Quote:
Originally Posted by birddog3k
There are basically 0 examples throughout history of a government providing a better experience for a cheaper cost compared to a private company.
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Healthcare -- game, set, and match.
The problem with your approach is, you're turning kids into one trick ponies, and that is superbly problematic. If that trick you taught the kid doesn't pan out for one reason or another, then the kid becomes totally screwed. Case in point -- what if a kid gets sent to this engineering school because he was good at math, but then it turned out that he hates match / applied science?
And then kids all growth, mature, and bloom in their own ways, and on their own time. If you don't even expose them to the different subjects, they wouldn't even have a chance to explore it. What if a kid was supposed to be a late bloomer in arts and music, but he didn't show that talent when he was a young child? And because you sent him to trade school instead of music school since he was good with crafts, the world would have lost this arts and music prospect. And then if it turned out that the kid was only mediocre in trades, then again, the kid is fxxked.