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Well, although Philly is a great city, it is not NYC. And although some government jobs are better than others, maybe the IB and S&T jobs are just more exciting and risky and a whole lot less boring.</p>
<p>There is more to a job than the wages.
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<p>Philly and other less populated metro areas aren't NYC; that's why they are more attractive. I grew up 35 mins away from NYC. </p>
<p>Many government jobs are boring and mundane, but those aren't the ones I would ever settle for. IB and S&T is less exciting, less risky, and a whole lot more boring that what I do (and want to continue to do or pursue in the future).</p>
<p>Being an Asian male and serving in a capacity/branch such as an Infantry platoon leader is risky. Serving in a region (South Jersey) where Asians are under-represented in a branch (Infantry) where, again, Asians are under-represented and excelling is unusual. Competing and succeeding in being selected over your peers for coveted specialty assignments such as Scout Sniper Platoon Leader is uncommon. Being recognized by your elected officials such as your Congressman to the point where they call your cell phone once in a while to see how your civilian career and military career are progressing as if they are eyeing (and betting on) you for a political future is rare.</p>
<p>I can assure you that my appetite for risk is far greater than the typical IB and S&T candidate. I'm willing to bet my life on the quality of the people around me, my own competence, experience, and skill. Can they?</p>
<p>The last thing I ever want to be in life is a conformist. I see so many of my Asian peers follow in the foot-steps of some type of generic life template. Many go to med school and others end up working on Wall Street (for a few years), and while they may have achieved great personal and economic success in their endeavors, that's all they've done. They simply didn't have a greater purpose - their lives are passively boring.</p>
<p>I want to be a trailblazer. I want to go where no others have gone before. Maybe I'm that @sshole with a chip on my shoulder and I'm out to prove something. So be it.</p>
<p>Now to bring the discussion back after being slightly off tangent, yes, a career is more than simply wages. But if you're being paid better to do something you ACTUALLY love and don't view as some type of grind, then you found what most people never will.</p>
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<li>As a side note, I'm currently a software engineer at a defense contractor. I went to a public school and majored in Computer Science. I joined the ARNG during that time and that allowed me to graduate with zero debt without even using my federal educational benefits. I'm doing better financially than all my peers from high school that ended up going to big-name schools and working on Wall Street. Debt and cost of living just destroys them even if they can find a well paying job in the financial sector.</li>
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