Pearls Before Swine by Stephan Pastis for April 06, 2023

  1. Img 0910
    BE THIS GUY  over 1 year ago

    Should have gone to trade school.

     •  Reply
  2. Ding a ling
    BasilBruce  over 1 year ago

    It’s that thing that only pays in other countries.

     •  Reply
  3. Zooey girl
    ronaldspence  over 1 year ago

    I guess he didn’t go to his safety school?

     •  Reply
  4. Green 5 point celtic knot 300
    Erse IS better  over 1 year ago

    $350K is far too much. Bob’s kid is an idiot to have gone that far in debt simply to get a degree from a “great college”.

     •  Reply
  5. Catsanddogsportrait
    DennisinSeattle  over 1 year ago

    When I went to a great college the tuition was 2750. The previous year there were protests, “2500 Too Dam# Much”

     •  Reply
  6. Photo
    Robin Harwood  over 1 year ago

    I find this phrase “start a family” quite annoying. Most of us are already part of a family. Our parents, our brothers and sisters, cousins, nephews, and nieces are part of our family. We don’t start a family when we have children, we add to the family we’ve already got.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    jmolay161  over 1 year ago

    Maybe the Crocs have the best idea. Forget college and the swamp of debt. Just go next door and eat Zeeba Neighba.

     •  Reply
  8. Missing large
    jmolay161  over 1 year ago

    Generation Z has their own ideas about starting families.

     •  Reply
  9. Missing large
    jmolay161  over 1 year ago

    Community colleges are a great inexpensive way for many high school grads to start. They also remedy the learning deficiencies in math and English that lots of high school grads come out with. Then transfer to a four year school later.

     •  Reply
  10. B3b2b771 4dd5 4067 bfef 5ade241cb8c2
    cdward  over 1 year ago

    It’s the new American way. Back in the 20th century, you could work your way through college and leave without debt. Some state schools didn’t even charge tuition. No more. Now, the US makes getting an education ever harder while it falls behind to other countries that make a college education as accessible as high school, ie., free.

     •  Reply
  11. 20071112 einstein
    hariseldon59  over 1 year ago

    Times have changed. I went to a state college in the late ’70s/early 80s. Borrowed about $6500 dollars.

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    newsbb  over 1 year ago

    Here in Denmark education is not only “free” as in its paid for by all taxpayers, those who study get paid like $900 a month to do so. Most students work a few hours on the side and/or take loans that are actually cheap, so few build any debt worth mentioning.Education should be like that everywhere, since everyone benefits from people being educated and it should not be about what your parents can afford. In fact education being paid like that makes for greater social mobility ie. “the American dream” is also more real, since it is interest and talents that controls which education you get.Also the whole “free” thing means greater freedom for all, if parents wanna try building their own business it don’t mean risking medical coverage for the whole family or the children’s future (education). Likewise, no one works a crap job in order to hang on to medical insurance and bankruptcy because of medical costs is not a thing.

     •  Reply
  13. Mrpeabodyboysherman
    iggyman  over 1 year ago

    After the Military, then Trade School, then my company sent me to college, and I made enough money to send my daughter to college so she owes nothing, Learning a trade was the best thing I ever did! Working with your hands is so rewarding!

     •  Reply
  14. Dscf0345
    colddonkey  over 1 year ago

    Learn a trade they pay you as you learn in an apprenticeship.

     •  Reply
  15. Th 9
    Count Olaf Premium Member over 1 year ago

    The most important thing he learned from his Liberal Arts degree was the phrase “Would you like fries with that?”

     •  Reply
  16. 288880045 10221076520606585 8531060568730745726 n
    dlkrueger33  over 1 year ago

    His future’s so bright he’s got to wear shades!

     •  Reply
  17. B3b2b771 4dd5 4067 bfef 5ade241cb8c2
    cdward  over 1 year ago

    Let me help: although every effort has been made on the part of Congress and universities to make college unaffordable, it is still the best path toward a good career. College grads still make a significantly higher salary, have better health care, and have better retirement plans than non-college grads. The way you get $350,000 in debt is by going to a small private college without any scholarships whatsoever. And even then, you have to work pretty hard to spend that kind of money.

     •  Reply
  18. Avatar 2475
    Troglodyte  over 1 year ago

    ‘til debt do us part…? Poor Bob’s son!

     •  Reply
  19. Missing large
    becida  over 1 year ago

    The modern American Education Industry at work!

     •  Reply
  20. Missing large
    eric_harris_76  over 1 year ago

    Who can name a politician who supported the law that excludes college debt from being discharged through bankruptcy?

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    chazkclines  over 1 year ago

    Missing the point about the amount of debt; he’s making a point of the high cost of college debt for many students.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    wrd2255  over 1 year ago

    Didn’t know this about student loans: https://www.americanbar.org/groups/business_law/safeborrowing/student/bankruptcy/#:~:text=For%20cases%20filed%20on%20and,your%20family%2C%20and%20your%20dependents.

     •  Reply
  23. Ellis archer profile
    Ellis97  over 1 year ago

    I know just how Bob feels. Even community college had me in debt for a long time, to the point where I wasn’t allowed to attend a semester unless my debt was fully paid and believe me, it took a long time to fully pay it.

     •  Reply
  24. 1017207 10200214106421862 492754112 n
    Cameron1988 Premium Member over 1 year ago

    One big lifetime debt ceiling sham

     •  Reply
  25. Profile pic
    The Orange Mailman  over 1 year ago

    Why do I get the feeling this is based on a true story?

     •  Reply
  26. Gators
    Croc Holliday  over 1 year ago

    Well, if you go to a pricey private university, yeah. But not if you go to a public one.

     •  Reply
  27. 96480   copy  2
    Goat from PBS  over 1 year ago

    The dictionary defines college like this: A land of indoctrination and poor decision making.

     •  Reply
  28. 461
    HOTLOTUS1  over 1 year ago

    community colleges aren’t cheap you know

     •  Reply
  29. Face
    BadCreaturesBecomeDems  over 1 year ago

    Wrong major…

     •  Reply
  30. Ataridragon
    AtariDragon  over 1 year ago

    His high -school classmate who didn’t study hard and didn’t get good grades, but who could play football, made $350,000 in NIL.

     •  Reply
  31. Missing large
    blairleroys Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Explain college. You cut out pictures and paste then on a poster. Idiot, that’s a collage. Oh, sorry.

     •  Reply
  32. Ignatz
    Ignatz Premium Member over 1 year ago

    And he did what all the adults told him was the right thing to do.

     •  Reply
  33. Missing large
    WineTraveller32  over 1 year ago

    I’m SO glad my daughter opted to follow her mother’s heritage and go to University in Canada! Her tuition was about 1/3 of what it would have been at a comparable school back here in the States!

     •  Reply
  34. Img 20190428 152052 hdr kindlephoto 2072758
    SusieB  over 1 year ago

    Very sad how in this country good ol capitalism has destroyed higher education for many people. Other countries offer free or very affordable college/university education

     •  Reply
  35. Missing large
    VICTOR PROULX  over 1 year ago

    Take profit out of education, and health care.

     •  Reply
  36. Missing large
    LKrueger41  over 1 year ago

    The current situation has been enabled by several factors. A) Many high school graduates have no classroom understanding of financial matters & no part time or summer job experience. B) Gov’t has encouraged borrowing to make higher education ‘affordable’. C) Colleges have taken advantage of this faux affordability to both raise costs & add offerings that don’t lead to financial success. D) Employer complaints that new graduates are often unprepared to ‘do the job’ have been ignored. E) With gov’t enabling, this has persisted & grown as a vicious cycle. End of Rant.

     •  Reply
  37. Zomy
    Malph  over 1 year ago

    Don’t get loans for collage. Don’t have kids before you’re financially stable – if at all. Work at night (or day if night classes). Do work-study programs. Apply for scholarships. Get your degree in 3 semesters (for AA) or 5 1/2 semesters for others – in 20 years you’ll never miss that extra time but will miss the opp you had to invest for retirement.

     •  Reply
  38. Photo 1501706362039 c06b2d715385
    Zebrastripes  over 1 year ago

    College wouldn’t be so expensive if the head wouldn’t get a house, car, expense account, a plane, and over a Million dollar salary….

     •  Reply
  39. Missing large
    MichiganMitten  over 1 year ago

    Once college loans began, tuition skyrocketed, far faster than inflation, and the colleges all built palatial buildings and hired thousands of administrators that contribute nothing to education.

     •  Reply
  40. Screenshot 20180802 120401 samsung internet
    Kurtass  over 1 year ago

    Get a job in bank. Embezzle some money and you’ll have it paid off in no time.

     •  Reply
  41. Pexels pixabay 278823
    Doug K  over 1 year ago

    The government should pay off everyone’s debt. (Don’t be concerned about the fact the government doesn’t really have the money either).

     •  Reply
  42. Missing large
    thelordthygod666  over 1 year ago

    …all because of one article in the Washington Post 30 years ago…

     •  Reply
  43. Missing large
    James Gifford Premium Member over 1 year ago

    “…went to a college with a championship sports program and two $50M stadiums…”

     •  Reply
  44. Picture
    IlonaHerbert  over 1 year ago

    I don’t understand why people become so pressed over a comic strip. It’s ink and paper. It’s a joke. Move on and get a hobby.

     •  Reply
  45. Dogs 003
    EXCALABUR  over 1 year ago

    and you agreed to it, went there, got the education YOU wanted and so now YOU get to pay for what YOU agreed to. Don’t want to pay, then don’t go. Figure something else out. Why should we pay for what YOU got.

     •  Reply
  46. Missing large
    John Jorgensen  over 1 year ago

    They’ve really got to change that no-bankruptcy rule. If you don’t have the money, you don’t have it. Why do they think the Department of Ed is the only entity that can get blood from a stone?

     •  Reply
  47. Bro1
    1Friendo  over 1 year ago

    Head of nail has been hit.

     •  Reply
  48. Pirate63
    Linguist  over 1 year ago

    I attended a small college back in the early ‘60s and remember obtaining a $1,250.00 Student Loan for my final year there. In today’s money that would be over $12,000 and wouldn’t even cover the cost of the tuition for one semester there, today!

     •  Reply
  49. 20141112 192913
    Aladar30 Premium Member over 1 year ago

    But he was able to find a well-paying job that exactly matches what he studied, right? RIGHT?

     •  Reply
  50. 533e
    oish  over 1 year ago

    Recently read that people with a 4 year degree will make on average $1,000,000 more over their entire lifetime (adjusted for inflation) than someone without a 4 year degree. By the time it takes to pay off the $350,000 with interest over the course of a lifetime, you might break even.

     •  Reply
  51. 689 6897683 blue rebel alliance logo png transparent png
    KEA  over 1 year ago

    It used to be about getting a well-rounded education… until greed set in and made it all about getting a high-paying job

     •  Reply
  52. Nowyoulisten
    zeexenon  over 1 year ago

    An example of inflationary greed: My tuition at UW-Madison was under $200 per semester. Of course, that was 60 years, and one career and long retirement, ago.

     •  Reply
  53. Bunnypancakehead
    DarkHorseSki  over 1 year ago

    Meh, I sacrificed to buy Education Trusts for my kids so they would not have any college debt and it is working. I did that because I know my kids are going to inherit the national debt (along with the extra costs that will come from Medicare and its $50-100 TRILLION of future unfunded liability and the unfunded liabilities of Social Security… which is also why I started retirement accounts for both kids when they were toddlers and which can, hopefully, grow enough to help.)

     •  Reply
  54. 20180812 203935
    dlaemmerhirt999  over 1 year ago

    I graduated in 2008 and I STILL owed $350,000! (Buff State is an expensive school.) After my Neuroligist declared me “unable to ever gain meaningful employment again” after my 2011 TBI, it was DROPPED! Guess what though?!? BUFF STATE STILL EXISTS!!! D8

     •  Reply
  55. Albert einstein brain i6
    braindead Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Let’s hear it for predatory lending!

    If student debt is not to be forgiven, why not restructure the loans so they are like a mortgage that can be paid off or paid down?

    And make their interest rate equivalent to the prime rate at the time of their mortgage?

    The lenders could earn a profit, and they could keep their ill-gotten gains. Future students would no longer be prey.

     •  Reply
  56. Tumble
    Keno21  over 1 year ago

    Far better to have working class guys like ME pay for his education… Hope he enjoys his Tesla.

     •  Reply
  57. Triumph
    Daeder  over 1 year ago

    It’s not a matter of explaining college, it’s a matter of explaining American society.

     •  Reply
  58. Missing large
    198.23.5.11  over 1 year ago

    Yeah,explain college to me.

    Ron De Santis went to Yale and he’s STILL a know-nothing.

     •  Reply
  59. Spinynorman
    Doctor Go  over 1 year ago

    Whoopsss, missed a 0 there…

     •  Reply
  60. T
    T...  over 1 year ago

    College, the school of financial hard knocks…

     •  Reply
  61. Image001
    dogday Premium Member over 1 year ago

    Explain college again? Easy: Most successful PR campaign in history.

     •  Reply
  62. Am  flag
    Geezer  over 1 year ago

    I graduated in 1967. My classmates and I paid for college with summer jobs and part-time jobs during the school year.

     •  Reply
  63. 878115f8 cd47 41f1 a067 7ef7045d26c3
    rwg1957rwg  over 1 year ago

    My tuition in 1976 was $350/semester at the University of Alabama. God, I’m old.

     •  Reply
  64. Missing large
    [Unnamed Reader - bf182b]  over 1 year ago

    Executive position requires university. University requires $$$. Therefore, only those with $$$ ever become executives. It’s called the class system.

     •  Reply
  65. Froggy with cat ears
    willie_mctell  over 1 year ago

    Indentured servitude.

     •  Reply
  66. Missing large
    Otis Rufus Driftwood  over 1 year ago

    There was a time this would have caused me to say ‘We can do better’. Now I say ’Let’s do something else’.

     •  Reply
  67. Missing large
    Ukko wilko  over 1 year ago

    Brainwashing you pay for.

     •  Reply
  68. Thinker
    Sisyphos  over 1 year ago

    It’s inexplicable, Pig. Ivy League is now $90K/year….

     •  Reply
  69. Nick danger small
    Nick Danger  over 1 year ago

    A better choice:

    https://www.mikeroweworks.org/

     •  Reply
  70. Img 4741
    Ninette  6 months ago

    College: Not free. Your choice.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Pearls Before Swine