Wtf should I study in College

Whats a career that wont be automated, has a high pay and needs a decent amount of education? (4-8 years)

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Nigger gas chamber technician

programming meets your points but also would help shield yourself from the influence of (((big brother))) in the very near future by making you understand how information warfare works on the technical level, the redpill of careers basically

Kek.

Go computer science, engineering, or buisness. Unless you become a doctor everything else is a fucking meme.
t.botany graduate
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>career that wont be automated
>has a high pay
Choose 1.

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You don't need college if you can kill without passion , read the hagakure.

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Skip college it's a waste of time. Find something you can do without a degree and invest your money, in 4 years you'll way outpace a college grad for the rest of your life.

Easy low IQ mode is take a job at Walmart, keep living expenses as low as possible, and invest the max possible into Walmart stock (employees get a buy one get one free deal on walmart stock, which is a free 100% investment gain straight out the gate).

Hooker.. but you dont need education for that.

If you're asking a Mongolian macrame website what to look for in college, don't go to college. Save your money and learn plumbing or tooling.

>wont be automated

I can't believe people as retarded as you are able to post on these boards.

Solid advice. I used to work at publix, which also has a profit sharing plan that gives out stock, and many fairly dumb upper level employees were millionaires just because they had invested their money and worked a lot.

I've done the math in an argument on this board before. If you take a job at Walmart working full time at minimum wage and keep your living expenses low, and invest all your extra money into walmart stock over four years, you have a higher net worth than a college grad until age 38 or something. And that's assuming no promotions.

Student debt is no joke, but the real problem is spending 4 years making no money and getting no work experience. The value of a degree is just not worth the cost. And walmart is the bottom barrel strategy, working as a truck driver or going into a trade is way more efficient for investing, especially if you're smart enough to do value investing.

Medicine, Engineering or Science particularly chemistry and physics

Holocaust studies. We project increasing opportunities in the job market.

Be a priest (even if you are an atheist; just put on the clothes and mumble the incantations)

-Guaranteed lifetime pay, room, board, medical, etc.

-Work one day a week

-Technically you are not supposed to fuck, but you can pick up hundreds of women who think it's sexy and naughty to sleep with a priest.

I'm also interested in this, so I'll ask: is IT still worth it? It has been trendy for a while, but it seems to be the holy grail:
>can work remotely, no need to deal with normies nor HR roasties
>good pay
>autistic
>no need for the college jew
But since that all sounds too good to be true, here I am asking you what do you think of it. I don't know shit about programming, but I'm more than willing to learn it if it means making a decent living and being able to work remotely, which will allow me to works towards my dream of living innawoods.

isn't it saturated though? If you work with it please stick around the thread

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your professors, and the commies they gather

Pre-Med
ChemE
Other engineering

Have you considered studying in college might be an extremely bad idea? Everything is getting automated in the next 10 years. It won't happen slowly either. It will happen rapidly. The only people who will still be employed are preachers and monks.

I decided to go into robotics because id like to build a mecha and it doesnt seem so far fatched as of now.

Also wether the job becomes automated or not it doesnt really matter since most jobs will have some kind of AI assistance built into it

All IT jobs that pay good require you to actually be there (although that location usually won’t be an office, but rather the customer‘s place). And if you think programming is an „IT job“, you’re badly mistaken. If you want something secure for the next decades, go for IT electrician, or whatever it’s called in your country. A wide range of possible certifications allows for specialisation (and thus make you attractive for employers) and the wide range of applications gives you enough options for specific occupations (so you won’t be stuck welding fibre optic cables together during all weathers, if you don’t want to).

Accounting. You only need a bachelors for like entry level jobs but if you want to get into public accounting, it's best to do a masters to reach the 150 credits and sit for the CPA exam.

Accounting jobs are everywhere

wtf are you talking about, what is an IT electrician?

Oh, before I forget it: Electrical Engineering. You’ll have companies apply to get you, at least here in Europe. Don’t fall for a shitty start-up (they don’t pay good, they demand ridiculous hours, and regardless of how „hip“ they market their atmosphere, it simply boils down to oppressive work regimens before the company fails), do a lot of side projects during university (getting a radio licence, learn how to use a soldering iron and build something useful yourself, and get privately interested in something relevant to your degree, like PCB-design).

If you get halfway decent grades, and have those side-things going for you (giving you actual experience), the only thing standing in your way is a decent skill for payment negotiations. All the big companies will try to fuck you over with like 50k€ incomes here in Germany, don’t fall for it. They are willing and ready to pay twice as much, sometimes three times as much depending on your grades.

Sorry, didn’t bother looking up the English term for it. IT Systems engineer. It’s „only“ an apprenticeship here in Germany, so it’s easily accessible.

Business business business.
Get a fucking business degree

>isn't it saturated though?
saturated by dumdums. If you're smart, you'll do really well once you get started.