Guess he didn't see THAT one coming.
IZ.
Guess he didn't see THAT one coming.
"Hogfather" was pretty nice...Meat Whiplash wrote:BLAH you're such a poo-pooer, tell me something goodDeWinter wrote:I was mildly disappointed with "Going Postal". Television adaptions of Pratchett fail by A) not doing any of the Witches stories, and B) continually NOT hiring Brian Blessed to play Mustrum Ridcully.
I thought he was banging on about some extreme sport..Hom_Corleone wrote:Why did they stop?
You're not the first to say that! Curiously in "real life" I'm renowned for being rather easy-going and amiable. I suspect the amount of opinionated gibberish talked on the internet stated as fact just irritates me beyond endurance. Especially when a ten second 'net search can get you the basic facts..Meat Whiplash wrote:BLAH you're such a poo-pooer, tell me something good
Funnily enough, me too. We manage to wind each other up at the drop of a hat though!DeWinter wrote:Curiously in "real life" I'm renowned for being rather easy-going and amiable.
True! We'd manage to row if one of us asked the other to pass the salt I begin to think..markfiend wrote:Funnily enough, me too. We manage to wind each other up at the drop of a hat though!DeWinter wrote:Curiously in "real life" I'm renowned for being rather easy-going and amiable.
DeWinter wrote:True! We'd manage to row if one of us asked the other to pass the salt I begin to think..markfiend wrote:Funnily enough, me too. We manage to wind each other up at the drop of a hat though!DeWinter wrote:Curiously in "real life" I'm renowned for being rather easy-going and amiable.
"Typical authoritarian/left wing attitude expecting others salt to be given to him/keeping all the salt and not caring about the saltless.."
It depends a lot on the degree taken though, the debts accrued. Engineering, maths, and I'm fairly sure medicine and the sciences are pretty heavily subsidised. Paying your way through college is pretty much par for the course in a lot of countries.markfiend wrote:Admittedly far too many school-leavers expect to go to university these days. It's unsustainable to have a third of them going to uni, or whatever proportion it is these days (not to mention devaluing the degree itself) but to expect someone to get £30K plus into debt just to get a degree (and keep themselves off the unemployment figures for three years) is ridiculous.
I don't remember many people taking a year out to earn money when I was 18. A year out to go travelling maybe, but even that was an exception. Almost all of my 6th-form colleagues went straight from school to uni. Almost all the people I went to Uni with had come straight from school. And they got a grant. (Remember those?)
As for earning while at university, I would contend that if you're doing a degree properly, you don't have time to do a job as well. YMMV.
It's an admirable thing to do, I agree. But at a time when we're repeatedly told that we're nigh-on bankrupt it's a bit unreasonable to expect anyone else to pay for it.markfiend wrote:I do agree with you to a degree (pun not intended) about "pointless courses", although a lot of people do (or at least used to) pursue learning for its own sake. For instance Mrs Fiend recently completed an MA in Victorian Art and Literature for no other reason than she wanted to. (In her own time and paid for out of our pockets )
I wasn't aware of any subsidy for any subject; one of the arguments I recall being made against higher fees was that medical students (who after all do 5 years rather than the usual 3) already end up with debts in the range of £40 to £50K and higher debts would discourage poorer (financially) students from reading medicine.
Shower of c**tlazarus corporation wrote:Couple who met at university to marry
DeWinter wrote: Just like Harry and his father..