The worthless college degree

It’s time someone said it loud and clear: A college degree is a waste of time. Remember, you heard it here first.

Everyone “knows” that people with a college degree make more money. The only problem with that fact is that it is false. It’s easy to make it sound like a college degree will mean more money in your pocket when you balance the salaries of college-educated people against everyone else. That doesn’t make any sense. The guy who has no interest in doing anything more challenging than flipping burgers shouldn’t figure in this discussion. The best approach is to compare specific types of work. In other words, the question is not whether college graduates make more money than those without sheep’s clothing; the question is do biochemists (for example) make more money than masons? The answer happens to be no.

The median income for a senior biochemist is just over $59,000 per year; a bricklayer can expect to earn just over $54,000 a year. But that’s not the whole story. The biochemist will spend at least $50,000 to earn his bachelor’s degree from a state school and more than $100,000 if he decides to attend a private school. [1]After that, you’ll need to finish a graduate degree and gain “at least 5 years of experience in the field or a related area” before you can expect to reach the national median income for your profession. [2] The cost of the graduate degree will be in the neighborhood of an additional $100,000.

We must also consider wages lost during the four to six years it takes to earn a bachelor’s degree (very few students complete their degree in the “normal” four-year time frame). Figure that out and you’ll see an additional loss of $60,000 to $160,000. This is a loss of just $7.50 per hour on the low end and $13 per hour on the high end, with no gains. (We’ll give the biochemist the benefit of the doubt and ignore the fact that he wouldn’t earn a market salary while finishing his graduate program. However, he may be able to live on the stipends he receives as a graduate student. For the sake of To make this comparison easier, let’s ignore the graduate years and focus on the years spent earning a bachelor’s degree.)

Simply put, the biochemist leaves college for at least $110,000 less than the bricklayer. Meanwhile, the bricklayer has been working as an apprentice (starting at $10-$13 an hour) [3], and if reasonably competent, will have achieved journeyman status by the time the biochemistry student earns his or her bachelor’s degree. This means that she will start earning the annual salary of $54,000 when the biochemist begins her graduate program. The biochemist will not reach the average salary of a “biochemist III” for another five years or so. Simply put, the bricklayer is $110,000 to $200,000 ahead of the biochemist, an advantage the biochemist will never be able to overcome.

“So what” you can say. “Comparing a biochemist and a bricklayer is arbitrary. It’s no more relevant than comparing all college graduates to college non-graduates.” Maybe: take a look at these randomly picked examples from Monster.com though.

When we consider the professions that require a degree, we see that the average salary expected in the United States for a typical:

The Biologist V is $88,625.

Nursing Staff – RN costs $58,924.

Accountant III is $58,866.

Social Worker (MSW) is $48,845.

Engineer V costs $102,298.

Activities Director – Nursing Home costs $34,385

The high school teacher costs $50,562.

Biochemist III costs $59,100.

When we consider professions that do not require a degree, we see that the average expected salary for a typical:

Electrician III costs $48,739.

HVAC III Mechanic is $50,591

Carpenter III is $44,793.

Machinist III costs $49,075.

Mason Sr. is $54,019.

Plumber III costs $50,138.

Insurance agent is $41,287.

Automotive Mechanics III is $49,563. [4]

In addition, “business administration and economics/finance graduates” receive an average of $38,254 and $40,630″ a year, respectively, upon graduation. “The average starting salary for marketing graduates” is $34,712 and $41,058 for marketing graduates. accounting “Liberal arts graduates” earn $30,212, per year after graduation “Starting pay for English learners” is $31,113 “political science majors” $32,296 and “psychology majors” enjoy ” entry-level salaries averaging $28,230.” [5] Meanwhile, responsible workers are already earning double after four years on the job.

As you can see, most college degrees are a amazing waste of time and money. The exceptions are professional titles; law, medicine, engineering and the like. Even those occupations don’t really require a formal degree, but that’s another article for another time. And remember, these figures do not address the cost of the title or lost wages.

Additionally, non-degree vocations are often more welcoming to the entrepreneurial spirit. The figures above reflect the circumstance of a skilled worker drawing a salary, not business owners having the urge to write their own financial ticket. Truly, the sky is the limit for a self-employed plumber, electrician, mechanic, or insurance agent who wants to build a business by employing and managing others to improve their own bottom line. Those people make six-figure incomes. I personally know insurance agents and carpenters who made over $100,000 a year in their late thirties. Your typical biologist or engineer would still be trying to pay for his college apartment at that age, while making much less money than the insurance agency owner or construction contractor.

The university degree is also a waste of time from an academic point of view. Everything you are supposed to learn in college you can learn on your own if you really want to. But then, most people don’t go to college to learn. A large percentage never graduate. Those who do are not really educated in the classical sense. Rather, they are trained to embrace the subservient, anti-intellectual, self-centered, godless worldview required to maintain the current bureaucratic state.

Honestly, college is for people who don’t want to or can’t face the responsibility of the real world. It’s a place where people go to prolong their childhoods (and generally ruin their lives), using Dad’s money or tax dollars confiscated from plumbers, bricklayers, and insurance agents who are responsible enough to make a living.

The main reason why our society places such high importance on a college education is because people have been brainwashed into believing that you cannot succeed in life without a degree. This fiction is pushed by big business and the government because it gives the establishment more time to dumb down the population, thus creating the sheep-like servants necessary to maintain the bureaucratic state.

The fact is that anyone can get the education promised (but never delivered) by the system. All you need is a library card and access to the interlibrary loan system. Do you want a degree in history or literature or sociology (and so on)? Get a reading list from a top college and then review or buy the books you see on the list. But don’t stop there; to be truly educated you need to go beyond the politically correct college curriculum. You want to learn how to think critically, so you should read classic and modern authors like Paul Johnson, Erik von Kuehnelt-Leddihn, Michael Denton, Michael Behe, GK Chesterton, Otto Scott, Theodore Dalrymple, etc. If you need someone to guide you in your quest for knowledge, purchase or consult a guide in the discipline of your choice (for example, the Politically Incorrect Literature Guide). If you prefer a living, breathing guide, then hire a tutor when necessary. If you want the system to “validate” your learning, take your knowledge to Excelsior College or Thomas Edison State College and test your way to an accredited Bachelor of Arts or Science degree.

If you can’t do this, then you obviously don’t have the brainpower or discipline to do much in life, so you might as well hop on the treadmill, complete your worthless degree, and get a job pushing paper for “The Man.” .”

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1. See: MoneyCentral online.

2. Check out: Online Salary Wizard.

3. See: HelmetsToHardhats online.

4. Figures obtained from Monster.com

5. See: MoneyCNN online.

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