Good Jobs with No Degree?

In today's economy and job market, what are some comfy or easy tech (or even non-tech) jobs that:

>Pay well ($60k+)
>Don't require a degree

Hard mode: Same criteria but remote work.
God mode: Little or no talking on the phone.

Are those of us without a degree limited either to low paying jobs or manual labor?

And to the user previously who said "Energy Auditor" for $70k: What companies hire for this? What do you do all day when hired? How does someone get into this?

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degree is not important if you can demonstrate skills. if you have no skills you will not be hired.

What kinds of skills, especially without formal qualifications or certs?

Git gud.

my brother is an environmental engineer and he never went to college. he got an internship and is now making around $150k per year after overtime/traveling
it's not really tech but it's an option.

I didn't get a degree and now I make 250k at Meta at 25 years old.

did you put your github or something on your resume + what language did you use?

I want to believe but I can't. You must be a master coder then or something. Details?

he is clearly a liar, how can you fall for his?

>engineer
>no degree
americans

>implying you take all of that home

my dad is director of engineering for a hospital system in a major city and he went to community college kek
america fuck yeah

Obviously the answer is Software Engineer or We Developer.

Roughneck

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Peace sells, but who's buying?

good morning sir

>start at amazon at 10 years old, since I lived around the corner
>work hard every day
>skip meals when shit needs to get done
>age 16, promoted to floor manager
>people try to report me multiple times and try to get the company taken down
>every local council meeting is about how we should be thankful for the jobs amazon's providing
>now i'm regional manager making 300k a year
It's really about personal choice.

Pass actuarial exams. 4 exams done puts you in the 90k range.

Buy kneepads and chapstick
Suck a million dicks for 1$

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Audio transcriptionist, particularly in a specialized field like law or medical. You don't need a degree but will likely need certifications.

>The actuarial credentialing and exam process usually requires passing a rigorous series of professional examinations, most often taking several years in total, before one can become recognized as a credentialed actuary.

>most often taking several years in total, before one can become recognized as a credentialed actuary.