
From BILL BILVERSTONE
Alternet
My low-impact life did not grow out of my concern for the environment, or anything the least bit altruistic. It sprang from my desire to get an education without falling into debt. Just back from caretaking an isolated Canadian fishing camp, I faced the challenge of finding an inexpensive place to rent in Bozeman, Mont., where the housing market had gone berserk.
An old friend invited me to stay in his junkyard while I looked around. Joe operated a towing and vehicle-repair business seven miles west of town, and an aged blue-and-white camper squatted among the wrecks behind his shop. It was stale and gritty from lack of use, but staying in it beat camping on someone’s couch. Besides, the neighbors were earthy and unflappable. A pair of cows grazed between the junks, and a lonely old buckskin named Dusty gobbled carrots from my hand.
A run of good news (my ancient community college credits would transfer, the state of Montana offered a tuition break for Vietnam vets) was tempered by the looming certainty that inexpensive rentals had gone the way of the triceratops. It was 1994, and Bozeman had begun showing up in magazines touting lists of “Best Places to Live.” I wasn’t going to find another inexpensive bunkhouse nestled in a canyon or $65-a-month cabin within sight of Bridger Bowl. Pushing 50, I couldn’t get excited about another winter in a teepee. Truth be told, I’d only lasted through November the first time, and that was back in the ‘70s.
One glum evening as I trudged over to Bozeman Hot Springs for a shower and a soak, I noticed a row of pint-sized cabins hired out to tourists. Next morning, I found Joe changing the oil in a battered green Civic and suggested I build a cabin in the junkyard. Build it on skids and rent the ground until I graduated and hauled it away.
Joe said he’d think about it.
Two days later I caught up with him as he pulled a handful of wrenches from a hulking red and chrome Snap-On toolbox.
“How about,” he said, “if I buy the materials and I own the cabin? You do the building and keep track of your wages, and once you move in, your wages go toward rent. After you burn that up, you pay me.
“How much?”
“$175 a month, including utilities.”
Joe is three inches taller than me and 40 pounds heavier, but I may have crushed the burly ex-Marine’s hand in my eagerness to close the deal.
Fact is, after 20 years of living on the fringe, I could tell some pretty good tales, but they didn’t feature terms like Dow Jones, equity or interest. In other words: My caretaking wages were all the money I had in the world. Purchasing materials would have meant putting off school an extra year or taking out student loans, something I was loath to do. I may not have been a corporate raider, but I hadn’t owed a cent in 15 years.
I began construction in June, dividing my days between the cabin and — since I was saving my nest egg for books and tuition — a landscaping job. I built a 12-foot-by-20-foot one-room frame structure with a gable roof and wired it for electricity. I built the bed a little high for the sake of storage room underneath it, the kitchen counter long enough to support a dorm-size fridge, and installed a pair of stoves: A propane stove for cooking and a woodstove for heat. I scrounged the propane stove, sink and fridge from the junkyard and rounded out my dorm-gothic furnishings with yard sale and second-hand store treasures.
And I did build the cabin on skids. Great 8–inch-by-8-inch treated timbers bolted together, with angle irons cut and drilled in the shop. If Joe needed to haul the cabin around, he could hook up to the ring bolts socked into the timber’s east and west ends.
Gray November had clamped down and a storm was looming like a sooty fist by the time we got my electrical service and sketchy waterline planted. I say sketchy waterline because the West Gallatin River was a quarter-mile down the road and the 80-yard excavation from the shop to the cabin must have crossed the old riverbed. What with the bowling-ball-sized boulders, the sandy, constantly caving earth and the ancient backhoe groaning like a ruptured septuagenarian, we’d started too late to trench below the frost. At least until summer, the electrician’s shallow ditch would have to do. Which meant I’d be hauling the occasional bucket of water from the shop during the coldest months. Which wasn’t even a bump on my freeway.
The cheapest rental I’d found cost more than three times what Joe was asking. It did not include utilities, although it did include a deposit, an oppressive rental agreement and the lingering tang of cat pee and boiled potatoes. Besides, living in the camper and building the cabin had given me plenty of time to look around. The hulking and admittedly homely shop sheltered me from the road, while a nearly unbroken vista of hayfields, cottonwoods and grasslands flowed away to the north, east and west of Joe’s land. Whitetail and cottontails were legion, skunk and raccoon were well represented, and bald eagles patrolled the blue-ribbon trout stream just down the road. As to the wrecks in my yard, they were a good deal more expressive than the wagons, wagon wheels and flowery mounds that adorned Bozeman lawns.










All good men and women must take responsibility to create legacies that will take the next generation to a level we could only imagine. ~ Jim Rohn
Why College? Especially if the only sane means to get and education and have no debt is to live a life of Spartan existence. College’s were originally designed to be free for all who lived in state. What the hell happened? Well, it became corporatized, like everything else.
If one’s goal for ‘higher’ education for their children is to make massive material wealth from a college degree then what does Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Michael Dell, Larry Ellison and Ted Turner all have in common? They never graduated from college!
Is it clear to everyone that the debt for degree and unpayable debt to acquire your homes occurred simultaneously? This was not a coincidence. And that every year over 300,000 college degrees are conferred in this country, yet in recent years, less than one-third of those with degrees have jobs that are at college degree levels? Which means more and more graduates are desperately competing for fewer and fewer jobs in this, the permanent recession?
Is it clear to all that running up the national debt to over $15 Trillion, whatever that is, means our children will be in debt servitude for the rest of their lives and the banksters will own their lives, even if they have no personal debt themselves?
“A recent report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York says the value of student loans outstanding is now close to $1 trillion, making it the largest and fastest-growing share of non-mortgage consumer borrowing. Unlike other forms of consumer debt, which have fallen, total student loans have grown by 75 percent since 2007.
The federal government has pushed relentlessly to expand access to college by cutting out the private sector in loan programs and by altering repayment terms for borrowers via executive order. It bears an eerie resemblance to the obsession with homeownership that got us into our current straits.
Like potential homeowners, students have been encouraged to borrow with impunity. It continues to intensify: The Department of Education lent $133 billion in 2010 and $157 billion in 2011. Late payment trends are also following a similar pattern to the subprime mortgage crisis. With new programs geared toward “income based” repayment plans and forbearance timetables, it is increasingly likely that the federal government and thus the taxpayer will eventually be on the hook for tens of billions of dollars of loans that will never be repaid.
This phenomenon has real social consequences. With two-thirds of college graduates possessing student loan debt of at least $25,000 and 53 percent of recent college graduates either unemployed or acutely underemployed, unproductive economic dislocations—putting off the purchase of a home or delaying marriage, for example—are rampant.”
http://theintelhub.com/2013/01/30/student-loans-another-federal-debacle/
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We must rethink and redesign the educating of our youth. Should it really be a parents and societies goals in these times to want their children to attend ‘the finest public schools in the nation’, like UC Berkeley, when the Golden Bears are locked at the hip with corporations like British Petroleum, the greatest polluter of the world Man has ever known?
“The oil giant gave UC Berkeley a $500 million grant in 2007 to create the Energy Biosciences Institute, which works to develop new sources of plant-based fuel. The 10-year deal, believed to be the largest-ever corporate sponsorship of university research, has outraged many students and professors who worry the global oil company will exert too much influence over academic research and damage the university’s reputation.
“The BP-Berkeley partnership has stirred debate about corporate funding of academic research at a time when UC is grappling with deep cuts in state funding that have led to faculty furloughs, course cutbacks and steep tuition hikes.Critics say corporate money steers university resources toward certain types of research, and widens the financial disparity between faculty members in science and engineering and those in the humanities and social sciences.”
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/31/uc-berkeleys-bp-deal-tain_n_666355.html
To further the whorporation of a college degree just look at any college football game or stadium which is deeply in bed with many, many megacorporations. Can independent, critical thinking be seriously taught to our next generation by professors and universities funded and sponsored by Budweiser and Citibank?
The young adults I know coming out of college are mostly inept and useless in real life skills. All with debt loads of $50k and above, have zero applicable skills, zero drive and are worthless to me on the farm when it comes to real labor.
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The massive debt burden that is being placed on our youth, without any realistic opportunity to attain meaningful employment in our outsourced, robotics-replace-humans future should mean a complete rethinking of what the heck a college education is for and worth these days.
The California University system is now focused on aggressively recruiting mainly foreign students to replace those in this country who can no longer afford a college degree that ends up costing in excess of 50- 100 thousand dollars. That means the higher paying ‘white collar’ jobs available in this country will, be design, get outsourced like the non-technical jobs that answer your credit card questions from India.
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/nov/14/local/la-me-uc-recruit-20101115
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What is needed is a retool and rethink of how we educate our children. Outcome based public education is designed to produce homogenous non-thinkers who obey authority and live inside the box as to go along to get along and regurgitate formulas and models that have little to do with life in the everyday world today.
In a public school education system today, our youth will have spent some 16,000 hours in a classroom, yet graduate without any meaningful skills to support themselves or their families. Is this the best we can do for our youth today?
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Colleges in this country were founded largely upon the ability of the rural farmer to generate enough income to build the colleges to send their children off for higher education . In the past the student went off to college and came back home to share with his community what they had learned. Now Africa, India, Brazil, etc. are benefiting from our higher education system at the direct expense of jobs in this country for our youth.
What is needed are Renaissance children to have critical thinking, home crafted, multi-skilled abilities. Who can be flexible and adapt and apply themselves in their communities to address the changing needs of those around them. We must educate them differently so they become assets to society rather than continued future burdens.
Can they fix and maintain cars? Can they operate a tractor? Can they grow food in ever increasing climate weirding weather? Will they do manual labor for 8-10 hours when cheap fossil fuel no longer is available or affordable? Will they desire to care for the Baby Boomer generation when we have lost all our pensions and medicare due to the massive debt our ‘leaders’ have created on all?
Can the become creative, creatures of creation and free, independent thinkers to adapt to this rapidly changing world?
Or will they continue to lose themselves further and pull their dark hoodies down lower and thumb tap, tap, tap messages to the anonymous cyberworld,curling further back into the fetal position, powering down massive caffeine uppers because pulling their heads up and looking at what their future looks like is to ominous, uncertain and scary?
Will our youth just give up because they lose hope for a meaningful future?
Re-educating our youth includes volunteering and being a part of their community that supported their upbringing. Learning vocational skills and local problem solving without the need to go into massive debt or rely on their families to support them while they ‘figure it out’ with what they want to do with their lives.
We need to bring alive again the artists, the creators, the risk takers and the dreamers like the wonderful Mendo Free Skool Model is attempting to stimulate in our community.
It seems to be the no brainer solutions for new visions of much better ways and a way out of our debt based system but we must begin now, like today, with a new type of realistic, alternative education for our youth.
In the radical changing days now and ahead, to prepare our youth for a very uncertain future, it seems one would get much more ‘education’ from and for their youth if they were to give the teenager the tens of thousands of dollars and the thousands of hours of time that would of been spent on college and have them start a local business, create a local enterpirse and/or, most importantly, as written so well in a book by a small local bookstore owner, ‘Be of Use’.