Good thing these people aren't forced into doing labor. I bet they're the types that would force other people to provide them with a comfortable lifestyle though 😂
@@thinkcritically2 they went to school and busted their asses off to get her where they are. Let’s not be jealous of intellectuals, channel your hate towards the kardashians if anything.
@@namaslay6866 the phrase is ironic because people who use it don't want to work for an employer but don't have a basis for how difficult life would actually be without society that needs people to labor for one another. The reality is that traditional employment today is far less labor than if one was trying to survive using just their own labor to build and maintain shelter, purify water, hunt/gather food, and survive outside of society without any of the creature comforts we have today. It's actually entirely possible to live outside society and NOT "labor" for an employer today, but that would mean a very difficult life; heck people do it all over the world today - subsistence farming in African nations for instance. "I don't dream of labor" usually comes from a place of privilege and means "I don't want to work AND I want others to work and provide my stuff."
She didn't make that up but it's actually super shallow. All those people who say that don't dream of anything, they say it thinking they're being clever but many people dream of accomplishing things that just happen to be linked to careers
@@pfftwhut7638 many people also would love to eat fruit (enjoy luxuries) their labor (work) didn’t produce, that being said someone dreaming of traveling the world but not knowing how to get in the position to do so is common. Edit: In other words a lot of peoples’ dreams are just the result of work not the actual job.
Pretty common in the U.S. lol engineering is just fancy for “better at math than English”. The industry is a nightmare right now. I would travel by train for the next few years. They are rushing parts through processing, forcing shortened deadlines, etc. Plane crashes have been happening, but not being shared on the main news channels. I’ve only seen a few. Plane crashes are a lot more rare than this. They have been happening more often lately because of the deadline rushes. My friends work just recently went on strike for it, and the whole office did crossword puzzles and games for 3 days before they got some calls. Their deadlines are extended and they let go a supervisor. My good friend said he had his “best f*ckin week at work yet!” 😅
@@ZiadHatahet Don’t let him scare you. The standards are the same as far as quality and testing is just as stringent if not more than it always has been.
“I don’t dream of labor” spittin facts. Get something that you are at least interested in and can bear doing that pays good enough. Don’t live to work, work to live. Bless up 🙏🏼
@@mizugirll dryer operator. We turn milk into milk powder/ baby formula. It's actually quite a complicated process that requires a couple years of training. at the end of the day though, a milk man is all it is 😂
A large part is the local economy. The cost of living is high here in DC, so salaries are commensurate. NYC, San Francisco, and others are higher. I've lived in small towns where the average salary was $30k, but you could also buy a house for $135k. Here in the DC suburbs, I just looked at a townhouse about 30 minutes west of downtown DC and it sold for 705k. Location is key.
@@SheilaR.08 yes. Been trying to explain this. 115k in DC is the equivalent of like 75-85k in most midsized US cities. And people can work remotely in her field. She probably works 1) gov work 2) contracted by gov agencies at her company So she's making an okay living there. Middle class, I suppose. But if owning property and making more money (by not having such high expenses) was her primary focus, she will have great exit opportunities ahead. Then she can take that 115k and negotiate 130k full remote and move somewhere nice but not insanely expensive. That'd be my move. All depends on what the individual wants out of life and their career. But yes. I concur. It's bad for people to compare their own earnings to someone living in NYC or DC. 100k is not much in those cities if retirement is a goal. It should be for those who don't dream of labor. But even 200k in Manhattan debt free is like middle class, will never own real estate in their zip code status. Thank you Sheila
yes!!! people always laud jobs like teachers and firefighters (which are noble professions, to be sure) but the people who do social work are also doing amazing things for their communities.
@@steveh5307 What did you study in school? Do you have to do advanced math to be an analyst or is it enough just using industry tools and programming languages like python? Also, how long have you been working as a data analyst?
@@steveh5307 So basic math like at high school level or at pre-algebra level? And if you were to be promoted to a management position, would you still get hands on with the analysis work or would it mostly be about managing a team and mentoring them at that point?
@@steveh5307 Hey how did you start out as a Data analyst? I'd say I'm right where you are I know basic excel and power BI, intermediate SQL, intermediate python(pandas,mathplotlib,requests, etc), I took all calculus and a linear algebra classes. Did you learn cloud?
I used to be a non-profit youth educator. I made $31K/yr teaching high school kids how to code. I went back to software development consulting and I make about $195K/yr now. I'm also a high school dropout with no formal education.
What is it about cats, who were motivated enough to learn the trade outside a formal setting and really LEAN into said trade, and CRUSHING it monetarily?! Good on you!! 🎉👏
So you basically make 3x that of the political science guy, who probably owes thousands of dollars in student loan debt, and you did it without any formal education. Awesome!
Teacher in France, for 8 years : 26 000 euros a year. And I bought my own laptop to use it in the high school I work in. I do not have my own classroom after 4 years in the same high school... I studied 10 years, 5 in English, 5 in History, suceeded in passing the big test to become a teacher... I love my job, though it is nervously tiring sometimes, but I would to be more paid for the time spent preparing my lessons and marking all the papers...
I really love seeing people who went to college and are utilizing their degrees. However I feel bad for the ones who make the same as me, a laborer in a factory
Aerospace engineering seems so cool. Yeah nobody dreams of labor but I think if you find an engaging job then it can bring you some level of fulfillment.
I know of a young couple I work with. Both are chemical engineers with one of the largest oil companies in the world. They haven't been able to buy a house even with their combined income.
I'm a high school drop out. I own a trucking company I started when I was 23. I'm 37 now and since they dropping gross I will too. My company gross is 2.2 million with 6.5 trucks on the road. The .5 is me. I don't drive everyday anymore, only when I want to. Life is good!
I can't figure out how an individual's before-tax salary is comparable to an entire company's gross revenue. Seems like you are jealous, I can't figure out why else you would make this comment.
@@McLovinKarma no I just hate videos. It implies that college is the only way to success. So I just drop a 10k ft view of my life just to let people watching know you don't need college to be successful.
I love this video, I wish they were around as I was a kid/ teenager to know what my options were & how much people would make… when I went to college I only knew I could be a teacher, doctor or engineer. I became a teacher but ended doing something else
As far as what? Income? Your blue collar jobs now often equate to even many STEM degrees; especially when factoring in loan debt and time invested in earning rather than school. An apprentice can earn 200k in the four years a STEM degree is piling up debt. I know plenty of plumbers who live large and engineers who live larger, but it’s the engineers who tend the hate their lives more, even with the slightly higher net worth. The big issue with STEM, as least as far as I’ve seen in my life, is that many ( especially engineers) underestimate the tedium involved in doing such a job lifelong. Anyways, take care.
@@mtb416 I wish there was a way to mix up a post high school blue collar training program with a higher education including philosophy, history, science, basic medicine, and civics / government. I admire some of the tradesman I know in terms of their skills in carpentry, plumbing, stonework, etc. But when you listen to them talk about their beliefs surrounding government or medical matters, they are prone to conspiracy and superstition. They have no knowledge of historical patterns and tend to be black and white in their thinking. Higher education and knowledge promotes critical thought. That's one of the reasons the renaissance occurred when more and more people could read and question.
I would never recommend people major in a natural science (phys, chem, bio) unless you are ready to seriously commit to it. Most fresh grad science jobs in industry aren't very glamorous and the pay often seems/is low compared to what you think you should be worth and what your responsibilities are. It certainly gets better as you get more senior positions, but you have to really love what you do.
As a European these salaries are absolutely bonkers. Making above 70k a year here is a really good salary. That's about what you can expect of a well paying job.
I don’t dream of labor is the best sentence I’ve heard. Whenever anyone asks what my dream job is I always say nothing because my dream is not to work, but this is my new answer lol
wow I only know one guy who studies Aerospace Engineering and he's also a international level chess master (a FM for my fellow chess aficionados). gotta love'em intelligent people ✨
I only know one person that was an aerospace engineer, she ended up being a district manager for a convenience store.... difficult area to find employment.
@@goldengoddess1723 An engineering degree period will literally land you anywhere. We have to learn many subjects. She more than likely just wanted to be a DM.
I make 52k which is a lot more than others at my job but I'm authorized to do overtime my base pay is like 44k. I still feel underpaid but for right now it's the first time I've had a manager title so I'll keep it for a bit to get more skills and experience on my resume.
These peeps work in the DC area where the cost of living is super expensive. If unless you reside in this area I wouldn't put much weight into what they are make.
Higher income, higher cost of living. Those high rise building in DC the rent ranges at least $2,500 and up. And those outside DC employees higher income but they are dealing with long commute and traffic.
All these people will likely pass away the moment society starts to collapse because being a data analyst is not a life skill used for survival. But it’s a skill used to produce money which is income in order to be controlled by whoever owns the money maybe the banks
@@allaansnackbar4269 In a scenario of society's collapse even those who have "life skills" will pass away if they are entirely independent. A clothes maker still needs a roof over their head and food on their plate, and they need the fabric supplier too because otherwise they wouldn't be able to make clothes in the first place, and the fabric supplier needs land, water and protection to make the supplies in the first place. In other words, we all depend on each other in various ways.
Data engineer is a mix between software engineer and a data scientists. The ones in my company build out and maintain the data pipeline infrastructure for the daily accumulation of petabytes of data on a feature. An example of this is think of how the data is being collected and then used for the RUclips algorithm based on the likes/videos/time watched. There’s a pipeline for that and that’s the stuff of what real data engineers are working on building.
@@ballinspalding11 yes i have. are you suggesting that could be the culprit..ive received several merit raises but i have not ratcheted up my salary via job migration.
" I don't dream of labor " very true if you want to become an engineer, attorney, health field. Everything else be prepared to either get ready for a reality check or work at McDonald's.
Damn, I’m a CNC Machinist. I make $62,000 a year. And since I live in California the $62,000 pretty much looks like $40,000 a year which isn’t shit so I barely get by. I have an SUV that’s paid off and I have my own place that I rent. I dress well, I look good…just don’t ask me to open my wallet lol
I have a strong sense of BS with these videos as well. I don't know us salaries well but 57k for a political science grad fresh out of school seems like a lot. Would expect him to work for half of that at McDonald's.
@@Theodinsson Yep. Mission Engineer Architect at 135? You're lucky with 70 after 15 YOE. Political Consultant at 57K? Never. Data Engineer at 115K? Possible, but not for someone that young. These are all blatantly fake.
The people in these comments! I should not judge but some people get mad when people study very hard and just are saying their job. I'm a human rights lawyer. It's my job it's not fancy, people are so mad though! I feel bad for laughing but I've had a long day and I'm being petty
🤣🤣I am a recycled paper container relocator and a certified EV machine operator and i make $26,000. AKA I work in a warehouse as a forklift operator who moves boxes all day. Lol
Don’t. Not sure where this is filmed, but you know what 115k a year is equivalent to in Houston? About 55K. Or compared to NYC? That’s 40k in Houston. These are extreme examples, but I’m doing this for perspective.
@@ywmedia Thank you, Chris. Making 115k in DC would equate to 67k in Houston, Texas. I know firefighters in Houston making 120k all day long, which is more than making $200,000 in DC. These “poor” “blue collar” types are buying boats while these engineers in DC are struggling to make ends meet.
I cut trees down around the power lines, I've been doing this for 10 years. I dropped out of high-school. I'm attending truck driving school and right now I make around 60k a year.
@@fast_gtr do you own your own rig or are you a company driver? I'm weighing my options. Everyone seems to want 6 months to a year of experience but no one will give you the opportunity to get that experience. So I'm looking into forming a LLC getting a business loan and buying a truck to lease onto another company.
That number is a little high. According to the Census Bureau, the median *household* income is around $91,000 but even that number doesn't mean much since some households are two people making a combined total of $250,000 and some households are one person making $78,000. The average salary is around $80,000 according to the BLS. Even that's going to vary a lot by age and education. These people look very young so the ones making $60K will be making a lot more than that in 5 to 10 years.
“I don’t dream of labor” ✨
Good thing these people aren't forced into doing labor. I bet they're the types that would force other people to provide them with a comfortable lifestyle though 😂
@@thinkcritically2 I bet you’re the type to bitch and moan about other’s not doing hard labor.
@@thinkcritically2 they went to school and busted their asses off to get her where they are. Let’s not be jealous of intellectuals, channel your hate towards the kardashians if anything.
@@namaslay6866 the phrase is ironic because people who use it don't want to work for an employer but don't have a basis for how difficult life would actually be without society that needs people to labor for one another. The reality is that traditional employment today is far less labor than if one was trying to survive using just their own labor to build and maintain shelter, purify water, hunt/gather food, and survive outside of society without any of the creature comforts we have today. It's actually entirely possible to live outside society and NOT "labor" for an employer today, but that would mean a very difficult life; heck people do it all over the world today - subsistence farming in African nations for instance. "I don't dream of labor" usually comes from a place of privilege and means "I don't want to work AND I want others to work and provide my stuff."
@@namaslay6866 college ≠ intellectual
Smart girl. I don't dream of labor either
She didn't make that up but it's actually super shallow. All those people who say that don't dream of anything, they say it thinking they're being clever but many people dream of accomplishing things that just happen to be linked to careers
@@pfftwhut7638 many people also would love to eat fruit (enjoy luxuries) their labor (work) didn’t produce, that being said someone dreaming of traveling the world but not knowing how to get in the position to do so is common.
Edit: In other words a lot of peoples’ dreams are just the result of work not the actual job.
@@pfftwhut7638 how is that shallow? she doesn’t like to work lol she’s being honest
@@pfftwhut7638 lol how is that at all shallow?
@@pfftwhut7638 , Um, she didn’t say she didn’t dream of “anything”. She said she didn’t dream of labor. Big difference there.
Aerospace...goddamn that's dope
very normal in india 😹
Pretty common in the U.S. lol engineering is just fancy for “better at math than English”. The industry is a nightmare right now. I would travel by train for the next few years. They are rushing parts through processing, forcing shortened deadlines, etc. Plane crashes have been happening, but not being shared on the main news channels. I’ve only seen a few. Plane crashes are a lot more rare than this. They have been happening more often lately because of the deadline rushes. My friends work just recently went on strike for it, and the whole office did crossword puzzles and games for 3 days before they got some calls. Their deadlines are extended and they let go a supervisor. My good friend said he had his “best f*ckin week at work yet!” 😅
@@A-N99-2 that’s scary. What kinds of planes are they? Private jets, 2 seater props, etc?
@@ZiadHatahet Don’t let him scare you. The standards are the same as far as quality and testing is just as stringent if not more than it always has been.
Only making 135k though...
"I don't dream of labor." I 100% felt that
“I don’t dream of labor” spittin facts. Get something that you are at least interested in and can bear doing that pays good enough. Don’t live to work, work to live. Bless up 🙏🏼
All these fancy titles lol. Im a spray dryer operator that makes milk powder and I make 85k a year but when people ask, i just say I'm a milk man lol.
What do u do?
Man ur cool
😂 I like you
@@mizugirll dryer operator. We turn milk into milk powder/ baby formula. It's actually quite a complicated process that requires a couple years of training. at the end of the day though, a milk man is all it is 😂
As much as an F1 champion is a car driver.
“I don’t dream of labor” 💅 😌
Only slaves dream
@@cain2548
What? Isn't it the opposite?
What does that mean?
@@breathtakingsamurai981”ah I dream of being a slave to capitalism all of my life” I own a business I’m still a SLAVE. 😂
@@sauce6534Capitalism is the best!
Best answer ever “ I don’t dream of labor” that’s what I’m talking about
I work Full-time as a family advocated at domestic violence shelter and I don’t make near close to those jobs but it’s so rewarding
That's great, there should be more emphasis on how rewarding the job is not just the financial value.
A large part is the local economy. The cost of living is high here in DC, so salaries are commensurate. NYC, San Francisco, and others are higher. I've lived in small towns where the average salary was $30k, but you could also buy a house for $135k. Here in the DC suburbs, I just looked at a townhouse about 30 minutes west of downtown DC and it sold for 705k. Location is key.
You do you. To each his own.
@@SheilaR.08 yes. Been trying to explain this. 115k in DC is the equivalent of like 75-85k in most midsized US cities. And people can work remotely in her field. She probably works
1) gov work
2) contracted by gov agencies at her company
So she's making an okay living there. Middle class, I suppose. But if owning property and making more money (by not having such high expenses) was her primary focus, she will have great exit opportunities ahead. Then she can take that 115k and negotiate 130k full remote and move somewhere nice but not insanely expensive. That'd be my move. All depends on what the individual wants out of life and their career.
But yes. I concur. It's bad for people to compare their own earnings to someone living in NYC or DC. 100k is not much in those cities if retirement is a goal. It should be for those who don't dream of labor. But even 200k in Manhattan debt free is like middle class, will never own real estate in their zip code status.
Thank you Sheila
yes!!! people always laud jobs like teachers and firefighters (which are noble professions, to be sure) but the people who do social work are also doing amazing things for their communities.
Finally, someone who is a Data Engineer!
right... but how the heck is she at 115 and only working 2 yrs.. she must be in consulting
@@steveh5307 so excel and sql? Anything else??
@@steveh5307 What did you study in school? Do you have to do advanced math to be an analyst or is it enough just using industry tools and programming languages like python? Also, how long have you been working as a data analyst?
@@steveh5307 So basic math like at high school level or at pre-algebra level?
And if you were to be promoted to a management position, would you still get hands on with the analysis work or would it mostly be about managing a team and mentoring them at that point?
@@steveh5307 Hey how did you start out as a Data analyst? I'd say I'm right where you are I know basic excel and power BI, intermediate SQL, intermediate python(pandas,mathplotlib,requests, etc), I took all calculus and a linear algebra classes. Did you learn cloud?
I used to be a non-profit youth educator. I made $31K/yr teaching high school kids how to code. I went back to software development consulting and I make about $195K/yr now. I'm also a high school dropout with no formal education.
What is it about cats, who were motivated enough to learn the trade outside a formal setting and really LEAN into said trade, and CRUSHING it monetarily?! Good on you!! 🎉👏
So you basically make 3x that of the political science guy, who probably owes thousands of dollars in student loan debt, and you did it without any formal education. Awesome!
Stop lying 🤣 you can't teach without a degree
@@UntilThenn it's youtube comments, let him pretend.
@@UntilThenn He worked for the non-profit, he wasnt hired by the school district
Teacher in France, for 8 years : 26 000 euros a year. And I bought my own laptop to use it in the high school I work in. I do not have my own classroom after 4 years in the same high school... I studied 10 years, 5 in English, 5 in History, suceeded in passing the big test to become a teacher... I love my job, though it is nervously tiring sometimes, but I would to be more paid for the time spent preparing my lessons and marking all the papers...
F
Jobs that are actually useful for society are paid like shit. Teachers, caregivers, social workers etc. Big uff here
Yea thats bullshit.... you should be making 60,000 euro a year
@@rear5118 implying that engineers and doctors arent useful?
That's poverty
I get these videos a lot. This is the first time I have related to any job profile
Data Engineer😂
Listening to what they studied made me want to study again🥺
I agree, school is just become toooo expensive now.
they all ar so young meanwhile
*me working at McDonald's at 34 years old at 26k a year
I'm 35 and on disability.... 12k a year wooo!!!
Tbf that's a pretty good salary for McDonalds right? You must have worked your way up.
everyone’s journey is different, it’s not the best idea to compare. you’re doing better than most people and you’re still pretty young!!
They are from Washington DC. Of course they got it made.
@@GoodBoi1503 What does that mean? Do you think everybody in DC is rich?
I really love seeing people who went to college and are utilizing their degrees. However I feel bad for the ones who make the same as me, a laborer in a factory
Don’t feel bad for them. You work harder than they do. Promise.
You provide real world value...
Don't feel bad. We all have our usefulness for this world.
Probably working more hours for the same amount of money.
dont accept your position. invest your money into yourself and keep trying to rise up. self employment is always an option to keep in mind.
Aerospace engineering seems so cool. Yeah nobody dreams of labor but I think if you find an engaging job then it can bring you some level of fulfillment.
I know of a young couple I work with. Both are chemical engineers with one of the largest oil companies in the world. They haven't been able to buy a house even with their combined income.
hahah she’s probably a mathematician
Facts "I don't dream of labor", that can be unpacked in so many different ways
I'm a high school drop out. I own a trucking company I started when I was 23. I'm 37 now and since they dropping gross I will too. My company gross is 2.2 million with 6.5 trucks on the road. The .5 is me. I don't drive everyday anymore, only when I want to.
Life is good!
I can't figure out how an individual's before-tax salary is comparable to an entire company's gross revenue. Seems like you are jealous, I can't figure out why else you would make this comment.
Thats awesome but was this comment meant to satisfy your ego?
@@bitzer8722 lol. Well my personal salary is 25k with roughly 90k in bonuses plus other perks. Company supplied housing and vehicle.
@@McLovinKarma no I just hate videos. It implies that college is the only way to success. So I just drop a 10k ft view of my life just to let people watching know you don't need college to be successful.
@@jakebrakejunky10-4 Thanks for the clarification! You're absolutely right, happy for you man!
I love this video, I wish they were around as I was a kid/ teenager to know what my options were & how much people would make… when I went to college I only knew I could be a teacher, doctor or engineer. I became a teacher but ended doing something else
I dream of labor..
I wake up unemployed.. 😢
That hit a little too close to home
LMAO
I DONT DREAM OF LABOR , I LOVE THAT MEME !
I don't dream of labor is _the_ most level headed answer since beginning of time 🤣
Financial transaction yo!
Legendary. “ I don’t dream of labour “
5 stars for that one. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
You go girl 👍💕👏😍😤
The lesson: PICK STEM MAJORS
Not exactly deep thinkers...
As far as what? Income? Your blue collar jobs now often equate to even many STEM degrees; especially when factoring in loan debt and time invested in earning rather than school. An apprentice can earn 200k in the four years a STEM degree is piling up debt. I know plenty of plumbers who live large and engineers who live larger, but it’s the engineers who tend the hate their lives more, even with the slightly higher net worth.
The big issue with STEM, as least as far as I’ve seen in my life, is that many ( especially engineers) underestimate the tedium involved in doing such a job lifelong.
Anyways, take care.
@@mtb416 I wish there was a way to mix up a post high school blue collar training program with a higher education including philosophy, history, science, basic medicine, and civics / government. I admire some of the tradesman I know in terms of their skills in carpentry, plumbing, stonework, etc. But when you listen to them talk about their beliefs surrounding government or medical matters, they are prone to conspiracy and superstition. They have no knowledge of historical patterns and tend to be black and white in their thinking. Higher education and knowledge promotes critical thought. That's one of the reasons the renaissance occurred when more and more people could read and question.
I would never recommend people major in a natural science (phys, chem, bio) unless you are ready to seriously commit to it. Most fresh grad science jobs in industry aren't very glamorous and the pay often seems/is low compared to what you think you should be worth and what your responsibilities are. It certainly gets better as you get more senior positions, but you have to really love what you do.
And not Mech. E.
He is sooo sweet..Iike totally
“I don’t dream of labor,” my spirit person lol
Great channel!
As a European these salaries are absolutely bonkers. Making above 70k a year here is a really good salary. That's about what you can expect of a well paying job.
WOW! Mission engineer Architect!
and people with real careers, breath of fresh air👏
Yes 👍🏾 “I don’t dream of labor” sounds like a saying I need on a t-shirt
Imagine the sweatshop kids making that shirt being like yeah same 😅🥲
Exactly 😂😂😂😂😂😂
The last girl is defying gravity with those things lol
The data engineer got me. Im a data analyst and I feel the exact same.
Hey boe (haha) how did you become a data analyst i think I wanna get into that ! Thanks in advance
@@ljthirtyfiver take math as your major
"I don't dram of labour" ..I felt that in my whole body 😪
i’m a part time target employee, i’m making like 17k a year probably and i cannot even begin to imagine being on their level
I don’t dream of labor is the best sentence I’ve heard. Whenever anyone asks what my dream job is I always say nothing because my dream is not to work, but this is my new answer lol
wow I only know one guy who studies Aerospace Engineering and he's also a international level chess master (a FM for my fellow chess aficionados). gotta love'em intelligent people ✨
Most of us are just normal people bud ☺️
I only know one person that was an aerospace engineer, she ended up being a district manager for a convenience store.... difficult area to find employment.
Come to India, you'll see many engineers
@@goldengoddess1723 Probably have to be willing to move far
@@goldengoddess1723 An engineering degree period will literally land you anywhere. We have to learn many subjects. She more than likely just wanted to be a DM.
You go girl!!👏🏾👏🏾😇
I don’t dream of labor. I’ve heard that somewhere and I giggle everytime. Because as a business owner. I swear all my dreams are labor focused. 🤣🤦🏽♀️
It's crazy how high salaries are in the US and how early people are in their careers compared to England where salaries are so low.
I make 52k which is a lot more than others at my job but I'm authorized to do overtime my base pay is like 44k. I still feel underpaid but for right now it's the first time I've had a manager title so I'll keep it for a bit to get more skills and experience on my resume.
These peeps work in the DC area where the cost of living is super expensive. If unless you reside in this area I wouldn't put much weight into what they are make.
The first girl seems super brilliant
Yep
I wish ppl in social services make 60k or better… it’s a thankless job.
"Thankless job" That's what mummy said.
Somehow I knew that first girl was going to say Aerospace Engineering lol
"I don't dream of labor" 😂 My girl!
Higher income, higher cost of living. Those high rise building in DC the rent ranges at least $2,500 and up.
And those outside DC employees higher income but they are dealing with long commute and traffic.
Exactly. "I don't dream of labor"
Me all the way.
This is the third data engineer/scientist I've seen from 3 different videos.
Second dude is smiling like 👍 I’m going to get replaced soon.
"I don't dream of labor."
She plans on getting a man to take care of her 😂😂
I don’t think that guy likes girls 😂😅
First girl was the best overall
best at what? what’re we comparing here? i think you’re missing the point if the video
Mission Engineer Architect would be quite the catch.
The real question should be ask is how much money left per month . And how much money they can able to save per month or per year.
It's interesting how a data engineer with 2 years experience makes more than a mechanical engineer with the same amount of experience.
And almost twice as much... they are full of sht
@@SonGoku-zr9nc I'm in Cybersecurity in the D.C. area. They must be full of sht because the job posting salaries are trash for tech around here.
@@LimaFoxtrot_98 That probably depends greatly upon who is hiring and what the *actual* job responsibilities are.
@@LimaFoxtrot_98 there's alot you're not looking in the right places
Damn dude, seems like everyone has their shit together , I’m a loser
It will be fine dude, don't stop trying
All these people will likely pass away the moment society starts to collapse because being a data analyst is not a life skill used for survival. But it’s a skill used to produce money which is income in order to be controlled by whoever owns the money maybe the banks
@@allaansnackbar4269 In a scenario of society's collapse even those who have "life skills" will pass away if they are entirely independent. A clothes maker still needs a roof over their head and food on their plate, and they need the fabric supplier too because otherwise they wouldn't be able to make clothes in the first place, and the fabric supplier needs land, water and protection to make the supplies in the first place. In other words, we all depend on each other in various ways.
Anything fancy job title with the word "data" is code for microsoft excel(sometimes sql)
Data engineer is a mix between software engineer and a data scientists. The ones in my company build out and maintain the data pipeline infrastructure for the daily accumulation of petabytes of data on a feature. An example of this is think of how the data is being collected and then used for the RUclips algorithm based on the likes/videos/time watched. There’s a pipeline for that and that’s the stuff of what real data engineers are working on building.
that's crazy..ive been working 8 yrs financial quant engineer and make the same as that data engineer who only worked 2 yrs.
Have you been working in the same company throughout these 8 years?
DC salary is going to be different than a lot of other places
@@ballinspalding11 yes i have. are you suggesting that could be the culprit..ive received several merit raises but i have not ratcheted up my salary via job migration.
@@jaylev85 job hopping does work
@@jaylev85 yes definitely!!! Start looking for new jobs
I want to see salaries in Dallas/ Nashville/
Atlanta
DC and west coast seem super inflated due to cost of living
How about the midwest where if u make $70k a year u live like a king
They are! I moved from Michigan ($750/mo rent) to DC ($1650/mo rent). Both apartments about the same quality.
"I don't dream of labor." The best comeback ever to that question.
Finally someone else who agrees... Why would/should anybody dream of working to deserve to be alive???
Well you could go out and hunt game instead.
Aerospace Engineering... Wow.
Shes literally a rocket scientist
@@RichieD_21 not necessarily, I know an aerospace engineer who designs helicopters.
Met a guy that got a aerospace degree but has been a driver for ups all his life
I was surprised that her salary wasn’t higher
That's badass they are doing the dahm thang..
" I don't dream of labor " very true if you want to become an engineer, attorney, health field. Everything else be prepared to either get ready for a reality check or work at McDonald's.
Dang the First Girl with the Glasses was Hot🔥🫠
I SHALL STRIVE FOR "I DON'T DREAM OF LABOR"!!!!
those people are not offended with the question about their income and very frankly answer
I’m still waiting for someone to say they’re a drug dealer
"Pharmacist"
She quoted James Baldwin?! 😂 😂 Okkkk
"I don't dream of labor." Final answer.
Damn, I’m a CNC Machinist. I make $62,000 a year. And since I live in California the $62,000 pretty much looks like $40,000 a year which isn’t shit so I barely get by. I have an SUV that’s paid off and I have my own place that I rent. I dress well, I look good…just don’t ask me to open my wallet lol
And how long have you guys been doing it?? Sounded very personal for the second party.
I’ve been saying I don’t dream of labor since I was in Pre K
Literally!
This same person (first in the video) was a data scientist in another video. Running out of friends to pose eh
I don't get why every youtube short and TikTok is staged :/
Which video
I have a strong sense of BS with these videos as well. I don't know us salaries well but 57k for a political science grad fresh out of school seems like a lot. Would expect him to work for half of that at McDonald's.
@@Theodinsson Yep. Mission Engineer Architect at 135? You're lucky with 70 after 15 YOE. Political Consultant at 57K? Never. Data Engineer at 115K? Possible, but not for someone that young. These are all blatantly fake.
@@Theodinsson for Dc area this is normal
"I dont dream of labour? - one of the worlds great sentences
The people in these comments! I should not judge but some people get mad when people study very hard and just are saying their job. I'm a human rights lawyer. It's my job it's not fancy, people are so mad though! I feel bad for laughing but I've had a long day and I'm being petty
I dont dream of labor. #awesome line.
Union Electrician. 135k no overtime. 40 hours a week.
I actually do dream about the job I do, but I'm a truck driver, I made 78k last year, which is close to my yearly average, to see the continent.
Right on Rob!!!
It’s a big beautiful country and there are worse ways to see it than from the cab of a Kenworth/Peterbilt/Freightliner
Do what you love. I love driving, but I do not love driving trucks. I couldn't do what you do.
Right now I'm in a dumb international but even then its fun
@@rob1399 the truck is generally what you make of it.
Hammer down pard. Stay safe.
@@justawhisperintheuniverse8257 I always knew I was supposed to do this
How long you two been doing it?
Believe me lady I’m working on it.
That guy is totally gay and/or has no chance
🤣🤣I am a recycled paper container relocator and a certified EV machine operator and i make $26,000. AKA I work in a warehouse as a forklift operator who moves boxes all day. Lol
If you ever want you know how much hourly conversion to year is to multiply by 2080. Same goes for yearly to hourly but instead you divide by 2080.
First girl is making Indians proud
She looks Arab rather indian
@@Dhua_diary 🤣really pal
@@zeusyieldrim4949 nah she's either Indian or from another South Asian country. Definitely not Arab.
These videos make me feel like a total failure
Same
Most of these people are just lying about their salary. I wouldn't worry.
Don’t. Not sure where this is filmed, but you know what 115k a year is equivalent to in Houston? About 55K. Or compared to NYC? That’s 40k in Houston. These are extreme examples, but I’m doing this for perspective.
@@mtb416 It's filmed in DC
@@ywmedia Thank you, Chris. Making 115k in DC would equate to 67k in Houston, Texas. I know firefighters in Houston making 120k all day long, which is more than making $200,000 in DC. These “poor” “blue collar” types are buying boats while these engineers in DC are struggling to make ends meet.
Is it monthly or annually??😅😅
Annually bro
Dear lord, these people are smart. I would have lied about what I do and then lied again about how much I make.
Me
High school drop out
I make $50k
Retired tree climber
House paid off
No debt
Travel the world
Life is good
I love his dream job it's mine too hahaha
Based off of reddit and all these videos I see on the internet. The average salary in America is 150k
Not even close brother
What? It's like $40k-50k. These people just have higher paying jobs.
I’m a general manager in retail I make about 50k a year not including my 4 bonuses I get 4x a year
I’m in finance but would never divulge what I make. Especially if your colleagues know what u make
Yep, that's a big problem in our society.
In some states, declaring it can cause problems with HR
I hate every single person in this video LMAO
What’s wrong with the first woman? Sounds like she really enjoys her job and passion 🤷♂️
@@smittypwnz touche she seems like a very nice person. I hate everybody else in this video
I cut trees down around the power lines, I've been doing this for 10 years. I dropped out of high-school. I'm attending truck driving school and right now I make around 60k a year.
I’m making 100k and just graduated this may.
@@fast_gtr do you own your own rig or are you a company driver? I'm weighing my options. Everyone seems to want 6 months to a year of experience but no one will give you the opportunity to get that experience. So I'm looking into forming a LLC getting a business loan and buying a truck to lease onto another company.
@@Couldnt_let_J.Marston_die oh, i forgot to mention in engineering
Washington D.C is hella expensive tho...
This is what affirmative action looks like lmfao
And they live in D.C. so they all actually take home only about 60% of those slaries.
There are plenty of cheap living options in DC. Just not always the cleanest.
I don’t dream of labour 😂😂🙌🏼🙌🏼 Me neither girl, me neither
I think about 100k or 110k is about average median income here in DC.
That number is a little high. According to the Census Bureau, the median *household* income is around $91,000 but even that number doesn't mean much since some households are two people making a combined total of $250,000 and some households are one person making $78,000. The average salary is around $80,000 according to the BLS. Even that's going to vary a lot by age and education. These people look very young so the ones making $60K will be making a lot more than that in 5 to 10 years.
she always seems to ask rich as hell folks
Who is he consulting
To the data engineer let’s gooooo!