I think I agree with everything you're saying Puppy. But it seems everyone has a college degree these days and they are applying to jobs at nearly every level. People making hiring decisions usually have college degrees and are probably a bit biased towards hiring a candidate with one even if 95% if their job isn't anything they covered in school.
Hell even if you were a STEM major and got a job in a STEM field, you probably didn't have more than one class that focused on the technical things you're doing all day at your job. One crisis I see is all the pre-med majors where most of them obviously are never going to end up in a medical field so I'm not sure what they can do other than reinvent themselves somehow.
LEGIT QUESTION.
I am 100% serious.
How come art majors have to do MATH and Chemistry but STEM people can totally ignore art and other things like it despite being equally of value as chemistry or math? If everyone else has to suffer through the first two years and take MATH when all we wanna do is draw and paint then certainly it's ONLY FAIR that STEM people be forced to suffer with everyone else and take things that have nothing to do with their major they hate as well.
The colleges and universities here in SoCal require everyone take a bunch of general education courses regardless of their major.
I think there's a mandatory ~40% General Ed requirement for all majors in the UC/CSU system. That covers everything from art to history to science to math so some of it will be satisfied by the classes you're taking for your major.
Art history was my favorite subject.
