If I came across as looking down, that was absolutely not my intention. I started with minimum wage when I bagged groceries. I though "this sucks, I'm not going to do this long" and I didn't. Got a job doing something else that paid a bit more. It just strikes me as odd that older people have minimum wage jobs when they've lived here all their life and worked for most of it too. I guess maybe they didn't learn any sort of marketable skill, but I doubt it. It just seems like something more is going on in that situation, what it is, no idea.
I do agree that a lot of skilled labor professions are going away and that's sad. Kids have the "go to college or you won't get a good job" crammed into their head to the point that they don't even understand that there are plenty of jobs that require training, but no degree. My brother in law is a plumber. He isn't even 30 and makes over $100k a year because he's good at what he does and he's smart. He dropped out of high school and I don't know if he ever got his GED. It just wasn't for him, nothing wrong with that I guess, but it doesn't seem to have hurt him at all.
I guess that may be my point. I've just seen so many people start at the bottom and work their way out of it that I feel like anyone can. Granted, maybe not alone, but there are opportunities out there, but too many people feel like there aren't. People need to be shown what is available to them. Apprentice programs are available for lots of different skilled labor jobs. From what I know, they make more than minimum wage and require little to no experience.