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:What is prestige?
Power, access, exclusivity and glamour. These are fields that only the privileged and the elite can enter.
When I think of prestige I think:
- high level government officials: heads of states; senators; congressmen; House of Lords; Ambassadors; CIA Director; UN representatives, people like Zibignew Brezinski, Charlie Wilson, Madeline Albright etc
- professionals that are at the top of their fields: CEOs, Non profit executives; tech entrepreneurs; Surgeon General; Justices of the Supreme Court
- The talented and the famous: Taylor Swift, Roger Federer, J.K. Rowling, Salman Rushdie, Michael Jackson etc
Anonymous wrote:Why Astronaut is important but not the guy who fixes spacesuits to work precisely or girl who tunes shuttle's engine? Aren't they doing their part?
Anonymous wrote:an architect is not prestigious, I work with many architects and there is no prestige within that profession unless you are the top of the top and are the senior designer for a major build (and that’s rare).
Most are “desk jockeys”.
Anonymous wrote:Doctor
Therapist
Anyone who can help another live or live a bit better.
Anonymous wrote:Veterinarian
Pediatrician
Judge