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Why Should Everyone Else Pay for Other People’s Dumb Career Choices
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Why Should Everyone Else Pay for Other People’s Dumb Career Choices# Biology - 生物学
b*e
1
简历放到monster上,第二天recuiter打电话,第三天schedule technical
phone inteview。 我一直纳闷,为啥要找我,我自己都觉得不match
果不其然,director上来问我将来想干啥,我说继续我某方面(research level)
他就半天没吭声。后来介绍他们公司,让我问问题。最后问我几个编程问题
我说我不太会,我主要focus在research上。然后他就说他想招low level的
programmer,然后就彼此果断得说了bye bye:)
话不投机3句多,从开始我就觉得我们彼此不match。还是觉得很悲痛,cry一下
avatar
c*o
2
今天刚close了房子。房子比较老了。
很多工作要做。列一下顺序,大家给参谋参谋是不是合理,还有什么需要注意的么?多
谢!
1、换Furnace和AC,疏通air duct
2、换橱柜,counter top 还有加island
3、换灯和加灯
4、刷墙和门
5、装修bath room
6、铺地板和地毯
avatar
n*g
3
刚才看了一下,发现看中的还是很贵,
正在想是不是easter到了,不知道笔记本电脑会有更好的deal吗?
avatar
d*u
4
The Graduate: Why Should Everyone Else Pay for Other People’s Dumb (and
Hedonistic) Career Choices
January 2, 2012 - 8:10 am - by Barry Rubin
I’ve recently made the acquaintance of a young man who has a problem. He is
28 years old; smart, of good moral character, and willing to work hard at
part-time jobs. He does not expect anyone else, including the government, to
support him. Yet he is puzzled and increasingly bitter that he cannot make
a good living.
What’s his difficulty? It’s not the economy (in this specific case) but
the fact that he has a degree in linguistics and is now studying Oriental
philosophy at a fine university. His case is not altogether typical, but is
immensely revealing.
Here’s the secret: He cannot make a living because the market for people
with degrees in linguistics and in Oriental philosophy is limited. He should
have known that. Someone should have told him that. The calculation of
practicality should have been made. It wasn’t.
As I said, this individual does not want handouts and he has not taken
student loans. Many others have. A large proportion of the Occupy Wall
Street-and-other-places movement seems to consist of those who have made
similar “career” (or non-career) decisions but want others to pay for
their pastimes and mistakes.
There are at least three important lessons here of the greatest importance.
First, young people should be taught, as the old saying goes, that the world
doesn’t owe them a living. Nothing could seem more obvious, yet this has
largely been forgotten. This is especially true in the United States, a
country whose prosperity was built on understanding this point. Of course,
telling them that the world does owe them a living can be rather popular and
lead to one’s election to public office.
Despite the rhetoric employed, the current dominant idea in the United
States seems to be not so much that the “rich” (and, in practice, the
middle class) have to pay “their fair share” to those who are starving to
death in rat-infested squatter camps (of whom there aren’t many), but that
they must subsidize upper middle class people who are non-productive yet
living very nice lives, often better lives than those who are hard-working
and subsidizing them. Those to be subsidized include those who want to work
in cushy, unproductive, useless but prestigious jobs but cannot find them,
or those who want to work in cushy, unproductive, useless but prestigious
jobs and do find them working directly or indirectly for the government,
supposedly doing good things.
Indeed, the siphoning off of potentially useful citizens who might possibly
engage in some economically productive activity (insert lawyer jokes if you
wish) into all sorts of made-up and useless jobs is bleeding society. The
problem is not the economic elite’s greed, but the oversized “intellectual
” greed. Why do you think university tuitions have skyrocketed?
Know this for sure: a lot of these latter people (in contrast to the former
group) do not work very hard and their work is of low quality, in large part
because they don’t have to meet serious oversight and their “products”
don’t bear any real value. In other words, their main achievement each day
is to have good conversations over lunch.
Since when have Americans fallen for the idea that government bureaucrats
are so useful and productive that the answer to their problems is to have
more such people?
Terrorist attack? Create a giant Homeland Security office so people can
write each other memos. Improve education or the environment? Raise the
budget of the Department of Education or the Environmental Protection Agency.
Being unable to find a job is quite understandable in the current economy.
Being unable to find a job because you have made decisions resulting in your
having no qualification for a job and making no attempt to do so is
something else entirely.
Glorifying the kinds of jobs that — at this point in history — make things
worse, not better, is suicidal.
Second, the mistaken idea has taken root — and been encouraged by the
federal government by making loans even more available — that everyone
should go to college and even get money for doing so no matter what they
want to study. I received a small scholarship to study Arabic at a time when
that was deemed to be a strategic need of the United States (that was a
wise decision), but I wouldn’t have received one to study “conflict
management” or some other useless made-up subject.
All too often I see too many young people trying to get into my field when
they lack not only the personal qualifications but the needed willingness to
make an effort. The university education they have received gets in the way
of their understanding reality just as the proliferation of jargon makes
them incapable of writing clearly, or — indeed — of having anything useful
to say. At one point, we took on ten interns after making it clear that
hard work could lead to employment. Nine of them did almost nothing despite
the opportunity offered.
Masses of people with degrees decide that they should be writers, policy
analysts, and academics (especially the kind who indoctrinate rather than
teach anything truthful) far more than the numbers ever conceivably needed
to fill these professions. And you can imagine what the political worldview
of 90 percent of them is. Those who don’t find jobs are bitter that the
capitalist economy has “failed.” Those who do find jobs will spend their
career telling this to their students.
The governing idea of all this nonsense: Everyone who wants some elite, non-
economically productive job should get one. This of course is a worldview
that fits their “class interest.” That’s followed by the idea that any
society which doesn’t perform this task is “unfair.” Massive deficits
follow.
And after that comes the idea that the job of government is to take money
from those who do something useful in order to pay not to those who cannot
earn a living because of intense poverty, disease or other affliction, but
rather to those who don’t want to do so because they have been crippled by
miseducation and excessively high education.
After all, where do the new jobs come from for the highly trained experts in
all these new fields? A surprising number are supported by George Soros. In
some cases there are foundation grants and donations, but those are going
to be limited. So the answer is: from the government. Either they could go
for a government job or a government-subsidized job, or a job based on a
government grant. Hence the political base for Barack Obama and the left-
pretending-to-be-liberal among these people.
That’s why politics have been flipped: we aren’t seeing a radical
proletariat resenting rich fat-cats, but a conservative mass of working
people resenting rich fat-bureaucrats and government-paid people they
subsidize at higher living standards than their own.
A recent study of a specific public school system shows that more and more
money is spent and people hired, but the proportion of actual teachers has
gone down. Businesses are stuffed with people whose jobs are rather
undefinable in terms of real productivity. Officials or consulting firms
teaching you how to be politically correct or how to comply with government
regulations seem to proliferate without end.
Fewer people invent, make, or sell things. More and more make sure that
those making or selling things have the right ethnic mix, air and water
quality, number of bathrooms per square feet, and so on. A friend of mine
who runs a school has to use a huge amount of his limited funds to pay
someone’s full-time salary to fill out government forms. In military terms,
the tail gets bigger and the teeth get smaller.
Or, to put it another way, the horse gets thinner; the rider gets heavier.
The outcome is obvious.
Don’t get me wrong. If you have a profound passion for art, literature, or
other such things, go for it. But be aware of what’s likely to happen
afterward. There is nothing nobler than for people to engage in hobbies,
pastimes, and cultural activities. The explosion in leisure time has made
this possible; the Internet is glorious in unleashing talent. My 12-year-old
son took me on a tour of YouTube showing the comedy, musical, animation,
and other artistry that sometimes attracts hundreds of thousands of viewers.
Internet video is like television in its early period during the 1950s. Some
of these people are making a living because they are either good or they
are providing what a lot of people want (not necessarily the same thing);
others are having fun and expressing their inner needs. And few of these
people have any expensive professional training.
Third, and that’s precisely the point. Studying the social sciences and
humanities, not to mention all of the phony degree programs that have sprung
up, does not make one employable, nor does a degree have written on it “
hire this person at a high salary.” Even as they charge more, universities
— especially certain departments in them — are creating neither qualified
professionals nor serious intellectuals.
Get a useful education, a job, and a hobby in that order. And don’t expect
the hardworking people, who have had to make compromises in their own lives,
to pay for you to do whatever you want.
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b*n
5
bless u

【在 b**********e 的大作中提到】
: 简历放到monster上,第二天recuiter打电话,第三天schedule technical
: phone inteview。 我一直纳闷,为啥要找我,我自己都觉得不match
: 果不其然,director上来问我将来想干啥,我说继续我某方面(research level)
: 他就半天没吭声。后来介绍他们公司,让我问问题。最后问我几个编程问题
: 我说我不太会,我主要focus在research上。然后他就说他想招low level的
: programmer,然后就彼此果断得说了bye bye:)
: 话不投机3句多,从开始我就觉得我们彼此不match。还是觉得很悲痛,cry一下

avatar
g*9
6
1, 4, 2, 3, 5

【在 c*********o 的大作中提到】
: 今天刚close了房子。房子比较老了。
: 很多工作要做。列一下顺序,大家给参谋参谋是不是合理,还有什么需要注意的么?多
: 谢!
: 1、换Furnace和AC,疏通air duct
: 2、换橱柜,counter top 还有加island
: 3、换灯和加灯
: 4、刷墙和门
: 5、装修bath room
: 6、铺地板和地毯

avatar
t*a
7
同问。
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y*n
8
这种本来就不合适的,去了更痛苦。
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R*R
9
这么早?

【在 g*****9 的大作中提到】
: 1, 4, 2, 3, 5
avatar
c*s
10
这个和过不过节没关系,就算是black friday,也不一定能碰上好deal,好的deal都是
每天刷一次刷出来的。不过,永远不变的就是,电子产品肯定是越等越降
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f*t
11
recuiter害人, patpat
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g*9
12
Only try to beat you.

【在 R**R 的大作中提到】
: 这么早?
avatar
I*s
13
没事. 没事. 就当闲聊.

【在 b**********e 的大作中提到】
: 简历放到monster上,第二天recuiter打电话,第三天schedule technical
: phone inteview。 我一直纳闷,为啥要找我,我自己都觉得不match
: 果不其然,director上来问我将来想干啥,我说继续我某方面(research level)
: 他就半天没吭声。后来介绍他们公司,让我问问题。最后问我几个编程问题
: 我说我不太会,我主要focus在research上。然后他就说他想招low level的
: programmer,然后就彼此果断得说了bye bye:)
: 话不投机3句多,从开始我就觉得我们彼此不match。还是觉得很悲痛,cry一下

avatar
R*R
14
You have to working hard every day.

【在 g*****9 的大作中提到】
: Only try to beat you.
avatar
g*9
15
Just to survive.

【在 R**R 的大作中提到】
: You have to working hard every day.
avatar
c*o
16
都是无聊人啊
avatar
c*o
17
Thanks for your reply gezhi. 能说说为什么刷墙要在换灯前面么?换灯和加灯好像
还要从墙里走线啥的吧?所以是不是应该先加灯换灯后刷墙啊?
还有,忘了一项工程,就是重新装修bathroom. 这个应该排在第几位?
多谢!

【在 g*****9 的大作中提到】
: 1, 4, 2, 3, 5
avatar
g*9
18

You only said 换灯, not 加灯 in your first post. If you need to 加灯, you
need to do all the electric work first, patch any wall you opened. mud, sand
, paint. Install the actual light fixture last (you can avoid getting paint
on the light and save you time to mask around the light) But after you take
off the old light, make sure your wires do not tough each other or you, you
can put some black electric tape on them) when you paint you do not need to
brush around them, you can just roll, some paint g

【在 c*********o 的大作中提到】
: Thanks for your reply gezhi. 能说说为什么刷墙要在换灯前面么?换灯和加灯好像
: 还要从墙里走线啥的吧?所以是不是应该先加灯换灯后刷墙啊?
: 还有,忘了一项工程,就是重新装修bathroom. 这个应该排在第几位?
: 多谢!

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k*s
19
装修这么多啊!
avatar
u*r
20
别一下子投入那么多,看看今后房市再说,一般来说你对房子的投入未必能从今后sale
的价格中弄回来。
确定你要住一大段时间了再装修那些带不走的。

【在 c*********o 的大作中提到】
: 今天刚close了房子。房子比较老了。
: 很多工作要做。列一下顺序,大家给参谋参谋是不是合理,还有什么需要注意的么?多
: 谢!
: 1、换Furnace和AC,疏通air duct
: 2、换橱柜,counter top 还有加island
: 3、换灯和加灯
: 4、刷墙和门
: 5、装修bath room
: 6、铺地板和地毯

avatar
c*o
21
谢谢你的建议,我买的房子比较老旧,所以才拿到了还可以的价格。Furnace和AC从
seller那里拿到了credit。
其他的不搞一下是没法子住的。但是我有一个budget,必须搞得优先,其他的慢慢来。
现在在美国的生活,很多人没法确定能在一个地方呆多久。尤其对没有身份的。

sale

【在 u*********r 的大作中提到】
: 别一下子投入那么多,看看今后房市再说,一般来说你对房子的投入未必能从今后sale
: 的价格中弄回来。
: 确定你要住一大段时间了再装修那些带不走的。

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