Absolutely 100% true. I think we were so a barrel of crap in the 1980s and the 1990s about going to college. I went and got my bachelor's degree from Rutgers and then I went and got my masters degree from Thunderbird, and no matter how many resumes I sent out or how much networking I tried to do, I could not find a good connection with a Fortune 500 company in which I can start to earn $75,000 per year end up. I was confined to clerical jobs at anywhere from 12 to 15 dollars an hour from 1990 all the way through until 2007. When you have to pay your rent every month and you live in an expensive place like New York City, you don't have time to really do a lot of career shifting or go back to school. Nobody is there to help you and you just struggle through and grind and trudge through with these low paying menial clerical jobs.
Much better to learn to be an electrician or a welder or a plumber or things like that. Even a CDL license and be a truck driver. Nowadays I'm not sure but back then you would make a killing and you could retire by now. But what about mechanic? You could be a diesel mechanic or airplane mechanic. You can even go to police academy and become a police officer and a cushy little Anglo-Saxon town with no crime in northern New Jersey like in Bergen county, and they started you out with about 75,000 per year and after 20 years you retire with a full pension at the age of let's say 38.
I guess University used to lead to good jobs back in the 1940s and 1950s and 1960s and even 1970s, but unless you're going for something really specific and lucrative like ceramic engineering or petroleum engineering, or you're going to law school, you should pretty much forget about University. It would be much better if you simply started buying and selling houses when you were 21 years old.


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. Hustle young man hustle. But whatever you do don't reduce to selling oranges on the corner. Or selling Pokeman cards.
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