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How is Business and your anticipation for the future?

Just paid over $1k for about 2.5 hours of plumbing work this past week. I mean, from what I can tell, you just need a cool truck and pants that bag in the rear...
 
It's not a given though. My neighbor's kid didn't feel like going to college. He was given a new truck, right out of high school, by his company and has no college debt. I have another neighbor that eventually started hiring more and more crews and now is bidding jobs to a team. He has a pretty swanky life and is younger than I am. Right now, I'd rather be in charge of three crews of house siders and roofers than three crews of appraisers.
Your neighbor's kid sounds entrepreneurial. Entrepreneurial-minded people make money off the labor of others - what about the people in the crews they hire - how well are they doing? Roofers and house siders can get injured, their bodies wear out, the demand shifts etc.

I agree that in some cases a trade is a better bet for people over college, especially if debt exists - but not in all cases, depending on the person and what they like or can handle. Some people pursue a career such as teaching or social work because they want to make a difference vs make a lot of money .
 
This is the biggest problem. Your chosen degree may or may not be a positive ROI by the time you break even.
I think you'd be alright if you stick with STEM and focus on writing. I meshed an engineering degree with liberal arts which focused heavily on writing and comprehension. It could have been Biology or mathematics. I have friends that got an MBA too. There were a lot of MBA's but I would recommend them for the well connected. I watched the rich take over family businesses, get great jobs in sales or work in investment firms.
 
Just paid over $1k for about 2.5 hours of plumbing work this past week. I mean, from what I can tell, you just need a cool truck and pants that bag in the rear...
I just paid $300 for 2.5 hours of plumbing work.
 
I just paid $300 for 2.5 hours of plumbing work.
Maybe they don't have to be licensed in Florida? I'm sure I could have found someone that cheap as well. Not sure how using Hill & Billy's Plumbing would have worked, though.
 
Entrepreneurial-minded people make money off the labor of others - what about the people in the crews they hire - how well are they doing?
Is there anyone or anything you don't hate (other than your own endless BSing)?
 
I think you'd be alright if you stick with STEM and focus on writing. I meshed an engineering degree with liberal arts which focused heavily on writing and comprehension. It could have been Biology or mathematics. I have friends that got an MBA too. There were a lot of MBA's but I would recommend them for the well connected. I watched the rich take over family businesses, get great jobs in sales or work in investment firms.

Yes but deciding on a degree today hoping it will be relevant and profitable 20+ years from now when you reach break even is gonna be a gamble no matter what.

Obviously this has been an issue all along, but current tech acceleration and globalization are increasing that risk exponentially.
 
Yes but deciding on a degree today hoping it will be relevant and profitable 20+ years from now when you reach break even is gonna be a gamble no matter what.
According to a recent interview with Musk, nothing is predictable 20 years out - even whether saving for retirement will matter...

 
According to a recent interview with Musk, nothing is predictable 20 years out - even whether saving for retirement will matter...

There are a lot of troubling statistics with retirement savings. If you follow Dave Ramsey, you may be a bit starry eyed. I used one of the vendor's he recommends and have averaged slightly less the 5% year over year average for the last 25 years. 2010-2020 ruined my averages. A lot of people are recommending buying the S&P 500 indexes but Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet (Class A & C), Microsoft, Amazon, Broadcom, Meta Platforms, Tesla, Eli Lilly, and Berkshire Hathaway make up 38% of that mix so there is a lot of tech pushing that index. The other issue is growth. In the 90's, companies waited 5-7 years to go private, now it's more like 14-years. Most of the growth is occurring on the private equity side.
 
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