<p>???</p>
<p>Strippers</p>
<p>If you don’t overdo it with drugs</p>
<p>Define your standards for quality of life. Everybody is different. Some might want a lot of money and want to work a lot. Some dislike a 9-5 office job.</p>
<p>If someone doesn’t want to work very much, a 9-5 job is a pretty good deal. Especially since there’s usually a lunch and a few breaks in there, that makes it as little as seven hours of work per day. The people who work in excess of twelve hours per day would probably like that plan.</p>
<p>I would say that the job with the highest quality of life is a job that the person enjoys.</p>
<p>I would say Supreme Court Justice. You get several months off per year, a decent salary, enough fame to get you a nice table, but not so much that you’re hassled on the street; can meet interesting people, have clerks to help write opinions, and get to spend your time on the job discussing important legal questions; which, if one has achieved that level, one obviously has a passion for.</p>
<p>^I think I’d have to agree on that one. However, applicants for those positions are quite competitive…And the interviews are killers…</p>
<p>And at the end of the day, the media is going to convince every American that you eat puppies for lunch and babies for late night snacks.</p>
<p>That’s only before you’re appointed. Like I said, the interviews kill. But after you get the job, it’s smooth sailing for the rest of your life.</p>
<p>It matters what you consider a high quality of life. Look for jobs that allow you to do at work and outside of work the things that you value. </p>
<p>I don’t value having a luxurious lifestyle, but I do value having lots of flexibility and independence when it comes to doing my job. I also value being able to travel, to learn, and being able to help others. For me, being a college prof resulted in a high quality of life. That wouldn’t be the case, however, for people whose values are different than are mine.</p>
<p>Clergy have the highest job satisfaction.</p>
<p>
Mathematicians are also highly satisfied; see [JobsRated.com:</a> A Comprehensive Ranking of 200 Different Jobs - CareerCast.com](<a href=“http://www.careercast.com/jobs/content/JobsRated_Top200Jobs]JobsRated.com:”>http://www.careercast.com/jobs/content/JobsRated_Top200Jobs) .
That said, people who become mathematicians tend to have somewhat unusual value systems.</p>
<p>lol. I like how the non-technical and non-math-related people are doing everything they can to attack the validity of that list</p>
<p>Good advice that I heard, is to find a job that you would do for free. If you would do your job without compensation then that is a great job. And from the ones that you would do for free, pick the one that gets paid the most. ;)</p>
<p>engineering ftw :D</p>
<p>uhm, CEO</p>
<p>I have to agree with engineering. MOST of those jobs take place in an air-conditioned office with smooth hours and off-time. :)</p>