Trade Pill

I don't think you know how trades work, no one is going to want you to manage techs without experience in the field and we certainly don't give two halves of a fuck about whether you have a degree or not.

>ibew
That is a good organization.

German people respect you more if you have a degree. It's a remnant of the old class system. Average workers are not respected much, master craftsmen and academics are highly respected.

My Granddad's 80, had a heart attack 10 years ago and is still able to wire houses.

The Upper-middle class hate tradesmen here, they see them as filthy peasant who couldn't do anything better. Kind of ashamed to be apart of the same class.

Because my state is so heavily unionized and unions are absolute AIDS

Been a machinist many years.
>not working in a climate controlled shop.
Were you just ruffling parts out for the real machinists?

No, I'm planning on working in a field where I do not encounter them very often if at all. I also live in a very rural area with few refugees and the ones that are allowed to stay usually leave for the big cities.

I'm finishing my engineering degree soon, but I hate it and would rather do a trade. What are good trades these days?

Who else is will be fighting fires this summer?

>German people respect you more if you have a degree. It's a remnant of the old class system. Average workers are not respected much, master craftsmen and academics are highly respected.
It's basically the same here, people think I'm a pleb when I tell them I do air until I show them my paychecks. Americans really only respect money though and for some reason the common belief is that skilled tradesmen are poorly paid when in reality most of us are upper middle class.

I honestly believe that doing trades is better for your body than sitting in an office.

Good to hear, I couldn't imagine what it would be like to be a social worker that has to deal with those scum.