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> It’s not selling your soul. It’s called being disillusioned with your impact on the world, a feeling that more and more people are feeling.

Not even this, it's just seeing a job exactly and only for what it is. As opposed to having some pompous judgemental false self-image of "helping the world" when in reality you are way too lazy and selfish to actually do that, like most other people.

It's a common leftist agenda to push and impose this culture of covering up mediocracy with virtue signalling pretending that it's actually a conscious choice and really better to make less money, not just being mediocre. The fight against rationalism and meritocracy, lazy intellectual leftists grasping at straws now starting to sound religious about how your soul will go to hell if you work for google. Give me a break



I don’t see the link between thinking it’s a bit sad that money seems to be the only driver of a growing part of the population and the left-right political divide. I don’t personally think it’s a very new phenomena however. My main takeaway from it is that in the USA software jobs have started replacing or at least being seen as as attractive as finance and consulting as a career of choice for people who are mostly interested in money which to me partially explain why we now see so little valuable and interesting innovation and new products coming out of the big tech companies.


> I don’t see the link between thinking it’s a bit sad that money seems to be the only driver of a growing part of the population

Because it's not the only driver, it's the most important driver of the money making part of your life. Which is turn is just a means to another end, and that end is your family, hobbies, self actualisation, experiencing the world etc.


The most fantastic teacher in the world will make less money than most software developers. This they’re mediocre? Your logic is gross, and idiotic.


Of course they are.

Let's ignore there is not much value coming out of education and that people mostly succeed despite having to go through the grind of an antiquated education methodology (which is the only way to certain professions). Let's ignore that better teachers can actually go to private education and get a higher salary.

Software developers can create software solutions that automatically do the work of tons of people (think about how much time is saved by an online checkout vs maintaining a physical store with employees). It's obvious that software is a great way for companies that want to multiply their revenue and that's the most efficient way to generate value for society at scale.

It's therefore obvious that people capable of delivering that solution have more value compared to a teacher.

You may not like Amazon, but people derive benefits from Amazon all the time. They can get stuff directly at home in a day. They can pay online without even seeing a store.

That's a lot of units of small value for the general public being created by the Amazon employees and Amazon itself.

You may not like where society is going, but people choose with their own wallets what they want or not. This is pure democracy.


“Let's ignore that better teachers can actually go to private education and get a higher salary.”

As a teacher, this is absolutely not true in the way you’re describing it.


They haven't heard of Texas, for starters.


The real reason why teachers make "little" money, is because their job is repetitive.


You have no idea what teachers do, do you?




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