Quote:
Originally Posted by lustylad
As of August 2025, there were 409,000 manufacturing job openings, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
^^^ The jobs are available and plentiful. The skilled applicants aren't.
Would you hire a 4-year liberal arts/gender studies major to operate heavy machinery or run a factory?
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Yep. Running almost any backhoe or loader or skid loader can be taught in 2 weeks. Proficiency in a few months. Also there are plenty of 3 axis machines that need an observer vs an operator. Not all of these are jobs like doing high 6g welding etc . Damn a lot of jobs just need a person willing to come to work. I don't think most require more than a 1 yr apprentice program at times. You can get a CDL in a few months. If you can stick with a program for 4 yrs of colleges this is easy. Not saying all trades are. I worked at a cabinet making shop to make extra money and learned more there and had a great time making stuff. Also worked for a construction company on summers when I wasn't at college or tending bar. The one thing about doing manual labor is it teaches you that hard work is valuable. All work is good work.
Where new grads are fucked up, is thinking that the only job they can do is the one they went to college for. Most people don't work directly in the role they went to school for. Even engineers are generally taught how to figure out application of science and math etc on absolutely different things than they went to school for. I know several civil engineers who only do things like retaining ponds or landfill estimates vs doing road or bridges.
Being flexible is everything in life. Good for men and even better for hookers. If you're not flexible, missionary gets old fast.