The primary school education rankings in the state I grew up in, South Carolina, are consistently ranked literally dead last in the nation. To my parents, public schools were never even a consideration -- I watched them literally break their backs to send my sister and I to the best private school in our county (which was roughly $50K a year for the two of us). This on top of their paying taxes for other children to be educated in a system that was (and still is) plagued with mismanagement, over-spending, and other assorted problems. They simply couldn't afford to put much away for our college educations, and we were both met with more disadvantage when it came time to apply for university because neither of us qualified for significant government financial aid due to my parents income. IIRC, I qualified for $2500 from the state, for my freshman year only, out of proceeds from the lottery, only if I attended an in-state school. I graduated from a top 10 institution one state over (which ironically has some of the best education rankings in the country) and received nothing except scholarship money, which was a pittance considering tuition ($45K per annum) and living expenses. I won't even go into the costs of graduate school, which is another absurdity in the climb toward academic acceptance.
Now, I am getting screwed as a millenial and, for tax purposes, an independent contractor, who relies heavily on capital gains to supplement my own personal income as well as pay my employees.
It's like I can't catch a break.