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They don't all have reasonable hours. Unless you think 4 am phone calls from nurses to report labs TwilightGardener Feb 2012 #1
Beats showing up at the jobsite at first light and working until darkness though. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #2
No, it doesn't. TwilightGardener Feb 2012 #15
One let's you retire at 55 though, and one has you drop dead at 55. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #25
Not necessarily. TwilightGardener Feb 2012 #41
I've found any job with that much UV exposure is not good for you longterm. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #47
I know two urologists who were on disability by age 60 mainer Feb 2012 #46
But I'm sure they have plenty saved up and it wasn't financially devastating. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #50
I'm a Union Bricklayer. I live in a NYC borough, I can answer any questions you have. FarLeftFist Feb 2012 #188
Because one has a skillset that has been deemed more valuable by society. Kurska Feb 2012 #114
Exact opposite. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #121
I have a good friend of mine who is a resident MD and sometimes works 24/7. Initech Feb 2012 #166
How deeply in debt is the bricklayer from all his years of bricklaying school? KamaAina Feb 2012 #3
Pobably more than the doctors MattBaggins Feb 2012 #12
wow - what a generalization dana_b Feb 2012 #38
Not an over generalization MattBaggins Feb 2012 #164
I imagine the relevance of your post would be if that number is unusually and consistently higher LanternWaste Feb 2012 #214
Stay classy. (nt) Posteritatis Feb 2012 #102
How many years at a surgeons salary does it take to pay off medical school bills? Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #17
It took me and my husband about 10 years. mainer Feb 2012 #21
So I'd have my loans paid off by the time I was 32. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #26
And if a doc starts paying off his loans at 30... mainer Feb 2012 #31
Guess they are living high on the hog at 30. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #36
Most doctors decide that at 30, it's now or never to have kids mainer Feb 2012 #39
Weird. I thought people were able to have kids after 30. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #43
If you're a woman, you don't want to have your first kid at 45. mainer Feb 2012 #59
That's why I married 8 years my junior. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #60
Drat, that was my mistake! Not marrying a man who was 8 years younger! mainer Feb 2012 #62
It's amazing that people seem to be able to support 2 kids on less than 50K a year. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #64
while paying off hundreds of thousands of dollars in loans? mainer Feb 2012 #66
both of us left medicine, by the way. mainer Feb 2012 #67
So tell me how much you were both making when you were 33? Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #73
Making: under $100,000. Student loans: close to $200,000. mainer Feb 2012 #81
A tad different, but still a very good salary. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #85
You appear to be rather confident when budgeting other people's money without knowing LanternWaste Feb 2012 #215
Wasn't that the reason I asked the question? Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #216
I made no inference as to why you asked a question. LanternWaste Feb 2012 #219
my sister was making $285k 1st year out of residency Dokkie Feb 2012 #165
An OB/GYN Sgent Feb 2012 #174
Yes, she was a surgeon mainer Feb 2012 #175
I was thinking more in the line Dokkie Feb 2012 #182
You are dissing your sister mainer Feb 2012 #206
My neurosurgeon didn't get out of training until he was 32 w8liftinglady Feb 2012 #42
I don't begrudge him. I just think you should be making a lot more money. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #45
A bricklayer's apprentice spends all day mixing mortar and hauling heavy block for Dragonfli Feb 2012 #148
I am not devaluing tradespeople KamaAina Feb 2012 #156
Because more people can be brick layers than they can be surgeons. kctim Feb 2012 #4
You sure about that? Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #19
Would you rather have a surgeon build your fireplace, or a bricklayer perform your surgery? 11 Bravo Feb 2012 #70
I know doctor who enjoys building stone walls mainer Feb 2012 #84
You continue to make little sense. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #123
It's minimization like that which is really disturbing. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #126
I wish we could "minimize" most surgery to the same level. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #136
Your right. Those "little" people should learn a new skill if they want more money. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #139
I can see that you know very little about trades or todays construction, or perhaps you are a Dragonfli Feb 2012 #154
Most that try it lack either the talent (it takes the talent of an artist you know) or the physical Dragonfli Feb 2012 #153
So how many people kctim Feb 2012 #218
So basically your argument is people will pay the doctors exorbitantly because of a death threat? Dragonfli Feb 2012 #229
Aw kctim Feb 2012 #233
You can have the bricklayer perform your next surgery... SidDithers Feb 2012 #5
Nurse, hand me that trowel pintobean Feb 2012 #20
That works both ways MichaelMcGuire Feb 2012 #44
When was the last time you needed an EMERGENCY home built?? JoePhilly Feb 2012 #125
LOL true nt MichaelMcGuire Feb 2012 #152
Emergency repairs are quite common, but being the expert you are, you know all about that. Dragonfli Feb 2012 #157
You still have it backwards. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #163
No I compared it to a homeowner that failed to maintain his home assume the bricks were perfect when Dragonfli Feb 2012 #170
What is "frustrating" is you claiming I said things that I did not say. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #186
what about sorefeet Feb 2012 #236
Pay should be tied to years of training combined with a valuation of skill/talent displayed Dragonfli Feb 2012 #173
Only problem.... Fastcars Feb 2012 #223
My sister is opting out of open heart surgery right now, she can't get the funding Dragonfli Feb 2012 #226
Emergency repairs aren't performed by unskilled workers, and hence are expensive. Donald Ian Rankin Feb 2012 #199
The whole point of this OP is that they are not "well paid". Not all of these skilled tradespeople Dragonfli Feb 2012 #203
I'm afraid I think that most of the facts you cite are inaccurate Donald Ian Rankin Feb 2012 #211
I have worked in three trades for all my life, This is not the UK (35 year career) Dragonfli Feb 2012 #224
Surgeons are paid more because there are fewer of them AngryAmish Feb 2012 #6
I have found that the highest barrier to being a surgeon is family money. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #23
Nope. Loans all the way for us. mainer Feb 2012 #35
Generally I find very few doctors that do not come from good families though. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #40
well, I'm the daughter of a cook mainer Feb 2012 #49
What is a good family? What does that even mean? MineralMan Feb 2012 #53
I've found that those "American Dream" yarns to not be the norm though. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #57
Is that what you've found? MineralMan Feb 2012 #58
Actually I do. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #61
In my medical school, there were quite a few from blue-collar families mainer Feb 2012 #65
Huh? Yo_Mama Feb 2012 #191
The AMA is a union which controls the supply of doctors. lumberjack_jeff Feb 2012 #71
The AMA is nothing but a shill for the pharmaceutical companies anymore. hunter Feb 2012 #90
One of my best friends is a primacy care physician. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #124
Exactly! It's barriers to entry. Jim Lane Feb 2012 #200
Part of it is the responsibility for a human life. MineralMan Feb 2012 #7
OOOh, look at you too high and mighty to use a self-taught surgeon AngryAmish Feb 2012 #18
I apologize profusely to all self-taught surgeons. MineralMan Feb 2012 #22
lolz JNelson6563 Feb 2012 #107
I worked in construction when I was growing up ... my dad taught me ... JoePhilly Feb 2012 #129
Thanks. I learned a lot of things from my father, too. MineralMan Feb 2012 #172
Wow. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #195
You ought to see my patio. Ron Green Feb 2012 #8
surgeons do not work fewer than 5 days a week mainer Feb 2012 #9
+1 JoePhilly Feb 2012 #130
Maybe because med school cost more than masonry training. eom tawadi Feb 2012 #10
This is not a good example to make the point cthulu2016 Feb 2012 #11
Perhaps you are right. I just think the spread is ridiculous. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #24
Oh, wait. Did you leave out the sarcasm thingy? mainer Feb 2012 #13
doctors average 105.00 per hour madrchsod Feb 2012 #14
not sure what you're after, but I'll answer in straightforward fashion DisgustipatedinCA Feb 2012 #16
I'm just pondering how blue collar labor is minimized. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #30
With the ease of a right wink think tank ... apparently... sadly....on a Democratic site Dragonfli Feb 2012 #158
I spend time on various computer hardware forums and tech websites MicaelS Feb 2012 #232
I've known some do-it-yourself types who could lay bricks. Recovered Repug Feb 2012 #27
Thinking again, you might want a bricklayer to do MineralMan Feb 2012 #28
Scarcity. There are a lot more people capable of laying bricks than performing surgery. Tierra_y_Libertad Feb 2012 #29
Part of that is control of the supply bu the US Medical establishment ProgressiveProfessor Feb 2012 #72
“Dammit Jim, I’m a doctor not a bricklayer!” cthulu2016 Feb 2012 #32
because most people would rather have a broken wall than be dead. Warren DeMontague Feb 2012 #33
I'm sure there are pintobean Feb 2012 #34
Good point about the hours. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #37
I agree that brick layers should be better compensated BUT dana_b Feb 2012 #48
When you say "making some money" what kind of figures are we talking about? Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #51
Bricklayers are paid by contractors and homeowners, aren't they? mainer Feb 2012 #56
Sounds like a race to the bottom to me. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #63
So pay your bricklayer more. mainer Feb 2012 #69
You are confusing bricklayers with gardeners Dragonfli Feb 2012 #159
Got some facts wrong there. Ms. Toad Feb 2012 #52
The career is changing mainer Feb 2012 #54
What does sex ratio have to do with Surgeon vs. Brick Layer? Neoma Feb 2012 #204
I'm addressing the stereotype of the evil rich white male doctor mainer Feb 2012 #207
How long does it take to learn how to butter a brick? badtoworse Feb 2012 #55
About the same amount of time it takes to learn how to put in a stitch. lumberjack_jeff Feb 2012 #75
Oh right. It's just like sewing a dress. mainer Feb 2012 #82
You make it sound like cleaning fish badtoworse Feb 2012 #104
Because a brinklayer never saved my life or saved me from being crippled the rest of my life. sarge43 Feb 2012 #68
My point is that blue collar workers should be paid A LOT more not that Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #76
Agree that blue collar workers are getting the shaft and are not being paid what they deserve. sarge43 Feb 2012 #92
Never never never said that surgeons are paid too much. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #106
In so many words, no you didn't, but you implied as much sarge43 Feb 2012 #135
And you saw something wrong with that. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #141
Male bovine fecal material sarge43 Feb 2012 #146
Check out Dragonfli's and nadinbrzynski's(sp?) posts and you will get it. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #209
*Skilled* manual labourers *are* paid a lot. Donald Ian Rankin Feb 2012 #197
Our society values philosophers more than plumbers? white_wolf Feb 2012 #88
I believe I wrote "A society ..." n/t sarge43 Feb 2012 #93
Good plumbing has probably saved more lives than good surgeons. Hassin Bin Sober Feb 2012 #91
Good point. For more people, that's probably true. sarge43 Feb 2012 #97
+1 n/t lumberjack_jeff Feb 2012 #162
And why do surgery centers get paid more than surgeons? Blue_In_AK Feb 2012 #74
The machinery of corneal transplant surgery is more important to the procedure. lumberjack_jeff Feb 2012 #79
Well, that's comforting. Blue_In_AK Feb 2012 #83
I'm saying that a machine is a machine. lumberjack_jeff Feb 2012 #161
why are bricklayers paid more than pizza delivery guys? spanone Feb 2012 #77
Why Do NBA PLayers Get Paid More The Social Workers? zorahopkins Feb 2012 #78
Another great question. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #80
Surgeons study for over decade savalez Feb 2012 #86
The lifestyle of surgeons is so brutal that only COLGATE4 Feb 2012 #87
Why does the Govt pay more to the killers of poor people raouldukelives Feb 2012 #89
My, my, aren't there a lot of jackasses in this thread! izquierdista Feb 2012 #94
What?? I don't know any surgeon that works less than a 60-70 hour week... tjwash Feb 2012 #95
I agree that manual laborers are underpaid and under appreciated. white_wolf Feb 2012 #96
I find that when folks post these kind of hypotheticals TBF Feb 2012 #98
Most surgeons would be kick-ass brick layers. hunter Feb 2012 #99
bargaining power killbotfactory Feb 2012 #100
Manual labour's horribly underpaid, but I'm not too offended at surgeons' pay. (nt) Posteritatis Feb 2012 #101
I appreciate the sentiment behind your post... w8liftinglady Feb 2012 #103
Would you pay 30% above the going rate for a house, Nye Bevan Feb 2012 #105
Absolutely if it was well built. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #110
Ummm ... When was the last time you needed an EMERGENCY BRICK LAYER???? JoePhilly Feb 2012 #108
You missed the point entirely. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #111
As I read more of the responses ... its clear that very few "got your point". nt JoePhilly Feb 2012 #115
Nope. Your father probably would have, but not you apparently. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #116
He knew a brick layer was never going to save your life. JoePhilly Feb 2012 #117
I'm sure your father would have liked to have been better compensated for his work. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #118
Everyone in this thread seems to be telling you the same thing. Kurska Feb 2012 #119
Thank you. n/t sarge43 Feb 2012 #140
excellent point Incitatus Feb 2012 #151
Obligatory Star Trek quote... slackmaster Feb 2012 #122
Your President does too dipsydoodle Feb 2012 #109
A lot of surgeons don't have good hours. backscatter712 Feb 2012 #112
A surgeon saved my life twice - don't emilyg Feb 2012 #113
Becoming a surgeon requires years of specialized education and training, and lots of money up front slackmaster Feb 2012 #120
That is true. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #127
On this we agree slackmaster Feb 2012 #142
I can't believe people are rec' ing this! Are you kidding me? Quantess Feb 2012 #128
That is not the point at all. Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #131
I read your OP and I don't think I missed anything. Quantess Feb 2012 #138
Your last line got it. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #210
Surgeons have the ability to kill people if they don't do their jobs correctly. Avalux Feb 2012 #132
because the input cost of obtaining an MD and successfully making it through residency is unbelievab Obama3_16 Feb 2012 #133
I am able to lay bricks. I have also laid real hardwood floors. Vinca Feb 2012 #134
Because their output is more valuable. Dreamer Tatum Feb 2012 #137
the medical profession CAUSES 225,000 deaths a year. provis99 Feb 2012 #143
Using that logic, Christmas cards cause Christmas. nt Dreamer Tatum Feb 2012 #145
you need to read on the definition of logic. provis99 Feb 2012 #147
definitely don't go to a surgeon for your next operation mainer Feb 2012 #176
I have laid bricks. SA, I would be happy to do any surgeries you might need... renie408 Feb 2012 #144
Time invested in training and ability to do the task... JSnuffy Feb 2012 #149
Something called supply and demand. Incitatus Feb 2012 #150
What is the source of your information about surgeons? You/your comparison are quite WRONG! Carolina Feb 2012 #155
You are going about it the wrong way nadinbrzezinski Feb 2012 #160
Congratulations. You absolutely nailed it. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #168
Finally an adequate answer, the poster IMO was not putting down MD's so much as supporting brickies Dragonfli Feb 2012 #169
Putting "down" the trades nadinbrzezinski Feb 2012 #179
BULLSEYE!!!!!!!!!!!!! Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #208
Forbidding doctors from working more than 40 hours a week would cause hospitals serious problems. Donald Ian Rankin Feb 2012 #212
When the state of new York cut resident's Shift hours from 36 to 24 nadinbrzezinski Feb 2012 #221
How much does that bricklayer pay for malpractice insurance every year? WillowTree Feb 2012 #167
Supply and Demand is the answer to most questions that involve "how much we pay" Egalitariat Feb 2012 #171
Another conundrum mainer Feb 2012 #177
Speak for yourself. I don't put less value on manual labor. gulliver Feb 2012 #178
Why do airline pilots make less than managers at McDonald's? mmonk Feb 2012 #180
Because the pilot doesn't have our lives in his hands? Little Star Feb 2012 #231
Frightening, isn't it? mmonk Feb 2012 #235
This is a joke question, right? You seriously don't know? Here's your answer: Honeycombe8 Feb 2012 #181
you could have easily been a bricklayer except you couldn't? pitohui Feb 2012 #185
Okay, so communication isn't your strong suit. Here's a restatement, Honeycombe8 Feb 2012 #190
Exactly alcibiades_mystery Feb 2012 #202
It's all about supply and demand FreeJoe Feb 2012 #183
because of class hate pitohui Feb 2012 #184
Don't know how to break this to you, but surgeons certainly do work with their hands. WillowTree Feb 2012 #194
Surgeons have been saving lives since the 14th century... SidDithers Feb 2012 #217
Go through 12-16 years of grueling education coming out with over $200,000 in debt fujiyama Feb 2012 #187
You're going to start your career with a chunkload of debt Yo_Mama Feb 2012 #189
Slightly different question: How much more should a surgeon make than a brick layer? limpyhobbler Feb 2012 #192
For the same reason ball players are paid more than surgeons. yellowcanine Feb 2012 #193
So much foolishness, I don't know where to begin. Donald Ian Rankin Feb 2012 #196
Good to see someone giv'n this thread the bidness! lonestarnot Feb 2012 #198
Sanity at last. Johnny Rico Feb 2012 #201
Are bricklayers paid more than doctors anywhere in the world? mainer Feb 2012 #205
I believe they used to make the same salaries in Cuba until a few years ago slackmaster Feb 2012 #225
I believe manual labor is merely but part and parcel of the total of value. LanternWaste Feb 2012 #213
My dad was a brickie Boudica the Lyoness Feb 2012 #220
Increasingly, the American labor force is becoming more and more specialized... YoungDemCA Feb 2012 #222
Another great point. nt Snake Alchemist Feb 2012 #228
Because a brick layer can't cliffordu Feb 2012 #227
It's all relative... kentuck Feb 2012 #230
This is easy. STATE LICENSING ProgressiveEconomist Feb 2012 #234
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