Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NFW!
#BlackLivesMatter
DEFUND THE POLICE !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NFW!
#BlackLivesMatter
DEFUND THE POLICE !
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would anyone encourage their child to go into a profession where death is a real risk? Why would a parent encourage a child to go into a profession where smoke inhalation and lung cancer are real risks?
You’re more likely to be injured or killed driving your vehicle. Sitting at a desk all day is unhealthy.
I take mass transit + walk to work, and though I have a desk job, I have a standing desk I use at least half the day standing, plus walk around a decent amount.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DCUM snobs only want other people's kids to be firefighters and cops.
Or they just want their kids to make more and be in safer jobs? Weird that you consider that snobbery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't think I have ever heard of a kid on here who wants or is a cop or firefighter.
Found out recently that brother in law, a FDNY member of 20 years, brings in 240k a year.
Back then, less went to college but now the academies for both FDNY and NYPD require some college credits.
Why aren't more parents encouraging these careers as well, along with the usual talk on trades given the rise of AI for white collar job risks. Understand it could be a dangerous job but guaranteed employment, excellent benefits and pension, location mobility, and high salary in areas like NYC.
This times 1000. I didn't raise my only child to be killed on injured on the job. Most firefighters and cops aren't making the money you mentioned. Your BIL probably works a lot of overtime for that $$$ and he works in NY.
NP.
+1.
I did not raise my child to murder Black people with their hands up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would anyone encourage their child to go into a profession where death is a real risk? Why would a parent encourage a child to go into a profession where smoke inhalation and lung cancer are real risks?
You’re more likely to be injured or killed driving your vehicle. Sitting at a desk all day is unhealthy.
Anonymous wrote:DCUM snobs only want other people's kids to be firefighters and cops.
Anonymous wrote:NFW!
#BlackLivesMatter
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't think I have ever heard of a kid on here who wants or is a cop or firefighter.
Found out recently that brother in law, a FDNY member of 20 years, brings in 240k a year.
Back then, less went to college but now the academies for both FDNY and NYPD require some college credits.
Why aren't more parents encouraging these careers as well, along with the usual talk on trades given the rise of AI for white collar job risks. Understand it could be a dangerous job but guaranteed employment, excellent benefits and pension, location mobility, and high salary in areas like NYC.
This times 1000. I didn't raise my only child to be killed on injured on the job. Most firefighters and cops aren't making the money you mentioned. Your BIL probably works a lot of overtime for that $$$ and he works in NY.
Anonymous wrote:divorce attorney friend told me she'd never allow her daughter to marry a firefighter.
(as far as you can allow anything of course ... just a saying .. lets not go crazy... just indicating rampant cheating in the culture .. of course her daughter can do what she wants .. if she had a daughter ... she doesnt even have a daughter, just making a point)
Anonymous wrote:Their salary isn’t 240k. It’s much lower. If you’re very senior and work a ton of overtime it might add up to a higher number.
Much easier, better pay, ans hours in a white collar job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't think I have ever heard of a kid on here who wants or is a cop or firefighter.
Probably because their parents aren't posting here on the college forum. They know what they want to do and are already taking steps to get there.
They are both important careers; both are physically demanding. Police work requires a high degree of "emotional intelligence" that many do not have. One needs to be the right type of person to do either sort of work, unlike office-drone work, which pretty much anyone can do with the right training and experience.
My son wants to go into (federal) law enforcement. He graduated from a HADES school and is at a T20. Do I think it's a great idea? Not really. Do I think it's a waste of education? No, education is never a waste. Time will tell what he ends up doing.
Good thing he's a trust fund baby, given the pay. Not that he knows that yet.![]()