Get Out While You Can: Why Young Americans Should Emigrate (see the article
below)

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I do not really agree with the article below (I think that we should
organize and take action to Solve the Problems in the United States rather
than immigrating to another country) But the article sure raises some
dramatic issues and possible directions and begin to show how serious the
problems in the United States are.

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(the Article):

Get Out While You Can: Why Young Americans Should Emigrate

Instead of accepting low-paid work or unpaid internships, young people
should focus on globalizing themselves.

The 20-somethings of my generation have been marginalized by the economic
situation in America. We've had a tricky time finding a place in the economy
and many of us have become burdens on our families, through student loans
and living costs. Now, how do we fix that? 

 

Emigrate, if you can afford it. Millennials have a ton of education and no
use for it. There are many other countries that represent a great
opportunity for millennials looking to enter into an increasingly globalized
work market. I'm not saying we should try to be members of an elite in other
countries -- we should reject our shackles and become more worldly. 

 

Part of that is learning a second or third language, something I thought I
never would do. This changed after my time abroad in Ireland while studying
at University College Dublin. I decided I was going to learn German, even
though it was not the most useful of languages. Four years later, after
teaching myself German from scratch, I have an operating fluency in German
and now live in Berlin, where I will soon start my master's degree. The
tuition costs a fraction of what it would in America. Despite being an
foreigner, I have access to public health insurance available for students
at only 60 Euros a month. 

 

How did I get here? It started with the betrayal and selling-out of our
generation. 

 

In the 1950s and 1960s it was possible to attend a state college, work for
minimum wage for a nominal amount of hours, and graduate with no debt.
According to the Center for Economic and Policy Research, a minimum wage
worker in 1979/1980 would have had to work 254 hours to pay tuition to
attend a four-year public institution. As of 2010 a minimum wage worker
would have to work 923 hours. That means instead of finding a summer job and
working to avoid debt, many students need to find steady full-time jobs
while studying, or graduate with massive debt. The class of 2013 has an
average debt of $35,200 and a lot of them still attended state school. 

 

Neoliberal reforms have been shoved down the throat of America since the
'80s and had two large effects: lowering taxes on the rich and the
destruction of organized labor, resulting in declining wages and worker
protections. The Bureau of Labor Statistics stated in January that union
membership fell 400,000 last year, to a 97-year low. 

 

And it has been by design; illegal firings of union supporters exploded in
the late 1980s, seeing one out of every 36 union supporters fired in
contrast to one in 110 in the late '70s. Millennials have it even worse.
With a great proportion of job "opportunities" coming in the form contract
or part-time work, their entry into organized labor is increasingly
difficult. A senior economist at Wells Fargo remarked recently, "A large
portion of the jobs we're adding tend to be in low-skill occupations." 

 

Meanwhile, our higher education system is failing the younger generation in
different ways -- it's increasingly taking on the appearance of a lending
operation, and treats students more and more as customers. My alma mater
recently built a large series of luxury apartments on campus. The facility
is not owned by the university, though it was built by a private contractor.
The cost? Rent comes in at $1,500 for a one-room apartment, $2,500 a month
for a two-room apartment. Public institutions like state universities
weren't founded to shackle us through debt. 

 

The University of Maryland also recently built luxury boxes for the football
stadium and charges almost $6,000 for rent for only eight months in a dorm,
and almost $4,000 for a meal plan. With tuition at almost $10,000 a year, a
student receiving no grants or help could easily pile up almost $80,000 in
debt.

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