logo
Submissions Log In Subscribe e-Edition
Google Play App Store
  • News
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Gillespie Life
  • Commentary
  • Obituaries
  • Classifieds
  • Public Notices
    • Place a Notice
    • View All Public Notices
  • Photos
  • Special Sections
    • News
    • Business
    • Sports
    • Gillespie Life
    • Commentary
    • Obituaries
    • Classifieds
    • Public Notices
      • Place a Notice
      • View All Public Notices
    • Photos
    • Special Sections
Skilled trades are safe from A.I.
Commentary
By Tom Purcell, on February 19, 2025
Skilled trades are safe from A.I.

Guest column

Guest column

Here’s the bad news: many jobs are going to be eliminated by artificial intelligence, and, with the speed at which AI is evolving, it’s going to happen sooner rather than later.

Here’s the good news: In 2025 many more young people are choosing careers in the trades — jobs that AI will never be able to replace.

When I was in college in the early ’80s, a bachelor’s degree was the ticket into the corporate world, where “the good jobs were.”

At that time, few people were able to get their foot in the corporate door without first earning that diploma.

Now, however, with a glut of liberal arts majors out there, even getting a toe in any corporate door is harder than ever.

Certifications in IT or cybersecurity are the way into a good corporate job now and you don’t need a university degree to get them.

Thus, it’s making less sense to borrow tens of thousands of dollars to fund a degree that may not lead to an entry-level corporate job — not one that isn’t likely to be outsourced to AI in the near future, in any event.

But it IS making a lot more sense to master a skilled trade.

Look, as millions of skilled tradespeople from the baby boomer generation retire, there’s a massive shortage of workers with the skills needed to replace them.

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, there are currently more than 8 million job openings for the trades — jobs such as electricians and plumbers that can pay well over $100,000 a year once a tradesperson is established.

That’s leading more college-educated people to give up white-collar, paper-pusher jobs to get into the trades.

As reported in the Washington Post, one 29-year-old in D.C. — with a degree from Notre Dame — considered going to law school, like many others in that lawyersaturated town.

After watching his friends work long hours as paralegals — and watching his lawyer pals sign their lives over to their big firms — he did something sensible. He became an electrician’s apprentice.

He wasn’t alone. The Post said many more 20-somethings are forgoing the white-collar world to become plumbers, electricians, mechanics and carpenters — all highly satisfying careers that can pay seasoned tradespeople six-figure incomes.

I think it’s great. Don’t we already have too many paper-pushers and useless office types whose only skill is excelling at office politics and kissing the boss’s boots?

We need people with real skills — skills that AI can never replace.

AI will be used in the trades to enhance a tradesperson’s skills, say, to conduct better analytics to identify the cause of a specific challenge. But it will never replace the human who is highly skilled using the AI tools.

Besides, a skilled tradesperson can earn more than many lawyers do — and likely enjoy the highly satisfying hands-on work more.

My father would be 91 were he with us today. And in his infinite wisdom, he saw the “master-atrade” trend coming long ago.

When I was a 19-year-old college sophomore in 1982, he was so worried that I was an English major destined to a life of paper-pushing misery that he made sure I chose a practical minor that would always be there to help me pay the bills.

To this day, I am the only person ever to graduate from Penn State with a major in English and a minor in air-conditioning/heating!

Copyright 2025 Tom Purcell, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.

Subscribe to the online newsletter:

* indicates required
ePaper
google_play
app_store
It might also interest you...
A: Main, Main, ...
FISD joins multi-district lawsuit against social media companies
New middle school on track for completion by end of month
Michaela Rush 
May 16, 2025
After convening in a closed session, the Fredericksburg Independent School District board of trustees decided to enter a multi-district lawsuit agains...
A: Main, Main, ...
Reverse Fire cause determined
Firefighters have it 100% contained
May 15, 2025
The cause of the Reverse Fire, which was 100% contained by firefighters on Wednesday, was burning debris, according to the Texas A&M Forest Service. T...
DANCEHALL NIGHT DIVAS
Main, News
DANCEHALL NIGHT DIVAS
May 14, 2025
Above, LaVerne Kothmann celebrated her 96th birthday with a special dance selection with her grandson, Kadden Kothmann, at Saturday’s Dance Hall Night...
News
Commissioners eye library interior design work
By Ken Esten Cooke Standard-Radio Post publisher 
May 14, 2025
Furniture for seniors, children needs an upgrade, along with interior lighting, says head librarian Gillespie County commissioners on Monday agreed to...
News
National arts funding cuts not yet affecting local organizations
By Christine Granados Standard-Radio Post managing editor 
May 14, 2025
As federal funding for arts programs are being cut nationally, Gillespie County nonprofits, government organizations and foundations are saying they a...
News
Business properties see 24% jump in value
May 14, 2025
Business property up significantly in past three years; home values see slight increase Main Street properties in Fredericksburg saw significant incre...

Subscribe to the online newsletter:

* indicates required
ePaper
google_play
app_store
ePaper
google_play
app_store

Fredericksburg Standard
P.O. Box 1639
Fredericksburg, TX 78624-4228
830-997-2155

8:00 AM - 5:00 PM M-F

This site complies with ADA requirements

Copyright ©2025 Fredericksburg Standard

  • Advertisers
  • Contact
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Accessibility Policy