Well that's why I'm going to school. I'm working on qualifying to be a sonographer, which starts you out around six figures with a associate's degree. My hope is that with my income plus my girlfriend's, there will be enough in the household to start getting ahead of this shit. Get a piece of land where we can grow our own produce, put an off-grid home on it like a yurt, because they sell some really nice yurts for like 20 or 30,000 bucks, keep our debt to a minimum, and invest all the savings that we can in order to get income passively on top of our salaries. My hope is that we'll be able to pull ahead enough to outstrip the inflation and achieve our financial independence within the next 15 years. If you don't plan ahead and get some kind of assets that you can keep, and get some property that you don't have to rent that somebody else can't throw you off of, and if you don't get ahead of this shit sooner rather than later, you're going to be in some deep trouble. Long-term, my goal is to work remotely in the Philippines or Thailand or some country with a relatively high level of safety and a good exchange rate for the dollar.
I was in college from 2007-2011. During perfect recession #2. Perfect recession #1 I was in 7th grade, 9/11/2001. Perfect recession #3 was 2020 and we're still on the way down - not even on the way up yet (we won't ever truthfully be on the way up without drastic measures and changes taking place.) Fuck globalists, I hate them with a goddamn passion. I'm not so sure investing in your education will net you the benefits that you seek, especially with the "big lie" that no one wants to work floating around - covering up the real truth that in reality, businesses aren't really hiring above minimum wage jobs, and even then they're not moving the process along quickly. When they pay someone minimum wage they're not paying them to remotely thrive and contribute in this sort of economy.
I'm not going in just to get a bullshit degree, I'm going in to get a specific associates degree with a very specific skill set attached to it. It's sonography, those jobs are on indeed right now and I'm willing to move to where the work is at. Those jobs pay $90,000 a year it really depends on what you want to do and what degree you get. I'm looking to go into medical. I don't see the need for doctors and hospitals going away anytime soon
Medicine is BIG BUSINESS. Just be wary if they ever force you to jab to keep your job. And your plans about moving to the Philippines - are you some sort of an asian or pacific islander, or are you a huwhite cismale?
I mean it's not like I plan on doing that shit forever. The end goal is my financial independence. That means I want to get to a point where I have enough assets generating revenue for me that I don't have to work anymore. In another country with a more favorable exchange rate for the dollar, that becomes a much more approachable task. You can live very well, and I mean very well, in another country on $2,000 a month. And the jab is something that is definitely a risk, but they're not forcing people to take that shit anymore, and worst case scenario I can just get a biology major and continue on to get a bachelor's degree, which still opens up tons of doors for fairly lucrative science/research/pharmaceutical jobs, especially if I want to get my masters. I thought about this a lot and I'm not going in blind.
I think Big Medicine is an unsustainable house of cards right now. They work hand in hand with all insurances, private and public, to inflate healthcare costs for everyone. Public distrust towards doctors and "experts" is on the rise. Death is also very profitable and funeral homes are making bank right now.
I'm a nurse and I'm making a career change over to cybersecurity. Hopefully that is a more noble profession and I'll have plenty of work vs AI in world where everything is connected to the Internet of Things.
Currently, US healthcare is a spiritually sick profession and needs to hit rock bottom before improvements can begin. I may return at that point and hopefully make a difference.
A trade career may also be a very respectable and profitable job to have in our near future. Just watch the new Joining the Panderverse South Park movie.
Construction trade work is not an option for me. My body can't handle it. And quite frankly I just want to finally get my foot in the fucking door in the economy. That means making over $100,000 a year because if you don't make that much then you don't really get to do Jack fucking shit. Less than 100,000 is enough to just barely scrape by until something happens and then you're fucked. I'm not going to work in construction for like 40 or $50,000 a year when that doesn't even pay your fucking rent for a one-bedroom apartment anymore. I'm done renting, I am going to go buy. I am done with dealing with having to move every year or every other year because of fickle landlords and the ever-increasing price of rent. I'm going to get a job that pays enough money for me to buy a fucking house right now. And right now that's pretty much all health care jobs and jobs that require a college degree. I want to work at a job that doesn't destroy my body. I want to work at a job that pays enough for me to live and save. I want to work at a job where I'm not dealing with some screaming asshole working me 70 hours a week getting all fucking pissed off because he's not seen his dick past his fat fucking gut in 30 goddamn years. I don't give a fuck what anybody says, I am getting out of this shit. I'm getting off the fucking plantation.
Well that's why I'm going to school. I'm working on qualifying to be a sonographer, which starts you out around six figures with a associate's degree. My hope is that with my income plus my girlfriend's, there will be enough in the household to start getting ahead of this shit. Get a piece of land where we can grow our own produce, put an off-grid home on it like a yurt, because they sell some really nice yurts for like 20 or 30,000 bucks, keep our debt to a minimum, and invest all the savings that we can in order to get income passively on top of our salaries. My hope is that we'll be able to pull ahead enough to outstrip the inflation and achieve our financial independence within the next 15 years. If you don't plan ahead and get some kind of assets that you can keep, and get some property that you don't have to rent that somebody else can't throw you off of, and if you don't get ahead of this shit sooner rather than later, you're going to be in some deep trouble. Long-term, my goal is to work remotely in the Philippines or Thailand or some country with a relatively high level of safety and a good exchange rate for the dollar.
I was in college from 2007-2011. During perfect recession #2. Perfect recession #1 I was in 7th grade, 9/11/2001. Perfect recession #3 was 2020 and we're still on the way down - not even on the way up yet (we won't ever truthfully be on the way up without drastic measures and changes taking place.) Fuck globalists, I hate them with a goddamn passion. I'm not so sure investing in your education will net you the benefits that you seek, especially with the "big lie" that no one wants to work floating around - covering up the real truth that in reality, businesses aren't really hiring above minimum wage jobs, and even then they're not moving the process along quickly. When they pay someone minimum wage they're not paying them to remotely thrive and contribute in this sort of economy.
I'm not going in just to get a bullshit degree, I'm going in to get a specific associates degree with a very specific skill set attached to it. It's sonography, those jobs are on indeed right now and I'm willing to move to where the work is at. Those jobs pay $90,000 a year it really depends on what you want to do and what degree you get. I'm looking to go into medical. I don't see the need for doctors and hospitals going away anytime soon
Medicine is BIG BUSINESS. Just be wary if they ever force you to jab to keep your job. And your plans about moving to the Philippines - are you some sort of an asian or pacific islander, or are you a huwhite cismale?
I mean it's not like I plan on doing that shit forever. The end goal is my financial independence. That means I want to get to a point where I have enough assets generating revenue for me that I don't have to work anymore. In another country with a more favorable exchange rate for the dollar, that becomes a much more approachable task. You can live very well, and I mean very well, in another country on $2,000 a month. And the jab is something that is definitely a risk, but they're not forcing people to take that shit anymore, and worst case scenario I can just get a biology major and continue on to get a bachelor's degree, which still opens up tons of doors for fairly lucrative science/research/pharmaceutical jobs, especially if I want to get my masters. I thought about this a lot and I'm not going in blind.
Huwhite cismale.
I think Big Medicine is an unsustainable house of cards right now. They work hand in hand with all insurances, private and public, to inflate healthcare costs for everyone. Public distrust towards doctors and "experts" is on the rise. Death is also very profitable and funeral homes are making bank right now. I'm a nurse and I'm making a career change over to cybersecurity. Hopefully that is a more noble profession and I'll have plenty of work vs AI in world where everything is connected to the Internet of Things. Currently, US healthcare is a spiritually sick profession and needs to hit rock bottom before improvements can begin. I may return at that point and hopefully make a difference. A trade career may also be a very respectable and profitable job to have in our near future. Just watch the new Joining the Panderverse South Park movie.
Construction trade work is not an option for me. My body can't handle it. And quite frankly I just want to finally get my foot in the fucking door in the economy. That means making over $100,000 a year because if you don't make that much then you don't really get to do Jack fucking shit. Less than 100,000 is enough to just barely scrape by until something happens and then you're fucked. I'm not going to work in construction for like 40 or $50,000 a year when that doesn't even pay your fucking rent for a one-bedroom apartment anymore. I'm done renting, I am going to go buy. I am done with dealing with having to move every year or every other year because of fickle landlords and the ever-increasing price of rent. I'm going to get a job that pays enough money for me to buy a fucking house right now. And right now that's pretty much all health care jobs and jobs that require a college degree. I want to work at a job that doesn't destroy my body. I want to work at a job that pays enough for me to live and save. I want to work at a job where I'm not dealing with some screaming asshole working me 70 hours a week getting all fucking pissed off because he's not seen his dick past his fat fucking gut in 30 goddamn years. I don't give a fuck what anybody says, I am getting out of this shit. I'm getting off the fucking plantation.
IF you want to keep bodily autonomy, take travel gigs. Contractors usually aren't forced into medical mandates.