The College Conspiracy - National Inflation Association
Written by The Watchman
Monday, 17 October 2011 21:33
The College Conspiracy - National Inflation Association
I went to college and I am still in great deep debt. The lifeline of payment deferment is about to run out. Despite this terrible thing...I do feel that I learned some lessons in college. But it was only the beginning of the important life lessons I have learned in the past 8 years since I graduated.
Most of what I have learned came from raw experience, trial and error. Sometimes a degree can get your foot in the door. But serious performance and applied knowledge can demonstrate your ability to get the job done.
Check out the video from National Inflation Association.
The Strong Watchman
Mainstream Media Finally Acknowledging College Bubble
The National Inflation Association would like to congratulate its members for helping spread the word during the past week about America's college tuition bubble and how college education is the largest scam in U.S. history. After NIA's release of 'College Conspiracy' on Saturday, May 14th, over 340,000 people have watched the documentary in its first six days of release, with many thousands of Americans tweeting about the movie on Twitter and sharing the movie on Facebook. Because of your help in spreading NIA's message, the New York Times finally felt compelled to admit the truth and write a cover story Thursday morning discussing some of the facts that NIA exposed in 'College Conspiracy'. Bloomberg, NBC News, the Washington Post, and many other mainstream media outlets, also came out with their own reports in recent days exposing some of the facts from 'College Conspiracy'.
On Thursday's cover of the New York Times, Catherine Rampell wrote an article entitled 'Many With New College Degree Find the Job Market Humbling'. According to the New York Times article, only 56% of college graduates in 2010 were able to get a job by this spring, compared to 90% of the graduates in years 2006 and 2007. Only half of those finding a job, found a job where their degree was required. The median starting salary for college graduates last year was $27,000, down 10% from the $30,000 starting income in years 2006 to 2008.