Home › Forums › Blue Pill Hell › What It’s Like To Be A College Student In 2017???
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Anonymous6As the readers of MGTOW know,this country is sick. It’s a sickness that exhibits symptoms such as feminism, with its destruction of healthy gender roles, feigned racism, which gives people a reason to riot and distract the rest of us from real issues, and mainstream trends, not being mainstream because of quality but because of strategic placement for the purposes of mind control. Now I could continue this list of bulls~~~ the left feeds us forever but it would be wiser to find the root of the problem.
Where are these idiots getting all their ideas from? If it is so utterly clear to us that all this crap is a lie to further some agenda, then how are so many becoming brainwashed? The answer is they aren’t living in the real world. They are living in a bubble held outside of reality—a bubble called college.
Why college?
The ages of 18 to 24 are extremely important years in any man or woman’s life. Unlike what popular knowledge tells us, we are really still in an adolescent stage in our early 20s. This final step of maturation is extremely important because it is the time when most people finalize their internal values and beliefs, meaning what they learn to be true in this stage of life will often be the basis for the rest of their lives. Now what, my friends, is so strategically placed in this time period of a person’s life? College.
How it happened
Universities were not always designed to turn us into mindless zombies reliant on the state, but at some point (I imagine early 20th century) liberals invaded the college system and methodically removed all other professors and officials with differing viewpoints. They did this because they knew that if they pushed their agenda in this particular time portion of a person’s life they would have a lot more people voting for them, and their ideals would eventually become mainstream. They achieved this victory in the 1960s with the counterculture movement.
What is college like today?
College is hell for anyone with a strong mind that can see through the indoctrination. I don’t know how many relationships I have ruined with women for not agreeing with their nonsense feminist ideals. Every class I go to, there is at least one statement a week about racial and gender inequality (even math). At this point it is basically a religion with the most devout believers receiving A’s while the students less knowledgeable about the liberal propaganda receiving C’s and D’s.Of course, the upside to this is that since I understand their propaganda I can just bulls~~~ all of my papers and get easy A’s. I once wrote an 8-page paper in my East Asian Civilizations class in two hours with few sources to back up my claims and a crap ton of misspellings, and still received an A because it was about the “treacherous” patriarchy. The unfortunate and truly sad part of all of this is that most people in college just want to make the world a better place.
After high school, in this day and age, very few people receive any life experiences that would shape who they are in any way. Therefore, most kids enter college looking for something to believe in and something to fight against so that they can feel that they did their part in making the world a better place. Well, they find the fight they’re looking for, but they are increasing hatred in this world rather than defeating it.
Conclusion
What we should learn from all of this is that college is no longer what it used to be. Now I am a believer in higher education, so I don’t think we should stop going en masse, but what we should do is use capitalism to our advantage. Start looking into vocational schools. Start going to private colleges and conservative colleges. Take from them their ultimate source of power—money.
The only reason anyone should go to college today is for engineering, medical school, any kind of scientific research, and skill-based professions. Anything else you learn in college you can learn just as easily on the internet. And as employers begin to figure this out, college as an entire unit will become obsolete.
The BS has become the new HS diploma.
I don’t doubt you but how could have gotten that bad in 25 years.
I had one libtard SJW professor. No one talked about race or gender.
Love is just alimony waiting to happen. Visit mgtow.com.
How it happened
Universities were not always designed to turn us into mindless zombies reliant on the state, but at some point (I imagine early 20th century) liberals invaded the college system and methodically removed all other professors and officials with differing viewpoints. They did this because they knew that if they pushed their agenda in this particular time portion of a person’s life they would have a lot more people voting for them, and their ideals would eventually become mainstream. They achieved this victory in the 1960s with the counterculture movement.
I find this to be veritably true.
However, I think that being a moderate or conservative is the new counter culture. People who have autonomy with critical thinking skills are seeing through the indoctrination. Honestly SJW’s, BLM, and Antifas days are numbered.
Fuck bitches... literally and metaphorically
Anonymous6It really depends on the major. I had some biology professors that were totally liberal and save the earth tree hugger type people. They didn’t like that people hunted. HUNTED!! Keep in mind, im in the South where mostly everybody in that class who wasn’t a biology major probably had a pickup truck and shotgun somewhere near by.
Some history professors were not liberal at all, and i felt more comfortable around them. We would make fun of the liberals all the time, and their lust for everybody to use the same bathrooms. But really, it just depends on the major and the area. If your up north, or out west, you’re probably gonna be in liberal country.
Anonymous6How it happened
Universities were not always designed to turn us into mindless zombies reliant on the state, but at some point (I imagine early 20th century) liberals invaded the college system and methodically removed all other professors and officials with differing viewpoints. They did this because they knew that if they pushed their agenda in this particular time portion of a person’s life they would have a lot more people voting for them, and their ideals would eventually become mainstream. They achieved this victory in the 1960s with the counterculture movement.
I find this to be veritably true.
However, I think that being a moderate or conservative is the new counter culture. People who have autonomy with critical thinking skills are seeing through the indoctrination. Honestly SJW’s, BLM, and Antifas days are numbered.
How i hope you’re right. I see it as a pendulum shift. The pendulum was in the liberal progressive corner for a half century. Maybe it’s the conservatives turn to change the culture for another half century
I’ll put this as a separate post for emphasis.
Straight science is dead in America.
If you aren’t in the top 5% don’t study science as the end. There are not enough jobs for BS in Chemistry, physics, or biology.
There are PhD’S in the above that can’t find jobs. They just aren’t there. Learn to ask if you want fries with that.
Pharmacy is a blood bath.
Nursing is a wreck.
Physicians assistant has a little hope.
All the shortage of STEM worker BS is designed to allow more foreign workers to come here and work for less pay.
Love is just alimony waiting to happen. Visit mgtow.com.
Maybe it’s the conservatives turn to change the culture for another half century
Yeah I think these trends tend to be cyclical. Prior to the Baby Boomer generation, people were much more conservative upholding traditionalism. Now that the cesspools of Feminism/Marxism, two sides of the same coin, have inundated every aspect of our life’s, people are getting tired of it.
The university was originally a bastion of constructive thought, where many ideas could be expressed. In this market place of ideas, the most compelling arguments would win out.
However, PC rhetoric has really stiffed constructive debate, and most importantly free speech. PC language has allowed untenable dogmas to sprout, and has allowed morons to spout utter nonsense that isn’t backed with empirical data or science for that matter.
We can see this in the dissolution of biological paradigm. BIOLOGY/ANATOMY is under attack by the thought police… Even mentioning that there are only two genders is a “radical” notion. Saying there are only 2 genders that agree with the 2 biological sexes would ensue a maelstrom of triggering. According to left, that would make me a bigot, sexist, yada, yada, (insert ad hominem buzzword)
We can see that the true science deniers are Liberals.
Fuck bitches... literally and metaphorically
The BS has become the new HS diploma.
This is definitely true. Current college level material used to be taught at the high school level. And this trend isn’t new. Shakespeare never even went to university: he wrote his plays with knowledge from grammar school alone.
Women are better at multitasking? Fucking up several things at once is not multitasking.
Online you can find exams from the 1850s that are harder than 90% if my college classes.
Love is just alimony waiting to happen. Visit mgtow.com.
This is another reason why I don’t want to have kids. Why pay 100K (who knows how much college will be in 10-15 years) to be brainwashed by feminists and liberals and then graduate with a degree that is useless in the job market ?
"Admit no woman to the imperial councils. Be accessible to no one. Share with few your most intimate plans."
Pharmacy is a blood bath.
As a pharmacist, I totally agree with this! If anyone wants me to elaborate, let me know…I will be happy to tell you all of the horrors of this profession…
Formerly MoneyOverBitches
Anonymous1Yeah, I graduated college in 2012. Even the STEM fields have contaminated with bull s~~~. They cut out the hardcore engineering courses to make room for SJW s~~~. The vast majority of my classes were all non-STEM related courses. All opinionated and forcing blue pills down your throat. The trick is to swallow it all down and then puke it up later when you go home. Once you get that piece of paper you can get a job in industry. It sucks, but you need that stamp of approval “I’m a blue pill sucker” to get a job in industry (STEM) anyways. I noticed right away when I walked into the library and checked out old engineering books from the 1800’s. Our education is a f~~~ing joke compared to old schools back then. Those guys were walking out of high school with multiple college degree’s in terms of our modern schooling (brainwashing).
Anonymous6Pharmacy is a blood bath.
As a pharmacist, I totally agree with this! If anyone wants me to elaborate, let me know…I will be happy to tell you all of the horrors of this profession…
I don’t have a question about the profession of pharmacist, but I would like to know about franchising a medical center and pharmacy.
Recently I have been looking into franchising opportunities that I would like to do in the future. And one that really caught my eye was an urgent care medical center. I was wondering if you could tell me what being a pharmacist is like in regards to running a pharmacy? Now obviously this is something that I would do years down the line, but i did have that question.
Heres an example of what I would like to do… http://www.franchising.com/americanfamilycare/
The health industry is a cash cow, especially down here in the South, all that soul food has a cost. I’m just trying to figure out how to make a profit that i can minimize losses and maximize gains.
Anonymous6Yeah, I graduated college in 2012. Even the STEM fields have contaminated with bull s~~~. They cut out the hardcore engineering courses to make room for SJW s~~~. The vast majority of my classes were all non-STEM related courses. All opinionated and forcing blue pills down your throat. The trick is to swallow it all down and then puke it up later when you go home. Once you get that piece of paper you can get a job in industry. It sucks, but you need that stamp of approval “I’m a blue pill sucker” to get a job in industry (STEM) anyways. I noticed right away when I walked into the library and checked out old engineering books from the 1800’s. Our education is a f~~~ing joke compared to old schools back then. Those guys were walking out of high school with multiple college degree’s in terms of our modern schooling (brainwashing).
I agree with you man, I’m getting my Masters right now and I just have to watch what I say and who i say it around. Plus I’m a black conservative, so that’s just another target on me. Like you said, you gotta let this stuff go in one ear and out the other. I know so many Bernie supporters its ridiculous. I’ll never understand this mindset of “give me everything for free, and the government should pay for everything, and we should be entitled to whatever we want.”
I guess it’s not meant for me to understand
Running a pharmacy, I do not have much personal experience with. However, I’ve worked in pharmacy for close to 2 years as an intern and a pharmacist for Walgreens.
In pharmacy school, you are trained in the mindset of being a health care provider. You are taught to always be looking for opportunities to maximize the patient’s benefit from medications while minimizing risks. Sounds good in the classroom…but anyone who has actually worked in retail pharmacy knows this can’t be farther the truth. Working in retail pharmacy feels more like working in a production line with near impossible deadlines to meet, than actually providing health care services.
As a retail pharmacist, your job is obviously is to evaluate prescriptions, check for possible drug interactions, communicate with prescribers and patients when problems arise, and make sure that prescriptions get filled correctly.
Challenges that arise every day:
– Resolving insurance rejections, these can range from day supply issues, refills too soon, drug not covered without prior authorization from doctor, technical input errors, and other reasons that are simply not clear without calling the insurance companies
– Having to call a prescriber when something is not clear on the prescription, seems incorrect/unsafe, or does not meet legal requirements (which happens a LOT)
– Checking for drug interactions and talking to patients about them when you feel it’s needed
– Making sure that your patients aren’t abusing narcotics, benzos, and other controlled medication by watching their fill history
– Making sure that your technicians type and fill the prescriptions correctly – many technicians are inexperienced and just plain careless with their work, it’s not uncommon for me to find 1 potentially fatal mistake every day
– Calling other pharmacies to transfer prescriptions from other places when requested by patients
– Helping patients when they ask for the pharmacist, which a lot of times have questions that should be reserved for medical doctors or other people in the store (i.e. Where’s the bread at?), but you answer the best you can regardless
– Tracking inventory
– Answering incoming phone calls (I would say even on a slow day, you get about 20 phone calls per hour)
– Answering questions from inexperienced/unskilled technicians (which make up a great portion of staff at Walgreens)
– Transcribing voice mails from nurses who call in prescriptions, many of them speak so fast that you have to listen to the voice mail several times to make sure you wrote it down correctly
– Mixing up and compounding medications when they are required
– Giving vaccinations and taking blood pressure readings when requested
– Balancing all of the above while trying to get prescriptions filled for people waiting outside for their prescription
– Filling anywhere from 300-800 prescriptions per day, with only between 1 and 4 technicians around to help you
– Putting up with asshole behavior from patients when they complain their prescription isn’t ready, or when prescriptions are supposed to be faxed to you and never make it
– NO LUNCH BREAKS, even if you are on a 12 hour shift. The only way to eat lunch is to bring your food with you and eat whenever it gets slow, if it ever does. Most of the time, I don’t eat lunch.
– And finally, as a relief pharmacist (which is the entry-level pharmacist position in retail and where I’m at right now), your work schedule is irregular and unpredictable. You will often have to do long distance traveling – sometimes I have to drive 2 hours to work. I also often have to work overnight hours at 24 hour stores for days in a row and am expected to go back to day shifts a few days later. Sometimes you will have to stay late to finish things up, and you will not get paid for staying late.This is already ridiculously hard and psychologically stressing. Now, when you are pharmacy manager, you have EVEN MORE s~~~ to do. Now, you have to make sure that your store complies with legal requirements and are in charge of doing the necessary paperwork. If you fail to comply with legal requirements, you are now the one responsible for it if investigators come to your store and hit you. You are now the one in charge of hiring who works in your pharmacy or not, and in charge of training your staff. When a problem arises and nobody at the store knows how to resolve it (again, this happens a lot), you’re the one who gets called on your day off. If a pharmacist calls off work or has an emergency, you’re the one who has to come in to replace them if nobody else can, even if you manage a 24 hour store and they work an overnight shift. When customers are dissatisfied and submit complaints to the corporate office, the district manager jumps down your throat despite giving you a meager budget to work with.
So, that’s pharmacy in a nutshell. Retail pharmacy, anyway. Now, you could also try getting a job at a hospital which is a lot less stressful, but that usually requires an additional 2 years of residency (which is really nothing but kissing ass and working long hours for really low pay) on top of 6 years of school. And even when you complete this, you take a big hit to your salary – the average hospital pharmacist makes about $90k/year, average retail pharmacist about $120k/year. And to get a residency, you must either have very good grades and/or know the right people. Good grades are not a guarantee, even if you study your ass off. I worked my ass off but was only an average student, I’m simply just not good at memorizing a hundred different facts about each drug. And I am far from a stupid guy.
The salary for a pharmacist sounds good, but I’m $180k in debt. At least half of what I make goes to federal taxes and student loans. But I’m lucky to even have a job! If you look at statistics from BLS.gov, they will tell you that pharmacy jobs are growing and opportunity is predicted to increase. This is not true. Just look around on pharmacist forums (Student Doctor Network is a good place to go) and you will see many threads of people who can’t find a job. This is thanks to new pharmacy schools opening up in each state every damn year, producing a surplus of graduates. I am blessed to even have a job in pharmacy.
So, yeah. If anyone is considering pharmacy as a career, I strongly recommend that you do A LOT of research, especially on the job market in the area that you want to work at. At the very, very least, you should work in a retail pharmacy for a few months and see if that’s what you really want. Don’t let the salary and the promises of job opportunities lure you in so easily.
Oh, and if you want more reading…I also recommend this blog site: https://www.theangrypharmacist.com/. This guy is my hero. 🙂
Formerly MoneyOverBitches
Anonymous6Running a pharmacy, I do not have much personal experience with. However, I’ve worked in pharmacy for close to 2 years as an intern and a pharmacist for Walgreens.
In pharmacy school, you are trained in the mindset of being a health care provider. You are taught to always be looking for opportunities to maximize the patient’s benefit from medications while minimizing risks. Sounds good in the classroom…but anyone who has actually worked in retail pharmacy knows this can’t be farther the truth. Working in retail pharmacy feels more like working in a production line with near impossible deadlines to meet, than actually providing health care services.
As a retail pharmacist, your job is obviously is to evaluate prescriptions, check for possible drug interactions, communicate with prescribers and patients when problems arise, and make sure that prescriptions get filled correctly.
Challenges that arise every day:
– Resolving insurance rejections, these can range from day supply issues, refills too soon, drug not covered without prior authorization from doctor, technical input errors, and other reasons that are simply not clear without calling the insurance companies
– Having to call a prescriber when something is not clear on the prescription, seems incorrect/unsafe, or does not meet legal requirements (which happens a LOT)
– Checking for drug interactions and talking to patients about them when you feel it’s needed
– Making sure that your patients aren’t abusing narcotics, benzos, and other controlled medication by watching their fill history
– Making sure that your technicians type and fill the prescriptions correctly – many technicians are inexperienced and just plain careless with their work, it’s not uncommon for me to find 1 potentially fatal mistake every day
– Calling other pharmacies to transfer prescriptions from other places when requested by patients
– Helping patients when they ask for the pharmacist, which a lot of times have questions that should be reserved for medical doctors or other people in the store (i.e. Where’s the bread at?), but you answer the best you can regardless
– Tracking inventory
– Answering incoming phone calls (I would say even on a slow day, you get about 20 phone calls per hour)
– Answering questions from inexperienced/unskilled technicians (which make up a great portion of staff at Walgreens)
– Transcribing voice mails from nurses who call in prescriptions, many of them speak so fast that you have to listen to the voice mail several times to make sure you wrote it down correctly
– Balancing all of the above while trying to get prescriptions filled for people waiting outside for their prescription
– Mixing up and compounding medications when they are required
– Filling anywhere from 300-800 prescriptions per day, with only between 1 and 4 technicians around to help you
– Putting up with asshole behavior from patients when they complain their prescription isn’t ready, or when prescriptions are supposed to be faxed to you and never make it
– NO LUNCH BREAKS, even if you are on a 12 hour shift. The only way to eat lunch is to bring your food with you and eat whenever it gets slow, if it ever does. Most of the time, I don’t eat lunch.
– And finally, as a relief pharmacist (which is the entry-level pharmacist position in retail and where I’m at right now), your work schedule is irregular and unpredictable. You will often have to do long distance traveling – sometimes I have to drive 2 hours to work. I also often have to work overnight hours at 24 hour stores for days in a row and am expected to go back to day shifts a few days later. Sometimes you will have to stay late to finish things up, and you will not get paid for staying late.This is already ridiculously hard and psychologically stressing. Now, when you are pharmacy manager, you have EVEN MORE s~~~ to do. Now, you have to make sure that your store complies with legal requirements and are in charge of doing the necessary paperwork. If you fail to comply with legal requirements, you are now the one responsible for it if investigators come to your store and hit you. You are now the one in charge of hiring who works in your pharmacy or not, and in charge of training your staff. When a problem arises and nobody at the store knows how to resolve it (again, this happens a lot), you’re the one who gets called on your day off. If a pharmacist calls off work or has an emergency, you’re the one who has to come in to replace them if nobody else can, even if you manage a 24 hour store and they work an overnight shift. When customers are dissatisfied and submit complaints to the corporate office, the district manager jumps down your throat despite giving you a meager budget to work with.
So, that’s pharmacy in a nutshell. Retail pharmacy, anyway. Now, you could also try getting a job at a hospital which is a lot less stressful, but that usually requires an additional 2 years of residency (which is really nothing but kissing ass and working long hours for really low pay) on top of 6 years of school. And even when you complete this, you take a big hit to your salary – the average hospital pharmacist makes about $90k/year, average retail pharmacist about $120k/year. And to get a residency, you must either have very good grades and/or know the right people. Good grades are not a guarantee, even if you study your ass off. I worked my ass off but was only an average student, I’m simply just not good at memorizing a hundred different facts about each drug. And I am far from a stupid guy.
The salary for a pharmacist sounds good, but I’m $180k in debt. At least half of what I make goes to federal taxes and student loans. But I’m lucky to even have a job! If you look at statistics from BLS.gov, they will tell you that pharmacy jobs are growing and opportunity is predicted to increase. This is not true. Just look around on pharmacist forums (Student Doctor Network is a good place to go) and you will see many threads of people who can’t find a job. This is thanks to new pharmacy schools opening up in each state every damn year, producing a surplus of graduates. I am blessed to even have a job in pharmacy.
So, yeah. If anyone is considering pharmacy as a career, I strongly recommend that you do A LOT of research, especially on the job market in the area that you want to work at. At the very, very least, you should work in a retail pharmacy for a few months and see if that’s what you really want. Don’t let the salary and the promises of job opportunities lure you in so easily.
What does your supervisor do? If i got into franchising a medical center and pharmacy, I wouldn’t be doing the above tasks, but instead hiring the right people to do those jobs. I always thought that it was a difficult job, i’ve seen how hectic it can get when orders are flying around all day, and oh man, if you mix up an order and give someone the wrong medicine! What can you tell about the job from a business perspective, as far as, ordering supplies per month, monthly salaries, money taken in, stuff like that.
I’ll put this as a separate post for emphasis.
Straight science is dead in America.
If you aren’t in the top 5% don’t study science as the end. There are not enough jobs for BS in Chemistry, physics, or biology.
There are PhD’S in the above that can’t find jobs. They just aren’t there. Learn to ask if you want fries with that.
Pharmacy is a blood bath.
Nursing is a wreck.
Physicians assistant has a little hope.
All the shortage of STEM worker BS is designed to allow more foreign workers to come here and work for less pay.
Not sure about you, but I sure as hell didn’t take quantum mechanics and Calculus 2, among other courses, so I could work fast food. In fact, I doubt a fast food restaurant would even hire someone with a Materials Chemistry, or any other STEM degree. They would tell anyone with a STEM degree that they are vastly overqualified, and to get the hell out.
Anyone that smart would hate the job anyways, and you would be isolated because none of your co workers would know what you are talking about or would be interested in any meaningful conversation.
I’ve dropped out 6 times due to PTSD, from the military, and am about to take my 2 final courses, which are spring only, and due to the stress of the last two, I will take one this spring, and the last one a year later.
I decided to go ahead and get my Geology degree as well, instead of waiting around to take a class. I’m disabled, and get income from that, so I’m really not worried about what comes after, just kept nagging in my mind about only being two classes from my degree and not finishing, after all my hard work and sacrifice. It’s more to finish than anything else.
Might be because I’m in TN, but I don’t see a lot of the SJW bulls~~~, at least in Chemistry. There’s some women in science stuff, ect, but none of the typical liberal bulls~~~ around here.
I worked fast food in high school and for a year or so afterward. I wanted to blow my brains out every day I was there. I’d literally be homeless on food stamps before I would do that s~~~ again.
I agree with almost everything you said, but even with degrees in STEM fields the propaganda and agendas are just too strong. They make you take general education courses anyway; not only is it a waste of time and another way to make you pay another year’s tuition, but it is a way to force you to take liberal arts classes. I had to take a gender studies course and bulls~~~ my way through a bull-dyke c~~~ of a professor’s course just so I could graduate my undergrad and if I got on her bad side, she would fail me and I’d have to pay another year’s tuition to take the course again. Then in order to get my master’s I had to take a mandatory, feminist sexual harassment course online in order to attend the school again (this was made mandatory for each subsequent year). Honestly, some of the technicians we have on the job are making money comparable to what I make with a master’s and they most likely only have a high school education. I probably will make more in the long run, but I started off with far more debt and hold way more responsibility and liability in my job. It’s debatable if people should just take trade school instead of pursuing a higher degree because of all of this bulls~~~.
The accumulated filth of all their sex and murder will foam up about their waists and all the whores and politicians will look up and shout "Save us!"... and I'll whisper "no."
I feel sorry for the American youth of today. Many state universities used to be affordable when I was 18 years old. I remember a semester of a California State University used to be about $2000. Higher education was highly subsidized by tax revenue. It was possible to have a night shift job and pay for tuition, books, and share an apartment or house with a roommate. That’s how people got by then. They had enough money to survive.
Those days are over!
You have to have rich parents, get some grants, or get a loan if you want a bachelor’s degree. Personally, I don’t see why a person can’t get a bachelor’s degree for $20,000. If I was rich, I’d create a cheap, private university to see if it’s possible. I wouldn’t have a large sports stadium. I’d just have a basketball court outside. You wouldn’t go to my university if you were planning to be a professional athlete. You’d get the basic courses in humanities, art, science, English, mathematics, and business. I don’t understand why this couldn’t be done for $2500 per semester if I had a lot of students and a few teachers. My students would have to write argumentative essays about their political views and debate them with other classmates. That’s a good way to learn. A professor who imposes his political viewpoints, without being open to an opposing viewpoint, is close-minded and can’t help his students to think and reason. I don’t want those kinds of professors. I don’t want to send indoctrinated students into the working world. I want them to develop their own ideas after being exposed to broad range of knowledge.
"I saw that there comes a point, in the defeat of any man of virtue, when his own consent is needed for evil to win-and that no manner of injury done to him by others can succeed if he chooses to withhold his consent. I saw that I could put an end to your outrages by pronouncing a single word in my mind. I pronounced it. The word was ‘No.’" (Atlas Shrugged)
As a college graduate, I can tell you that universities today are nothing more than indoctrination camps. There is a severe lack of critical thinking and introspection being taught in schools now. This and the combination of Marxist ideologues, have created inept and petulant snowflakes. As much as it pains me to say this, most degrees are utterly useless now. Hell even PHD Jordan Peterson even shares my sentiments.
I got my degree in health, and I’m not even using it… I’m currently work in IT for a medical firm, and the benefits are good, and the salary is ok. For now, this is good enough until I finish my graduate school. After not being able to get accepted into Physical Therapy school, I applied to all the nursing schools in Texas. I got accepted into every nursing program with my TEAS and HESI scores being above 90%. After some careful consideration, I decided to forgo pursuing my BSN. I wasn’t going to waste my efforts on getting another undergraduate degree in a career field that had a salary cap of 70k. I love health and science, but for me it was Physical Therapy school or nothing. I decided to get my MBA, and I am really glad I did. The future outlook is more promising and the potential for salary growth is good.
In a year’s time, I will graduate. Soon after that, I plan on setting the groundwork for creating my own medical supply firm. I have many friends with technical skills and some want to invest capital to help me start this up. The only way to truly make $ now is to be an entrepreneur.
F~~~ school. Get into a trade school and invest.
Fuck bitches... literally and metaphorically
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