Education System

Information from The State of Sarkhan Official Records
Revision as of 03:37, 10 November 2023 by MoNoLidThZ (talk | contribs)
Welcome to the job market, new graduates.

The Illusion of Education: A Dystopian Dive into the System

In the grand theater of life, education plays the role of a meticulous director, shaping the actors (students) to fit neatly into the predetermined roles of the job market. This orchestrated production, however, often leaves aspiring talents stranded on the cutting room floor.

The Systematic Blindfold

As you enter the hallowed halls of academia, the glittering promise of knowledge unfolds before you. Little do you realize, you're stepping into a labyrinth where the exit is a job, and your fellow classmates are competitors vying for the same elusive prize.

In the dystopian landscape of the job market, statistics in Thailand reveal a stark reality. A staggering 75% of graduates find themselves jobless, and the remaining fortunate few are either exceptionally skilled or possess the golden ticket of connections.

The Wagie Conundrum

You're told that education is the key to success, but the fine print reads differently. If the golden key doesn't open the door to opportunity, there's always the option of shackling yourself with a student loan—a motivating whip to keep you running on the hamster wheel of work.

Buying a house, a quintessential part of the "American Dream", is presented as a goal. Little do you realize, it's a Faustian bargain, chaining you to a mortgage for the next three decades. Congratulations, you're now part of the grand illusion of economic stability.

The Unseen Curriculum

The curriculum, a masterfully crafted script, meticulously erases certain chapters of life. You graduate with honors, your portfolio gleaming with achievements. Yet, what's missing is the practical knowledge—like understanding taxes or alternative avenues for income, such as the enigmatic world of forex trading.

Creativity, once a wild force within you, is systematically tamed into a subservient jack of all trades. Mark Twain's words echo through the corridors of academia: “I was educated once – it took me years to get over it.” The grand design seems to be creating workers, not thinkers; followers, not innovators.

The Portfolio Paradox

Your portfolio may shine, a beacon for potential employers, but the shadows conceal the cost. The very education that adorns your resume might be stripping you of your innate intelligence and stifling creativity. You become a walking paradox—an impressive CV that conceals the loss of individuality.

In this dystopian education system, the corridors echo with the footsteps of countless graduates, each carrying the weight of unfulfilled dreams and the disillusionment of promises unkept. As the curtain falls on this chapter of your life, you might find yourself questioning the script you were handed and contemplating a rewrite—one where education liberates rather than confines, empowers rather than shackles, and where success is measured by fulfillment, not just employment.