For the “insiders” already referred to in para. 10 and 11
above, the issue is non-existent.
But for the “outsiders”, all out of work, success
probabilities of between one in 36 and one in 5,000 can mean far too long a
time out of work for the people in that position to retain any control at all
over their affairs, financial or otherwise.
So then some of the job seekers are ruined financially, and
are then criticised endlessly by their peers for “...not knowing what they are
doing...”, having the “...wrong attitude...”, and so on.
What these job seekers are actually trying to do, in managing
their financial affairs, is to solve a mathematical problem which has no
solution.
Hence the criticisms levelled at them are both incompetent
and un-professional - and are all coming from people who are supposed to know
what they are doing, but actually don’t know and don’t care and only interested
in showing off within their little cliques how “tough” they think they are.
They are actually criticising the unsuccessful job seekers
for not solving an unsolvable mathematical problem, the nature of which the
critics are ignorant of and wish to remain ignorant of.