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Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

almost 100% of all coders, hobbyists + pros alike, agree with me entirely in tech discussion communities.

would you ask a programmer with sissy arms that cant possibly produce the same as other workers in coal mining to go become a coal miner?

because I cant work in my field, I often DO work construction, and I take a LOT LESS PAY because I cant carry as much and i hurt my frail body easily. people are surprised how hard i bust my ass through the pain -- often continuing to work with broken bones and not going to the doctor. but it doesnt mean I can handle it really, or be as productive. guy next to me does twice the work twice as fast -- and nobody blames me. i take less money and they see me trying as hard as they are. its just you cant expect me to lift 4x my bodyweight which is like half theirs.

most of you can bench press me with only one arm!

259 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

almost 100% of all coders, hobbyists + pros alike, agree with me entirely in tech discussion communities.

would you ask a programmer with sissy arms that cant possibly produce the same as other workers in coal mining to go become a coal miner?

because I cant work in my field, I often DO work construction, and I take a LOT LESS PAY because I cant carry as much and i hurt my frail body easily. people are surprised how hard i bust my ass through the pain -- often continuing to work with broken bones and not going to the doctor. but it doesnt mean I can handle it really, or be as productive. guy next to me does twice the work twice as fast -- and nobody blames me. i take less money and they see me trying as hard as they are. its just you cant expect me to lift 4x my bodyweight which is like half theirs.

259 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

almost 100% of all coders, hobbyists + pros alike, agree with me entirely in tech discussion communities.

would you ask a programmer with sissy arms that cant possibly produce the same as other workers in coal mining to go become a coal miner?

because I cant work in my field, I often DO work construction, and I take a LOT LESS PAY because I cant carry as much and i hurt my frail body easily. people are surprised how hard i bust my ass through the pain -- often continuing to work with broken bones and not going to the doctor. but it doesnt mean I can handle it really, or be as productive.

259 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

almost 100% of all coders, hobbyists + pros alike, agree with me entirely in tech discussion communities.

would you ask a programmer with sissy arms that cant possibly produce the same as other workers in coal mining to go become a coal miner?

260 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

almost 100% of all coders, hobbyists + pros alike, agree with me entirely in tech discussion communities.

260 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

not to mention it takes a special type of person to be a programmer and not literally hate themselves from the type of unique stresses it causes. you have to enjoy doing it and tolerate that well under pressure.

260 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

learn to code isnt useful for anyone.

I been doing this shit since i was 10. let me tell you. without the b.s. or higher AND connections you SOL getting any job. nobody will even ask what you know or look at a portfolio without one or both of those. You could be gods gift to earth and they'd refuse to look at you.

if i cant get that job, no chance in hell a coal miner who just started a week ago can. theyd be retirement age by the time they started having the skill to actually do the work -- and even if they did do it amazingly fast as a legendary talent -- nobody would hire them anyway.

learn to code is an absolute fucking joke. if you have a connection you got a slim to none chance of bypassing HR. without that, HR will burn your application in a fire before even reading it. so that coal miner is gonna have to start his own successful startup to get into the biz -- no other way for him, not without giving him entirely free college retraining to help him (self learning leaves some gaps at least up to the mid-level once you get there you can continue on your own just fine), and access to social groups of engineers which the guy likely does not have.

260 days ago
1 score