----- Original Message ----- 
From: Ed Weick 
To: Ed Weick 
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2012 2:28 PM
Subject: More on the Quebec student riots


MARGARET WENTE
Quebec's university students are in for a shock
MARGARET WENTE | Columnist profile | E-mail 
>From Tuesday's Globe and Mail
Published Tuesday, May. 01, 2012 2:00AM EDT
Last updated Tuesday, May. 01, 2012 10:03AM EDT
It's a little hard for the rest of us to muster sympathy for Quebec's 
downtrodden students, who pay the lowest tuition fees in all of North America. 
Even if the government has its way - no sure thing if the Parti Québécois gets 
back in power - they'll still have the lowest tuition fees in North America. 
The total increase would amount to the cost of a daily grande cappuccino.

Students in Quebec are like no others, we're told. We need to understand that 
tuition fees are not the real issue. The real issue is social justice. The real 
issue is the promise made during the Quiet Revolution that universities would 
eventually be free. The real issue is the fight against the ruling class, the 
greedy corporations, the tar sands, and the entire capitalist, neo-liberal 
elite. Of course, since universities actually do cost money, somebody will have 
to pay. Who? The greedy corporations!

The most militant protest group, the CLASSE (whose handsome spokesperson, 
Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, has become a celebrity on French TV), has lots of other 
ideas about social justice. It wants a boycott of Israel's "apartheid regime." 
It wants courses, lesson plans and reading lists to be "feminized." It wants an 
end to free trade. You get the idea.

According to Pierre Martin, a political science professor at the University of 
Montreal, Quebec's students dwell in a world of their own. They neither know 
nor care what's happening in the rest of Canada. "The Quebec education system 
is a distinct system in the sense that very few students would contemplate the 
option of going elsewhere," he said onAs It Happens. "The system is very 
self-contained." Now I get it: The kids are on another planet.

In fact, Quebec's students have good reason to be furious. They should be 
furious at the professors who tell them that their cause is just, and who have 
deluded them into thinking that social justice can be achieved if only the 
greedy corporations are brought to heel. They should be even more furious at 
all the adults in the government and education establishment who have fooled 
them into thinking that the education they're getting will equip them to thrive 
and prosper in the world.

The truth is, the education they're getting is overpriced at any cost. The 
protesters do not include accounting, science and engineering students, who 
have better things to do than hurl projectiles at police. They're the 
sociology, anthropology, philosophy, arts, and victim-studies students, whose 
degrees are increasingly worthless in a world that increasingly demands hard 
skills. The world will not be kind to them. They're the baristas of tomorrow 
and they don't even know it, because the adults in their lives have sheltered 
them and encouraged their mass flight from reality.

A university degree is no longer an automatic ticket to a decent job and a 
pleasant living. According to a devastating story by The Associated Press last 
week, more than 50 per cent of recent university graduates in the United States 
are either unemployed or working in jobs that don't require bachelor's degrees. 
They're more likely to work as "waiters, waitresses, bartenders and 
food-service helpers than as engineers, physicists, chemists and mathematicians 
combined."

Canada, too, is awash in soc and psych majors. And soc and psych majors who 
refuse to venture beyond their comfort zone - linguistic, geographical, or 
ideological - face even dimmer prospects. Someone should have told them that by 
now. Sooner or later, they'll find out, and it's going to be a shock.
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