If you're alluding to my attempt to discourage you from pursuing an online degree, I just want to clarify that I was *not* discouraging you from pursuing medicine in general. In fact, my intention was to help you be *more* competitive for the med school admissions process, not less. At this point, I have gone through the entire med school app process as a nontrad applicant myself; I have served as a member of the admissions committee at my med school for the past three years; and I have counseled dozens of nontrad applicants on how to improve their apps for med school, including many SDN members. Based on my personal and professional experiences, I would be doing you a major disservice by encouraging you to do something like getting an online degree, when I know for a fact that having an online degree would decrease your competitiveness for medical school admissions.
As I explained previously, medicine is a conservative profession. While there is certainly more acceptance of older applicants and students now than there ever has been before, there is *not* a general acceptance of online degrees by medical school adcoms. Online learning may be the wave of the future, but at present, med school adcoms are still standing on the beach watching that wave go by. Is it possible to be accepted with an online degree? Maybe, if the rest of your app is stellar. But again, you would be making the already difficult road to med school even more difficult by not going the tried-and-true route. As anyone who has already gone through the app process can tell you, it's hard enough to get into medical school even when you do everything exactly by the book. Why would you want to create extra obstacles for yourself that are completely avoidable?
I'm glad you decided on attending a state school for your prereqs rather than trying to do them online. Again, it's a good decision in terms of maximally strengthening your competitiveness as an applicant, especially if you do well in these classes (3.8+). Don't forget that you must also get some sort of clinical experience if you haven't done so already (shadowing, volunteering etc. in a medical setting).
Hope this clarifies where I'm coming from, and I wish you the best of luck.