@talisay999 I'm not sure which country you're from but that's a pretty common theme across the west, teachers and people pushing retirement-age goes on about how you need to go to college/university and just study something they're interested in. Then when people graduate millions realize that there's not any actual demand for their degree in history or arts, and end up wasting 4 years of their life for an entrylevel position they would've gotten without it. Even worse in countries like the US where you often pay for your degree and end up with hundreds of thousands in debt and in a worse position than someone out of college. Sure it can be a smart idea to further educate yourself, but you need to be sure that your degree is actually useful for a career before dedicating large parts of your life to it.
That's what annoys me about the people spreading lies about it, on one hand you have the people in academia who are obviously heavily biased and on the other hand you have old people who think higher education has the same worth now as 30-40 years ago and constantly shill for it to the younger generation.
If you live in a country with high wages for unskilled labor it's a solid idea to just go straight into it, save and invest the money you make (instead of going into a deficit and spending years on an education) and try to build up passive revenue to fill the gap between your regular job and a sought-after educated position. Most people spend 4-5 years on a degree and another 3-4 to pay it off so they're basically on -/+ zero after eight years and THEN begin earning money from their degree, with eight years of investing half your salary you can breach that gap just fine. If you live in a country with very low minimum wages though like the US you really should consider spending a few years to learn a trade, even if education is what's gotten you in this mess. Unlike university it doesn't cost a fortune, pretty much all jobs are sought-after and they often only require a few years which you can do while working on the side to finance it.