Confuses correlation with
causation, IMO.
Just as ridiculous as noting that neighborhoods and socioeconomic outcomes improve with home-ownership relative to non-homeowners. That doesn't mean that all of those socioeconomic ills are cured just by granting loans to people who otherwise don't qualify for mortgages. (As we've now seen, I sincerely hope.)
In other words, maybe fixing the problems that led them to be
poorly qualified for mortgages might have been a better (real?) solution.
Same thing with college-for-all. Okay, higher earnings are associated with college degrees. But maybe that isn't
causative as a relationship. Maybe it's correlative instead.
_____________________________________
Back to the original topic here-- I have been
floored by this phenomenon in my DD's coursework. It's high VOLUME-- so students, teachers, and parents
feel that their kids are "working REALLY HARD!!" The phenomonon there seems to be about window dressing and not about reality, however.
Or, in to steal a quote from
Christmas Vacation:
(In reference to the expense and trouble of all of the-- nonfunctional-- Christmas lights)
Francis (Clark's MIL):
Talk about p***ing your money away. I hope you kids see what a silly waste of resources this was.Audrey Griswold:
He worked really hard, Grandma. Art (FIL):
So do washing machines.Maybe I'm just naturally flippant and irreverent, but I so often find myself looking at my DD's schoolwork and thinking...
SERIOUSLY?? 
This is
high school?? NO. WONDER.
This explains so much about those poor students that were woefully unprepared for college chemistry. Er.. college anything, truth be told. Washing machines. That's what schools are all about now. <nodding>