The following career-choice diagram looks silly:
"Go into finance" is a career plan; "Don't go into finance" is the absence of a plan, so it shouldn't be a choice-node. It makes more sense for the diagram to look like:
Similarly, many people seem to implicitly use something like the following career-choice diagram when thinking about school:
However, "don't go to school" isn't a career plan, so it shouldn't be a choice node. The diagram should look more like:
I tend to agree. A lot of people seem to talk about dropping out, but without great ideas about what they would do next.
People quitting to work for an alignment org that deems them useful - I'm in favour of it.
Programmers quitting their jobs to learn about AI safety - hard to have a better safety net than that, so go for it!
But students who are not yet useful enough to be hired, without enough indicators of excellence to suggest they could quickly become a top apprentice, without any particular distaste for the school system, and without any affinity for entrepreneurship? Many such people should stay in the school. If they are interested in academics, or theory, or they need a US visa, then especially so.