Orme, a Singing Bard wrote:
I'm a big boy - please fire away. I enjoy seeing your fruitless attacks.
It's really a pity you're so utterly incapable of reflection or introspection. I'm playing a different game than you are, buddy. I was actually remarking in my first post in this thread what I saw as a rare example of you being able to acknowledge at least some kind of complexity. I don't feel the need to have the last word in every circumstance, especially when your responses don't merit an honest reply, but that's not because I have nothing to say.
Your self esteem clearly relies largely on belittling others. That's usually the case with people who are insecure about their own place in life, as well you should be. Let's face it, the MBA is a vanity degree at best; anyone can do the work of an MBA without an MBA. This is not even close to true of any other professional degree. You can't practice law or medicine without a degree in those fields. What, pray tell me, is the province of the MBA? You can't even teach college (in any respectable institution) with one (lol @ your teaching community college, by the way). You yourself have already expressed doubt as to the value of your degree in other threads. And dude, your school isn't even ranked. I checked. My school is, and it's a pretty modest tier 1 school, but I'm not the one claiming to be the master of the universe here.
And your job? Come on man. You've complained that you don't get enough purely managerial work and that you usually are stuck doing the logistical details for this architectural firm or something. Sounds like an errand boy job to me, buddy.
And your crap about not going into debt, then we learn you apparently don't count the debt to your employer as "debt" because then you'd have to come to terms with the fact that you, too, paid for your degree.
Night school? I seem to recall that you're the one who went to night school. A no-doubt abbreviated farm-out-job half-ass MBA program designed by the university to milk corporate budgets and muted individual ambitions for every penny they're worth, giving in exchange some little tutorials on probability and statistics, business "strategy", and maybe some accounting if you're lucky. I attended a business school for undergrad and I can't say I was impressed with your type wandering the halls: strident, over-confident MBA candidates who thought they were god's gift to academia because they had worked a 50-hour job at some point in their lives.
Everyone in that school was convinced they'd be CEO's. I bet you think that too. But someone with your pathological personality would surely screw that up even if you did somehow get the chance to enter upper management.
I have some honest advice for you: don't test the marketability of that degree you're so haughty about. I know people with MBA's from schools that are actually respectable who are actually running retail franchises because they couldn't find any other work. Don't try to leave your city, either, as no one is going to even bat an eye at an MBA from a business school they've never heard of.
And this is off memory. Don't make me take notes.
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Knowledge without reason is useless.
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