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138

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[–] 1 pt

I agree. So many crafts are lost in this new age where everyone thinks a college degree is the only thing worth pursuing. Truth is, we don't need more people with useless degrees running around. We need more people to pursue the dying arts you speak of. As well as a hundred others.

[–] 1 pt

Hopefully we will see a resurgence in the trades and skilled crafts once the money starts to dry up for professional degree jobs and the trades become the high paying jobs. I like that Mike Rowe is a proponent of the trades and other skilled crafts while simultaneously exposing the reality that degrees do not make better or smarter people. His evangelism is important to the future of the trades and I think he is doing a great service to our young and impressionable generations who are starting to see the future of office jobs as untenable and unrewarding. I hope it's not too late to save some of the quickly eroding trades and skilled crafts. We will lose so much if no takes over for the old masters.

[–] 1 pt

Mike Rowe is nailing it out there on TV. Hopefully he reaches some, as you said. There's real money in what he preaches, rather than the nonsense of the liberal left.

[–] 1 pt

If I were a young buck, I would take up the trades for sure. Now I'm a bit too old and too worn out in the flesh to make the shift to a physically demanding skilled trade, but I often think about what it would be like to do an honest day's labor and feel good about it when the day is done. The white collar world doesn't have the appeal it once did for me and I sometimes think I made the wrong career choices in life. I've changed my attitude towards my kids and their futures and I encourage them to seek more options than college. I think they will choose the right path and do something real and worthwhile instead of carrying mountains of school debt and working in soulless corporate hellholes.