber those sharing Western values.
2. Non-Westerners will demand justice for the historical misdeeds of Western imperialism.
3. Resources are scarce, and a world government will redistribute them more equitably."

How is this evil? Just because you stand to lose, doesn't make it evil. Actually wouldn't the imperialistic exploits be evil? Same with greed (inequitable distribution of resources)? My ideal of cooperation is by no means "evil", but one of trying to make communication smoother (ooooo how very evil of, not only me, but all Australian's who don't alienate other cultures aparantly)

"Rights come from laws and the powers that enforce them, and I value the civil rights I have according to the laws of my country."

There is no international institute that can govern countries, so what happens then? There is no "world government" and at no point have I suggested there is such an institute or expresses a desire for one. You cannot apply domestic law to an international context.

"3. Resources are scarce, and a world government will redistribute them more equitably."

So, how do you distribute them? Trading? Oh but then people like me learning and understanding countries customs/languages is a GOOD THING (makes trading alot easier). No matter what way you look at this, when dealing with resources, there either needs to be trade or cooperation (as no one country really has all the minerals that they require), so relationships between 2 nations is ESSENTIAL!

I give your invention the worst score imaginable. An A minus MINUS!
~Wornstrum~