Anonymous ID: c7d8f5 May 11, 2023, 11:19 p.m. No.18834112   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4119

>>18834070

as a retired college prof who was constantly in hot water with the admin for advising students to drop out…

a diploma is a business investment. it's ONLY justified if it enables you to get a job that you could not otherwise get,

AND…

if said job pays WAY more than you could earn at another job that does NOT require any kind of diploma.

forget about "your passion" or what you "like" to do. that's bullshit "guidance counselors" (shills for colleges) use to funnel you into the education racket.

work is fucking work, and no matter what job you have, you will soon enough get sick of it, and sick of the fuckwits you have to work with.

with on-the-job training (you get PAID to learn), you can end up in a skilled trade making six-figures (give or take).

will your pilot's license get you a job that pays way more than that?

enough more to justify the up-front cost of getting the diploma

PLUS the lost wages from the time spent in school and NOT earning a paycheck?

 

take some time and think for yourself, but from this perspective. only you can decide. don't listen to people who try to tell you what's best for you.

Anonymous ID: c7d8f5 May 11, 2023, 11:34 p.m. No.18834167   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4180 >>4202 >>4502

>>18834131

>Being aware and honest while working in the medical field seems impossible for many reasons including the ones you listed.

>>18834149

>79 percent of Americans rated nurses “high” or “very high” in honesty and ethical standards.

 

i'll not disagree that nurses are far more likely to genuinely care about the patients, but you left out one key qualification…. COMPETENT.

having help train more nurses than i care to remember, i can tell you most are idiots.

and unfortunately, a well-meaning idiot is still an idiot, and mostly indoctrinated to believe in the medical establishment.