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I expected this would occur and religious and philosophical exemptions are not applicable. My plan now will be to uproot and leave it all behind and move to a red state that respects personal choice on the matter. Is it feasible to transfer community college course work between state? If that is not an option, what would be viable path besides a 4-year that is not physically taxing?

I am thinking heading to somewhere in TX.

EDIT: Thanks for the advice, I shall figure something out with what I have learned.

I expected this would occur and religious and philosophical exemptions are not applicable. My plan now will be to uproot and leave it all behind and move to a red state that respects personal choice on the matter. Is it feasible to transfer community college course work between state? If that is not an option, what would be viable path besides a 4-year that is not physically taxing? I am thinking heading to somewhere in TX. EDIT: Thanks for the advice, I shall figure something out with what I have learned.

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[–] 2 pts

I agree completely. Due to my relative limited knowledge, the only thing I know how to earn money is to put up with an entry level job or go to school and hope for the best with a reputable STEM degree.

I will need to know what an apprenticeship means and what options are for such a thing, yeah in my community, people only know retail, food, or labor.

[–] 4 pts (edited )

I will need to know what an apprenticeship means and what options are for such a thing

It just means on the job training, specifically for a trade like carpentry or electrician. You do basic tasks for low pay while watching an expert and learning how to do the job. There is no set criteria for how that works out. Call a local business of this type and ask if they're interested in taking on an apprentice.

STEM degrees are not necessarily as valuable as you think. The some professions require a degree, that's the only time it makes sense to have one, even then medical and engineering degrees teach you the basics in 4 years that you would learn in 1 year on the job. I'd hire a self taught programmer or one with 1 year on the job over a PHD from MIT.

If you want go to TX, the oil industry is a decent place to look for a job. Depending on the job your looking for you can take a 6 month course and get a job that will eventually pay 6 fig.

[–] 0 pt

Referring to engineering, the fact that you would hire him has zero bearing unless you hire him and will employ him unconditionally for the entirety of his career. If he tries to get another job in unfavorable conditions, he'll be fucked. If he does find anyone else willing to hire him, he'll likely be starting at the tech level. I did chemical engineering and would love to see you "learn" it in 1 year, lol. Otherwise, really good advice.