And one of the most infuriating things is that higher education is content with continuing what theyโve always done and expecting the government to deal with the fallout. Higher Ed is a racket in the US and they all know it, but have no incentive to change. https://t.co/foEUu46Y0Q
โ Milena Rodban (@MilenaRodban) June 25, 2019
This is what I think people donโt understand: even if you gain something from it, extortionate items like health care and higher education are still a racket. This is true even if many of the educators and health care providers are โhonest.โ As with not understanding risk very well, many people have real trouble with shades of gray and accepting that the world is not completely Manichean in nature.
For instance, the health care system and higher education share many traits with the Mafia. Something that most people donโt realize is that many people didnโt know they were even working for a criminal organization. They sat in offices, worked in factories, drove taxis. All those businesses โ many but not all fronts โ were legitimate undertakings operating legally as far as anyone could see. But at one point in NYC and Chicago, tens of thousands of people were employed by the largest criminal organization ever to exist in the world.
Health care and higher education are similar, due to who controls them and their methods.
I wonโt argue that higher education and health care in the US are as criminal as the Mafia. Obviously, thatโs absurd. But I do argue that they are also definitionally criminal in nature: their methods are coercive, they swindle their own customers freely, and they offer no guarantees of quality while being very punitive if you stray. In short, they are legally-sanctioned but de facto criminal enterprises in a moral if not legal sense.