Good point! And something similar can be said about those politicos that never live or work in the private sector after leaving law school. Clerk with a judge, become staffers on a govt payroll, then run for local or state office, etc. Never have to face (directly or indirectly) profit and loss or payroll obligations, etc.
Good point! And something similar can be said about those politicos that never live or work in the private sector after leaving law school. Clerk with a judge, become staffers on a govt payroll, then run for local or state office, etc. Never have to face (directly or indirectly) profit and loss or payroll obligations, etc.
In fact, many decades ago my engineering mentor, the chairman of the dept., mentioned that someone had told him it was not a good idea for STEM graduates to go directly on to grad school, without some real world seasoning. My mentor disagreed, but back then people were still more aware of the real world outside the university. I was really disappointed to find that CRT/DEI had breached the STEM department "logical fire wall", even at MIT!
Good point! And something similar can be said about those politicos that never live or work in the private sector after leaving law school. Clerk with a judge, become staffers on a govt payroll, then run for local or state office, etc. Never have to face (directly or indirectly) profit and loss or payroll obligations, etc.
In fact, many decades ago my engineering mentor, the chairman of the dept., mentioned that someone had told him it was not a good idea for STEM graduates to go directly on to grad school, without some real world seasoning. My mentor disagreed, but back then people were still more aware of the real world outside the university. I was really disappointed to find that CRT/DEI had breached the STEM department "logical fire wall", even at MIT!