This is maybe the only place in my life where some people are as left or lefter than me, so I'm curious on perspectives. I've been studying on my own with plans to pursue a competency-based degree online -- if I prove to myself that I care enough to stick with it.
Given that by now I've become acquainted enough with two jobs to become jaded, I'm wondering how CS is (initial puzzle-solving thrill versus six years later). The tech industry can be rife with chud shit, and I doubt someone with little experience could jump straight into freelancing or working in a more solo capacity. But it's an industry I'm wholly unfamiliar with.
My career experience (ignore these two walls of text if you don't want any exposition):
Journalism: Don't regret it, but solely because it taught me the valuable lesson that I won't always know what I'll actually want in life. Started as a super-lib and left a washed-out sucker. The average reporters I met were nauseatingly status-quo -- either true-and-through bootlickers or too naive to realize themselves as free PR agents for people in power. There's something about years of condensing complicated situations to a few grafs for laymen which rots your brain into an endless chasm of cheap metaphors, impotent virtue-signaling rage, and other cliche nonsense. Met a few good ones who felt trapped like I did, but my experiences with the industry and the average journalist I met were eyerolling. I've worked manual labor jobs where older men literally screamed insults at me, and they never treated me worse (in the ways that truly mattered) than journalists did. When you have no true allies, you don't feel good, and you're not making the world any better, it's time to leave. Seriously, fuck journalism in the USA.
Education: There's a certain comfort with privatization among many teachers I meet that bothers me, but the bedrock idealism of "My actions and words impact how a child thinks" is at least something capitalism can't ruin completely. There's also a fellow commiseration to the extent that many teachers know it's a flawed institution, but we're mostly in it together. Unlike journalism you at least find less eager bootlicking. I've considered getting my Masters and progressing since currently I'm just ESL-certified, which isn't much, but I could still see myself teaching in some capacity as a lifelong career since I've had my fair share of bad days over three years and I'm still motivated enough.
Even if you're working some start up, you're in a corporate job. Idealism does not factor into it even a little, unless you end up believing in their corp speak. College seemed to hammer out idealism pretty quick, my instructors would straight up tell you that you're better off just doing this for money, because your dream job probably fucking sucks.
I got into freelance stuff right out of college, because the tech sector fuckin loves the gig economy. It pays well, I've met 0 people left of Bloomberg, but most people above entry level will never talk about politics, so who knows.
Do you think it's unrealistic to plan a CS career with no prior experience while getting to remain abroad? I left the US a few years ago and am not interested in going back, to the extent that I'd probably even abandon a good career opportunity if it meant I got to remain abroad.
I don't really know much about the job market in other countries. Experience is pretty much the only thing that matters though so I'd say it all depends on whether you can get that first job or not.
Or you could just lie on your resume, either or.