A common piece of life advice I see is "work in trades" instead of going to college, and while I think there is certainly some value in exploring alternative paths rather than going into debt for a dime-a-dozen degree, I do wonder how the advice of working in trades proliferated. It is career advice that sounds good on paper, but is also not as cut-and-dry as the comments would have you believe.
I'm sure it started from hearing random folks who supposedly work in trades are making great money, but the concept of working in trades becoming pushed more and more by the redpill community seems a bit suspicious to me. When did the sentiment of working in trades start to become more common? Was there a particular person or organization who made it more popular?
I think it is important to understand the origins of "popular" sentiments in order to truly determine whether there is an ulterior motive. For example, the common idea of "there aren't enough people in STEM" isn't really true, it's just a claim made by industries to pressure Congress into allowing them to import more cheap labor.
Could there potentially be a larger interest pushing the idea of working in trades as being a lucrative career path? Perhaps it is far-fetched to assume that there are greater forces at play who have an interest in convincing people to work in trades, but trades play a crucial role in maintaining a functional society, and without these people, the current status quo would fall apart. Glorifying trades would upset the status quo of "intellectualism," but appealing to male pride and honor and appealing to the men who see the futility of modern society is a viable means of ensuring that men remain working for a system that thinks lesser of them.
I'm not saying that working in trades is bad or that going to college is better. Working in trades is very admirable, but it is also important to be mindful that there is no surefire pathway to wealth or a fulfilling life. Neither STEM or trades may be the gateway to success that is pushed on the internet, and it is important to consider the path you take based on the circumstances you have been given.
Life experience, mostly.
Before I went to school, I spent a summer cleaning up after trades in residential housing to save up money (paid my rent and bills for the first two years).
After I graduated, and got a job in my field, I was making the same as I was before.
I stuck with it for five years and got my wage up maybe 20% beyond that.
I got into a situation where I wasn't working and needed income fast, so I got into roofing (barely a trade, usually not even unionized). I made 25% more than I had been making in my first year roofing than I had with five years of experience and a bachelors degree. And then I got raises. And then I started taking side jobs.
There is literally as much money as you want to make in trades, all you have to do is get it.
There is no conspiracy behind trades. The conspiracy is that everyone can pay to get a magic piece of paper that will allow them to get rich without straining themselves, and that's being pushed by the diploma mills and whoever is making money off student loans.