If that was in reference to what I said, I'll reiterate: most careers do not require a potential employee to spend four years at a university, only one (maybe!) of which will be relevant to their job for any reason other than that they've been told they should. That unhealthy notion itself sprung from the culture of the generation which gave birth to the '80s-'90s kids, more or less, which developed this notion that the way to ensure your children had a good future was to send them to university, which would fast-track them to a high-paying job... except that that is meaningless when everyone who can push grades for scholarship money, get a student loan, &c. can get the same degree.
Literally all that happened was that the cost of entry into the real workforce was raised by thousands of dollars. Jobs have not suddenly become more complex across a broad spectrum in the last twenty to thirty years, and even if they had, they still wouldn't require three years of broad-and-shallow general education on top of secondary school. Because news flash: there have always been complex jobs. The only difference is, it used to be that you were taught how to perform a job when you were hired, rather than being required to jump through financial and social-networking hoops before... being taught how to perform the same job when you are hired because an undergraduate degree will almost never provide the full body of knowledge to perform a job unless it's... a trade school.
Which, incidentally, is the way to deal with any jobs which are right at that lukewarm level of complexity between "You need no special education to perform your job," and "Come see us when you have your Master's/doctorate,": trade school. Except don't call it trade school, wouldn't want to offend the future white-collar workers. Incidentally, that's more or less what law school is: trade school for those going into the legal profession (with an extra year of bullshit tacked on, according to the vast majority of law professors I've spoken with regarding it--more than a few advocate for making it an independent two-year deal without the undergrad requirement or fluff), plus the requirement to waste four years doing an undergraduate degree which will at best provide a bit of support for future law students insofar as that it gets the most basic concepts out of the way.