Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say the following:
- Diplomat
- Senior level Sate appointment
- Any high-level White House appointment
- USAID
- CIA
None of those are prestigious in the slightest, and their measly pay shows that. A diplomat (I assume you meant state department) or a fed employee in general are nothing social. They are a dime a dozen, make meh pay (and even then you could argue are overpaid given how little work they do) and have fairly low hiring requirements.
In my book the prestigious careers (outside of unique ones like Hollywood actor) are big law, investment banking, big tech, and to a lesser extent, management consulting.
Weird that you conflate pay and prestige. The vast majority of Americans would never consider excel monkeys and empty suits like i-bankers and management consultants to be prestigious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say the following:
- Diplomat
- Senior level Sate appointment
- Any high-level White House appointment
- USAID
- CIA
None of those are prestigious in the slightest, and their measly pay shows that. A diplomat (I assume you meant state department) or a fed employee in general are nothing social. They are a dime a dozen, make meh pay (and even then you could argue are overpaid given how little work they do) and have fairly low hiring requirements.
In my book the prestigious careers (outside of unique ones like Hollywood actor) are big law, investment banking, big tech, and to a lesser extent, management consulting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say the following:
- Diplomat
- Senior level Sate appointment
- Any high-level White House appointment
- USAID
- CIA
None of those are prestigious in the slightest, and their measly pay shows that. A diplomat (I assume you meant state department) or a fed employee in general are nothing social. They are a dime a dozen, make meh pay (and even then you could argue are overpaid given how little work they do) and have fairly low hiring requirements.
In my book the prestigious careers (outside of unique ones like Hollywood actor) are big law, investment banking, big tech, and to a lesser extent, management consulting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd say the following:
- Diplomat
- Senior level Sate appointment
- Any high-level White House appointment
- USAID
- CIA
None of those are prestigious in the slightest, and their measly pay shows that. A diplomat (I assume you meant state department) or a fed employee in general are nothing social. They are a dime a dozen, make meh pay (and even then you could argue are overpaid given how little work they do) and have fairly low hiring requirements.
In my book the prestigious careers (outside of unique ones like Hollywood actor) are big law, investment banking, big tech, and to a lesser extent, management consulting.
Anonymous wrote:Comedy writer. Seriously. I think you need to be really smart to write good comedy. I have so much more respect for someone who can do that over investment banking or consulting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Teacher
Meditation teacher
Chef
Soccer player
International pop star
"Prestigious"? Lol. The opposite.
For you.
I’ll take a Thich Nhat Hanh over a judge or State employee any day of the week.
Nobody knows the names of State employees or judges. Lol
You want to suggest that Thich Nhat Hanh falls into the general category of "teacher" along with my BIL who teaches hs history and goes around calling himself a "historian"? No.
Anonymous wrote:Serving as a senator or congressman
Serving as a justice on the Supreme Court
Anonymous wrote:I'd say the following:
- Diplomat
- Senior level Sate appointment
- Any high-level White House appointment
- USAID
- CIA