The author argues that modern education systemsâespecially universitiesâtolerate a kind of indoctrination that keeps students bound to perpetual loans and unearned debts while simultaneously promising âbrilliantâ futures that only those already privileged can actually achieve. He explains how this cycle of debt, memorization, and corruption forces children into poverty inherited from their parents, leaving them too preoccupied with survival to think creatively. The essay calls for a return to the philosophical roots of Socrates: for students to seek selfâknowledge, wander nature, listen to clear thinking, and build a legacy that others can continueâso that future generations will no longer be enslaved by rote schooling but empowered to become great beings through wisdom rather than mere hard work.






















