Our perpetual dependents

I am sitting here watching my local crow family. We are back up to four again. There are two youngsters this year. I can tell because, although they are the same size as the parents, they still flutter their wings and beg to be fed. Other than that, they are indistinguishable from the parents, who are hustling to find enough food for everybody.Just think what it would be like if people acted this way. Picture fully grown children, now young adults, dependent upon parents for their subsistence, begging for food, clothing and enough money so they can go to Daytona for Spring Break. Oh, wait a minute.I see parents working themselves to death holding down two or three jobs, working well past the time that they should be thinking about retirement so that their kids can go to college. A lot of them do not ask to see the grades. This would, it says here, be an invasion of privacy. The fact that the grades may be sliding and some of that hard-earned school expense money may be going for a kegger is not a valid concern, it says here.Our society developed the concept that kids should be kids fairly recently, as history goes. Third-world children help with the household tasks and work in the field or factory as soon as they are able. This was true in early America. Not only do we now keep our little kids at play, shielding them from the world of work, we now also do the same for many young adults. Part of this is not their fault. We have come to hold a college degree as indispensable, as if we did not possess enough innate intelligence to figure things out without first being given years of theoretical problems to solve. Having solved them, we get a piece of paper that says to the world that we know a lot of stuff.Not so fast. There is a problem with this. An awful lot of this stuff is not relevant to making a living. The subject of Beowulf does not come up much in daily life. The boss looks on in amazement as his new hire does stupid things. It takes him a long time, if ever, to realize that his college guy lacks common sense (which, by the way, he was taught is a fallacy by his philosophy professor). Doggedly he waits for results, because, after all, the guy is a college graduate and belonged to the same fraternity.The next thing you know, people who are unwilling to support themselves will be expecting the government to take care of them. Wouldn’t that be something?Bill Abrams resides, and contemplates the pros and cons of college life, in Pine Plains.

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