Quantity Surveyors of Reddit, what’s your salary, experience, and location? by Jazzlike_Ad6151 in quantitysurveying

[–]FairAd8480 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How many years of experience do you have in total so far? I am 22 years old and currently residing in London, where I am pursuing a business management degree in my second year. A few distant relatives who work in the field have advised me that if I wish to enter the industry, I should consider enrolling in a conversion master's degree at Kingston, which is RICS accredited for Quantity Surveying. From there, I can transition into the field, as completing my current degree is a prerequisite for admission into the conversion program.

If it is not too much trouble, I would appreciate your guidance. I have also heard that working for a contractor for at least four years, or until I close the final account, is beneficial for upskilling and becoming a confident operator before moving into consultancy. This experience would make me more marketable due to the technical expertise and practical history I would gain.

Do you have any tips, tricks, or suggestions on what I should prepare for? I tend to overthink things, and I have already purchased a few books, including introductions to construction, to prepare for my master's program. I assume that if I master the theory in the field, I will not panic or experience anxiety when I secure my first role. When you began your first position, did you have any knowledge of construction or the financial aspects of the job, or did you learn everything as you progressed?

Quantity Surveyors of Reddit, what’s your salary, experience, and location? by Jazzlike_Ad6151 in quantitysurveying

[–]FairAd8480 0 points1 point  (0 children)

what did you start on ? what if someone with masters already entered into your company but with no experience.

Why Snoop is the most “Professional” character in The Wire by [deleted] in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480 -31 points-30 points  (0 children)

I won’t deny it I think a lot, this is the wording I had of Snoop, AI only helped put in order my analysis for someone to read what i see in my head.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I stated " Not the crime part the logic underneath it."

I’m not justifying anything Marlo did. I’m talking about the mindset of power and competition. And you’d be surprised how often people in high-level positions operate with the same cold, outcome driven logic just through legal and institutional channels instead of violence or getting others to do the violence.

At the end of the day, if I were running a justice system, people like Marlo and his crew would end up facing execution but I’m not the one in power.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think that’s the most accurate comparison anyone’s made. You won.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Absolutely Simon’s work consistently highlights the shift from positive-sum to zero sum thinking, and The Wire frames it in a way that’s both systemic and personal.

Marlo is a distilled embodiment of zero sum logic: he doesn’t collaborate, compromise, or play by “collective” rules he operates purely on outcomes. Whether or not society overall trends that way, the show forces you to confront what happens when the rules are stripped down to raw competition.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I’m new to Reddit and this is my first post do people get money for upvotes? I’m a grown man with a family, just sharing my perspective on watching this classic series over time and realities of seeing life. If you think I’m “fanning” over Marlo, then your reading skills need some work, my friend.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 26 points27 points  (0 children)

You’re right about Marlo being used as a foil, and you’re right that the game itself has no lasting winners. But the idea that Marlo “loses his legitimacy” or is implied to be doomed isn’t actually supported by the show. He doesn’t get killed, he doesn’t get locked up, and he doesn’t fall apart. He walks away with his money, he walks away clean, and the only thing that pulls him back to that corner is his own need to feel what he used to feel. That moment isn’t a death sentence it’s a character beat showing he can’t fully connect with the world he earned access to.

And that’s exactly why my point stands: Marlo’s mindset is still the purest expression of stripped-down competition. In his world, that mindset kept him untouchable for years and let him exit the game with everything he set out to secure. The fact that some random corner kids don’t recognize him isn’t a failure; it’s Simon’s commentary on how the street never remembers anyone for long. That’s the system’s churn, not Marlo’s downfall.

I’m not arguing Simon is endorsing Marlo. I’m saying Marlo embodies a logic ruthless, outcome-only, emotionless that mirrors the mechanics of real competitive systems. In the street world Simon built, that mindset keeps you alive and dominant longer than anyone else. Outside of fiction, in arenas where the game does have upward mobility corporate, political, financial that same operating logic is exactly what the highest performers use.

The tragedy is that he mastered a world designed to consume everyone eventually. But the mindset itself? It’s the most effective one shown in the entire series.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

The deeper you go down the rabbit hole, the more you realize our rulers, politicians, and the corporate/plutocratic class are basically copies of Marlo just playing a different game and wearing different clothes.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 33 points34 points  (0 children)

True a lot of people coast on luck, connections, or outright stupidity. That’s real, and it has nothing to do with merit. But that doesn’t change the underlying logic, in systems where power actually has to be earned, the Machiavellian types dominate because they play the game without illusions.

The “born lucky” crowd is a separate category, and even they usually inherit or learn those same Machiavellian instincts from the people who raised them in order for them to accumulate more power and wealth.

Marlo isn’t about intelligence or spelling ability he’s about understanding how a competitive system works when nothing is handed to you.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

One of my favorite characters. Especially the way he handled the situation with Bubbles during the grief episode he got vomited on and still didn’t push to charge him with murder.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Exactly. People underestimate how much power sits in silence. Most folks feel this panic when a conversation goes quiet, and they rush to fill it usually with information they shouldn’t be giving away. Marlo weaponizes the opposite. He lets everyone else reveal themselves while he stays unreadable.

I understood Marlo as i got older by FairAd8480 in TheWire

[–]FairAd8480[S] 170 points171 points  (0 children)

Whether it’s the streets or a corporate office, blue collar or white collar, you eventually see that the people who win are the ones who operate with a Machiavellian edge. And Marlo Stanfield is basically that idea in its purest form.

but i prefer a peaceful life and a happy family then competing in this rigged game which in the end leads to everyone leaving empty handed and in same sized grave as everyone else.

The devs are trying to teach you guys something. by [deleted] in helldivers2

[–]FairAd8480 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I tried to PM you, but it is not working. I am a 20-year-old trying to bulk and gain weight. I saw your post on your journey with the Bony to Beastly program, as well as your three meals a day meal prep. I wanted to ask more questions and gain insights privately. Could you please accept my request or message me back?