we have robust and flexible system for religious and other relative exemptions. i think what universities need to take into consideration, to get out of the pandemic and population nearly 100% vaccinated, covert is not going anywhere and the university has to get zero risk of obsessive covid regime out of mine in order to get back to normalcy. shannon: and i know you worried that a lot of the policies on the campuses are very isolating. you can t leave your dorm room. you can t go out to eat. based on where you are going to school and what the rules are, what is after a couple of years of this, the impact on students like you? well my thank god i don t go to yale where students cannot eat outdoors in new haven until they are vaccinated. at princeton, we have nonsensical restriction, for example we are not allowed to gather groups of 20 and have to wear a mask but university put together masks and dining halls. this is reminiscent where we
were they sitting around the room saying, gee, prices are really high. i ve got an idea. let s subsidize consumption. this obviously is going to push prices higher. tuition in this case. they capitalize into the tuition because students will be able to borrow whatever they need. and they have no incentive to try to hold down costs. you have a lot of american high school students who don t go to college. and what ends up happening, they re subsidizing these losses and also kids who don t go to school, don t go to college, don t get the four-year degree, don t go to yale, brother freeman, get they re the ones who end up subsidizing through their tax dollars. and finally, i think this stifles innovation. because some people are actually trying to be creative about how to bring down costs. online learning combined with the traditional learning to try to push prices down. but where is the incentive if the government is just going to provide a bottomlesses pit. as we said, this