What Does AI Mean For Higher Ed? | Office Hours
Is college still worth it when artificial intelligence supposedly makes knowledge free? In an age of rising tuition and disruptive technology, parents face an existential question about their children's future. Meanwhile, mothers of young boys grapple with a different challenge: how to raise sons in a world where male role models are increasingly absent and emotional vulnerability is still stigmatized. These aren't abstract debates—they're decisions that will shape the next generation's trajectory, relationships, and economic security.
Puntos clave
College graduates earn 66% more per week than high school graduates and face half the unemployment rate, demonstrating that higher education's economic value remains intact despite technological change.
The single greatest risk factor for boys is the loss of a male role model—boys without fathers are more likely to be incarcerated than to graduate college and are twice as likely to die by suicide.
AI hasn't disrupted higher education's core value proposition: certification, peer networks, and structured learning environments that develop both cognitive and emotional skills.
The college affordability crisis is real, but the solution is expanding access and lowering costs—not abandoning higher education in favor of supposed AI-driven alternatives.
Successful long-term relationships require alignment on three fundamentals: physical attraction and affection, shared values about life priorities, and economic compatibility around earning and spending.
En resumen
Despite headlines about AI disruption, higher education remains one of the most powerful predictors of economic success and personal development—the real crisis isn't relevance, it's access and affordability.
The Hidden Vulnerability of Boys Without Fathers
Male role models are neurologically essential for boys' development and survival.
The single point of failure when boys «come off the tracks» is the loss of a male role model. America now has more single-parent homes than any nation in the world, with 82–88% headed by women. While girls in single-parent households may experience depression and seek attention inappropriately, they generally achieve similar educational and economic outcomes. Boys face an entirely different trajectory.
The moment a boy loses a male role model through death, abandonment, or divorce, he becomes more likely to be incarcerated than to graduate from college. He's twice as likely to die by suicide and twice as likely to abuse substances. Despite being physically stronger, boys are neurologically and emotionally much weaker and more susceptible to the absence of male influence.
For single mothers, the prescription is clear: ensure men are involved in the boy's life. Even if the parents separate, maintaining the father's involvement is critical. The relationship between a single mother and her son often becomes the defining relationship in his life—«there's the rest of the world and there's our mother.»
What College Actually Delivers
The AI Disruption Myth
Artificial intelligence hasn't diminished higher education's value—just distracted from the real problem.
“I just think this narrative that AI is going to destroy higher education is such ridiculous [ __ ]. The notion somehow that school has been disrupted by AI, give me a [ __ ] break. Someone who tells me that, oh, their kid doesn't need college that they maybe they'll be the next Zuckerberg or with AI they don't need college—I'm looking at someone whose son just got a 22 on the ACT and they're trying to make themselves feel better when they realize their kid may not be cut out for college.”
The Real Higher Education Crisis
Affordability and artificial scarcity—not relevance—threaten college's value proposition.
The Real Higher Education Crisis
The «corrupt cartel known as higher education» has raised tuition faster than inflation and created artificial scarcity. Student debt is now non-dischargeable in bankruptcy. When UCLA cost $2,300 and Berkeley could be attended with $60 and a Honda Accord, college was a no-brainer. Now elite schools with $8 billion endowments admit 1,100 freshmen when they could admit 11,000. The solution isn't debating AI's impact—it's expanding access and lowering costs.
Higher Ed by the Numbers
The economic case for college remains strong across employment and earnings metrics.
The Three Pillars of Lasting Relationships
Successful partnerships require alignment on sex, values, and money—in that order.
Sex and Affection Physical attraction and the desire for intimacy signal «I choose you.» This is table stakes—young people are usually good at figuring this out, even if it's not politically correct to say attraction matters.
Shared Values Where do you want to live? What role will religion play? You don't have to agree politically, but you must be able to have conversations about life priorities without contempt or avoidance.
Economic Alignment The number one source of divorce isn't infidelity—it's economic strain. Partners must align on earning, spending, and the role money plays in their relationship, or resentment will compound over time.
Relationship Red Flags and Green Lights
Personas
Glosario
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