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On 10/13/15 10:03 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 10/13/2015 8:21 AM, Justan Olphart wrote: You don't understand the college experience. It's not just "the information," and, no, I am not referring to fraternity parties. You want to learn esoteric facts for self worth, pay for that education. If the rest of society is paying the bills, they should get a return on those investments. I take classes these days for fun and to learn something new. But why should the taxpayers pick up 80% of the cost of me taking a guitar class? And way to much overhead in universities these days, as well as the primary schools. Some university had Mexican Food Day in e cafeteria, been doing it for years. Two students complained, as was degrading to Mexicans. So the "Associate executive Vice President for Student Affairs" apologized. First, tell the complainers to suck it up. And if you have to have titles like that VP, you have way too many administrators! "Esoteric facts for self worth..." Hehehe. Gotta love rec.bloats. And what I s wrong about not having the public pay for someone's desire the learn some great Trivial Pursuit answers, while we end up paying them welfare when they can not find a job playing Trivial Pursuit after they graduate? Hey, Bilious, if you think the answer is Trivial Pursuit, then you don't understand the questions. Gotta love rec.bloats. Nope, I got an Engineering degree. Yours is the Trivial Pursuit path. Posit: a degree in electrical engineering is obsolete the day it is issued. A degree in mechanical engineering, however, is not. Actually mine is an Electro-mechanical discipline. And is never obsolete.. May need some continuing education, which I did. But other than faster, and smaller, most notably is still appropriate. Actually, they big want these days, is for old analog engineers. Ohm's Law hasn't changed. As you point out, everything an EE learns in school still applies, just with different packaging for the most part. When our main design engineer graduated, DSP's didn't exist. Now our product is loaded with them, and he designs the circuits and writes the code. The rest of the circuitry is exactly what was taught in school. The writer's posit is wrong. There are no known uses for Harry's skills and training. Harry reminds me very much of someone else I know who is just about the same age as Harry. He majored in college in English with a minor in journalism. Following graduation he entered the Army. I think he was drafted because he only served for two years as a second lieutenant which included a short tour of duty in Vietnam as an Army journalist/photographer. Today, 40 something years later, in social gatherings he invariably ends up talking about his time in the Army and the fact that he's a vet. He has "Vietnam Vet" tags on his car and wears the typical "Vietnam Vet" geezer ball cap wherever he goes. He's proud of his service but after a while the constant references to his service starts to become repetitious and obnoxious in a way, especially to other vets like me who spent many more years on active duty but rarely talk about it or even think about it. It was a period of time for most of us .. a chapter in our lives ... and we all moved on. I was talking to my wife about him after he visited us a while back and mentioned that he seemed to be living in the past all the time. Then it dawned on me why. The time he spent in the Army writing news stories was the highlight of his entire working career. He never really did much else of any consequence. He wrote for various local and small town newspapers or periodicals as a free-lance contributor from time to time but that was about it. His wife worked full time for a major company for over 20 years while he did various odd-jobs, more as a "handyman" with the occasional writing for the local paper. I've met and known hundreds of engineers and physicists over the years. None spend much time talking about their degrees, how many they hold or even where they went to school. It really doesn't matter in the real world, other than getting the job opportunity in the first place. Harry reminds me of the guy I described. Based on his countless posts about his education, his multiple degrees and his sense that the education, types of degrees and work experience can't possibly compare to his capability of "abstract thinking" (which, BTW, is part of *any* college level ... heck .. even high school level course of study) makes me think the highlight of *his* career was going to school and that's about it, much like the other guy who's highlight was his two year stint in the Army .... 40 something years ago. It's incredible to me how obsessed you right-wingers are with me. There is no way I would discuss my past or present professional work in any detail in this pigpen of conservative crappers. Just the other day, Fretwell "accused" me of being a fan of Cuba's Castro brothers when, in fact, for more than 15 years I have been working as a consultant with an NGO that does what it can to create problems for them. Another of my clients trains indigenous populations in the third world to build and maintain sustainable communities -housing and water, mostly. A third is a multi-billion dollar investment management firm. A fourth is a labor union. Oh, I was one of six members of a labor union team that twice negotiated the largest labor union contract in the United States. No, I don't brag about my days in the Army. Fortunately, I didn't have any. The reluctant virgin here, by the way, is your buddy FlaJim. What has he posted here about his boat, his work since being mustered out of the navy, his wife, his kids, his anything? Answer...nothing. Have nice day. |
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