Profitability of my early labor.

By Aaron Linder

I have worked in several different crafts:

I was a tailor, a field laborer, a salesman, a casino dealer, a chemist, mechanic, and AI Engineer before I ever reached professor.

Tailoring

Tailoring profits is very high, apprentice labor is $9.00 an hour, journeyman labor is $14.00 an hour. Master tailoring is $18.00 per hour, and then they can make $400 profit per day on their off days making a full suit. it’s $3000 of tools to get into. I built many people’s wedding clothes and work clothes.

Table Games Dealing

I only made $7.50 per hour, and made some tips to $22.00 an hour. The Casino made a lot of profit. But the benefit I had was student housing and school library.

Oil & Gas

Field labor on gas and oil is very profitable also. It requires no tools, the hotel and clothing is provided, it requires no tools, and the job yield on my service was a part of $44,000,000.

Chemist

I wasn’t allowed to work in commercial chemistry because of my gender, but I was able to sit there and learn and understand the world better with very little tools.

Mechanic Work

Mechanic work I worked on many people’s tires and breaks and automotive service, that service gave a lot of people new tires and I worked for the military worker. It can be up to $60,000 of tools to get into.

Artificial Intelligence work

The tools cost $4,000 and $190,000 of school which I had written off. I worked for 3 years on 11 projects for virtually free, with licensed software and such and built many commercial products to save lives in dangerous jobs, as well as help people secure trade deals and well being software.

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