walrusbear
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i get you
you believe in majoritarianism?
you believe in majoritarianism?
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Children and the expensive fees of childcare aside, I don't see how the Union can possibly justify its compulsory Union fee system. Not only has elections within the Union been plagued by low turnouts (showing lack of student participation and a feeling of antipathy towards the Union), the so-called subsidies that our compulsory fees pay for are hardly felt (see above for food debate). The only sane argument I've heard so far is that these Union fees are like taxes - and therefore should be allowed. This of course, is also a load of ****, as only Federal and State Governments should have the ability to collect taxes for public services, the fact remains, NO PRIVATE INSTITUTION should have the right to force people to pay for something they feel that they do not need.walrusbear said:so your argument is that people with children shouldn't be financially assisted by the community? especially in instances of providing education
other causes beneficial to students aren't really under the microscope here. if they are beneficial to students then naturally the union would focus on them??
No. Seriously. What the hell is that going to do for us?Phanatical said:1) Casework
2) Campaigns and Activism
2) Publications
i wasn't talking about 'baby bonuses' (a Liberal Party initiative i disagree with). providing subsidised child care is assisting young parents get an education so judging from your last statements you should be happy with it.Malfoy said:Education - yes. Blindly paying out welfare and baby bonuses? NO FUCKING WAY. I'd love to see better sex ed/more funding of public education/more funding of health for the next generation, though I don't plan to ever have kids. I think paying people for breeding is revolting, at whatever age, but doubly bad when it's teenagers who aren't emotionally, physically or financially ready to do it. If you were to fund them by providing parenting classes or health initiatives or something... but I don't much like the idea of throwing money around that can be spent on just ANYTHING, especially when you hear so much about people buying iPods or TVs with the baby bonus money. And education helps break the cycle of poverty so I'd rather fund that than foster generational dependence on welfare. An educated society benefits everyone.
there is no reason to link social services assisting alcoholism to campus because they aren't necessarily linked to attending university. i'm fine with taxes paying for subsidising this sort of help because alcoholism can affect anyone.wikiwiki said:Excuse me? You are arguing that they have an external social factor that impacts on their ability to undertake tertiary study at the University of Sydney.
So what exactly is the quantitative difference between having a child and being alcoholic in an educational context?
no one here is debating the high prices of student fees - at sydney uni they are obviously too high. you're distracting by suggesting that contributing to a form of childcare is bankrupting you, which i'm sure is incorrect (can someone who has stats on this sort of thing contribute?? waf?? how much does each student pay for childcare??). however overpriced fees are and inefficient the union is presently, the principles of USU are far more sound than user pay.Malfoy said:Personally, I think you are missing the point. Not EVERYONE should have to contribute money for that kind of lifestyle choice. And yes, having kids is a choice. As I said, it's not like students are rich, generally speaking. Up until I got my second job a couple of weeks ago, student fees were TWELVE WEEKS of my income. I'm not kidding - when there's not enough shifts to go around and you end up with one a week, money is really tight. Why the hell should I - or anyone else in a similar situation - pay for someone else's childcare when they weren't responsible enough to plan for it themselves (organising, funding, etc)?
i still disagree and think childcare should be included in the feesMalfoy said:But the reason the fees ARE so overpriced is because unnecessary things like childcare - which should be the PARENT'S responsibility - are being funded. Use USU to fund the basics, and the things which benefit everybody, and cut the costs to about 1/3 of what they are. $100 a semester won't bankrupt anyone. $300 is a much more significant chunk of money. That was my original point.