Any ideas?
Any ideas?
accounting
House Majority Leader 111th and 112th congress?
1 2 3 5 4 6 wrote:
accounting
CPA in international tax
It's All just counting right?
FvcKtard
President of ths United States. Oh well Obama isn't smart and a world class slacker.
Sales
Professional athlete.
Engineering
foutbaal player
psychologist/psychiatrist
Oil rig Roughneck or hand digger with a company that replaces underground pipes or wiring.
Bad Wigins wrote:
psychologist/psychiatrist
Psychologist: PhD
Psychiatrist: college, med school, 4+ year residency.
Big difference, brah.
But I was going to write "physician" because you don't have to be incredibly smart like PhD biochemists, engineers, or PhDs in the hard sciences to be a doctor. Docs are smart, but relative to those guys, not so much.
But it is going to be a LOT of hard work.
Possibly this wrote:
Sales
This. When I was finishing up with undergrad, I interviewed for a few financial/insurance sales jobs. I really think that being even moderately intelligent would make you worse at these jobs. Your average guy would be bored to tears working as a glorified telemarketer, but if you're dumb enough to not be bothered by the complete lack of challenge and stimulation, you can make six figures selling that crap.
Business, corporate sales, industrial sales. You do not have be particularly intelligent to run a good business, just focused and dedicated. At least from my observation.
I have observed folks that are not particularly good at the focus required for academic success are good at running a small business because of the constant attention and variability that a business requires. A small business seems to have built in action and change, which is great for those with short-attention spans.
Yup, loser guy. wrote:
Psychologist: PhD
Psychiatrist: college, med school, 4+ year residency.
Big difference, brah.
But I was going to write "physician" because you don't have to be incredibly smart like PhD biochemists, engineers, or PhDs in the hard sciences to be a doctor. Docs are smart, but relative to those guys, not so much.
But it is going to be a LOT of hard work.
Big difference? As you imply, one is psychologists, the other is physician psychologists. If neither has real brains like the hard sciences require, there is no difference re the thread topic.
Jskskndjis wrote:
1 2 3 5 4 6 wrote:accounting
CPA in international tax
It's All just counting right?
FvcKtard
Lol accounting is right. But not CPA, since the test is hard. Just find an accounting job at some private company and brown nose a lot. You'll be fine.
Fisherman, construction worker, stock broker, personal trainer, celebrity hair dresser, IT professional, realtor, flipper, franchisee.
Bad Wigins wrote:
Yup, loser guy. wrote:Psychologist: PhD
Psychiatrist: college, med school, 4+ year residency.
Big difference, brah.
But I was going to write "physician" because you don't have to be incredibly smart like PhD biochemists, engineers, or PhDs in the hard sciences to be a doctor. Docs are smart, but relative to those guys, not so much.
But it is going to be a LOT of hard work.
Big difference? As you imply, one is psychologists, the other is physician psychologists. If neither has real brains like the hard sciences require, there is no difference re the thread topic.
Ok, it is a LOT harder to get into med school and finish residency than to get a PhD in psychology. Let's be real, son, there is a BIG difference between the two. It takes a LOT more hard work and a fair amount more intelligence to become a psychiatrist than a psychologist. Even taking and getting a 30+ on the MCAT is probably much harder than anything a psychologist goes through.
Then add all the premed courses, anatomy, pathophysiology, genetics, and all the med classes and it isn't even close. Then add 60-80 hour weeks (yes, every week son) during residency for 4 years in psychiatry. Psych residencies aren't as tough as surgery, where they have to do 80+ hours a week. Although some psychiatrists subspecialize so you would need another year in some cases.
Construction, or any kind of skilled trade like welding, carpentry, machining, etc. I know plenty of guys who make $50k+/year in construction, and the ones with a skill of some kind (like welding) can make $80k+/year.
Go up to Watford City, ND. Almost everyone is dumb as sh!t yet is making $50-100k/year.
Lawyer.