I suspect that in many cases, 'environmental concerns' equate to 'not in my back yard'. There are valid concerns, but there are too many people who seem to be 'whatever it is I'm agin it'.
A common complaint in the UK over the last forty years has been 'we're not educating enough scientists/engineers/technologists'. This in a country that started the industrial revolution... it always struck me that the complaints give the government the perfect opportunity to sponsor people to take degrees in, say, engineering, teaching, medicine (whatever they expect to be short of) rather than expecting people to be seriously in debt when they get their degree. A mechanism to require said graduates to remain in the field for enough years to pay back their training costs - no actual payment unless you leave that field of employment, and pro-rata if you leave the field before your time is up.
It's not unreasonable to _enable_ anyone who is capable to get to university; it is unreasonable to get them their to get degrees in comparative basket weaving (thanks, RAH, for the quote). (I saw a meme recently that pointed out that you can get a degree in pyramid archeology. There are however almost no jobs in that field, so your only option is teaching pyramid archeology... it's literally a pyramid scheme
)
jgh: managers driving trains is not perhaps a good example: most of the managers are perhaps ex-drivers, and there are a _lot_ fewer of them than actual drivers. Certainly the service is not up to the usual shambles of British Rail (or indeed Deutsche Bahn as we have to suffer over here).
But again, regarding high-tech jobs and skills: what do you expect when your MBAs kept exporting your production to somewhere _that was cheaper this year_; when companies like HP and IBM deliberately sack, er, I mean of course, encourage to leave, their older workers - the ones who developed the processes and systems and know how they work.
IBM in particular wants to replace its workers with AI - and the AI simply doesn't work:
https://www.theregister.com/2024/09/24/ ... ai_talent/ - Is there any reason why anyone wants what might be laughingly called a career in such a place?
Neil
p.s. small world department: my parents were friends with a chap who was the head of a UK university electronics department. Nearly forty years after I last saw him, I discovered he had educated my at-the-time boss.