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Painted fingernails.

More demand for bitter baristas in the urban centers.

Not sure you’re why trying to convince me a bachelor’s degree isn’t what it used to be in terms of guaranteed employment opportunities. It’s not relevant to our discussion and I don’t do is agree with you. Not sure why you are obsessed with this.
 
I’m not, just a response to your comment about urban centers being more educated. I wouldn’t have said anything about it without your comment.
 
I’m not, just a response to your comment about urban centers being more educated. I wouldn’t have said anything about it without your comment.

But whether a certain degree helps a person get a specific job has nothing to do with whether education and voting tendencies are correlated. Your rebuttal has to the obvious correlation seems to be that people with bachelors degree often work at Starbucks out of college.
 
But whether a certain degree helps a person get a specific job has nothing to do with whether education and voting tendencies are correlated. Your rebuttal has to the obvious correlation seems to be that people with bachelors degree often work at Starbucks out of college.

If you look at voting trends by college there are extreme differences, as an example Brazos County in Texas has a highly educated population dominated by Texas A&M and the proxie was 62% red. It’s not something intrinsic to education that has biased voting but something in the characteristics of the education received.
 
If you look at voting trends by college there are extreme differences, as an example Brazos County in Texas has a highly educated population dominated by Texas A&M and the proxie was 62% red. It’s not something intrinsic to education that has biased voting but something in the characteristics of the education received.

Texas A&M is universally considered the most conservative large college in the country so I have no doubt that’s accurate.
 
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