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Old 02-14-2008, 02:52 PM   #14
-Allmusic-
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Join Date: Mar 2006
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Posts: 1,134
Interestingly though, FM, fewer young adults even seem interested in those ongoing discussions about moral and ethical issues. I don't think they come into play when they are choosing Economics to study, so as to enter the field of i-banking.

We don't plan on supporting our music son after graduation. He's got a great skill set beyond music, and if he can't make it in performance, he'll have to get a job doing something else. I don't look at it any differently than I would if I had a child who wanted to be an English major (that was me, hoping to write The Great American novel, as yet unpenned, although I went onto an entirely different career anyway). If you can't find a job in your chosen area of interest, you find something else.

Better than studying something you hate, just because you might be able to make a living doing it. That sounds dreadful to me, but hey, maybe I live in a fantasy world.
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