<p>Why would anyone want to do premed. Just major in engineering and you will get a job guaranteed. You could also be a business major, but there is little to no respect for business graduates. It is a well known fact that business has the lightest workload. Many recruiters cite this as one of the reasons they have little to no respect for business majors.</p>
<p>How do you expect us to answer you?</p>
<p>Ah, but I much rather work with people that use bridges than the bridges themselves. You sound like a bitter engineering premed with a bad GPA.</p>
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Really? I wonder what the unemployed engineers are doing wrong then.</p>
<p>If your future job is all you’re concerned with, there’s some pretty decent job security with an MD appended to your name. Just sayin’</p>
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Maybe, when you just graduate. But, could you keep a job in this field 10-15 years after you get your first job, when so many politicians sponsored by deep-pocket big business keep selling that kind of jobs overseas in the name of cost-effectiveness/productivity?</p>
<p>The days of “engineers without borders” likely come sooner than the days of “doctors without borders.” I have not heard that doctors are rotated in and out of this country in large volume yet. This practice (rotating the workers in/out periodically with some who-knows-what visa that have been introduced by big US business and your politicians) is quite common in some segment of engineering.</p>
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<li><p>Engineering jobs are being outsourced more and more frequently, so the “guarantee of having a stable job” is very misleading. Even if they don’t get outsourced, engineering companies sometimes lay off middle-aged people and replace them with young college grads since they can pay them less. </p></li>
<li><p>If you do the pre-med track really well, then you’re pretty much guaranteed a good, stable job for the rest of your life. </p></li>
<li><p>Yea business may be easy, but especially in that field, its about who you know, not what you know.</p></li>
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<p>OP, why do you care so much? BTW, all your assumptions are incorrect.
- Just major in engineering and you will get a job guaranteed. - Where this idea cam from. My H. is an engineer and so are my many friends.
- You could also be a business major, but there is little to no respect for business graduates. It is a well known fact that business has the lightest workload. Many recruiters cite this as one of the reasons they have little to no respect for business majors. - And this is complete opposite of being tru in every single sentence.</p>
<p>Well, you scored very high in crdibility department! Congrats!</p>