I'm unconcerned how this tweet will make you feel by the time you finish reading it.
I hope young people copy one example from Job other than just studying further. If you just continue collecting qualifications blindly, you'll end up with many qualifications you can't use at once because they don't compliment each other, looking like a mad man who goes from one dustbin to another, collecting all sorts of cana and plastics just to carry.
Job studied one course up to PHD level, then added a complementary PGD for a lawmaker that he is.
We have people in this country with hundreds of qualifications: 3 Honours, 2 Masters, a PHD, 3 PGD, 5 certificates, all in 6 different fields. That's not education but an academically lost person.
The concept of making things work with few resources is constant everywhere - resourcefulness. If you aren't useful with a few qualifications, you won't be useful with many. It's a sign you are not resourceful and haven't figured out your purpose.
We have been fooled to believe those with the most qualifications are the most intelligent. That's a lie. Many are not convinced they're intelligent enough so they study to hide that shallowness behind qualifications.
As we study further, let's choose complimentary qualifications/fields. After all, qualifications in 1 or 2 fields never just cover 1 or 2 fields. They overlap with many other fields. You'd always find an Accounting module in non-Accounting programmes, or a Commercial Law or Economics course in other programmes.
If you need to study every course to understand everything, you're that mad man, and you'd realize many with qualification poitjies can't do much productive with them; even just to write a book.
NB: The most useful people in this country have 1 or 2-field qualifications, complimented maybe by a people/project/business (etc.) management qualification.