Trump and Musk want people to think college is not worth it. They are wrong | Carlo Invernizzi-Accetti

For many, going to college is the very definition of the American dream. Relieved from familial burdens and toil work: it is a brief and precious period of freedom

One of the many guises in which the Trump-Musk duo presents itself to the American public, as they take office in the new administration, is as ”employers-in-chief”: seasoned businessmen entitled to give life advice to their fellow citizens on the basis of a purported real-life experience that cuts against received wisdom.

It is in this guise that both Trump and Musk recurrently attack higher education institutions as one of the as yet unconquered bastions of the “liberal America” they are now keen to tear down. Already during his first presidential bid in 2016, Trump famously stated that he “loves the poorly educated”. More recently, at a campaign rally in support of Trump’s re-election bid, Musk stated that “too many people spend four years in college, accumulate a ton of debt, and don’t have any useful skills they can apply afterwards”.

Carlo Invernizzi-Accetti is executive director of the Moynihan Center and full professor of political science at the City College of New York.

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