There have been a lot of informative answers here but I do not appreciate it when someone stereotypes me and starts making claims on things I never even said...
Anyway, my only interest in aerospace stuff would be participating in building space-related design, creation, whatever anything is involved in creation of such a thing, and if there are limited opportunities in doing this type of work I think I will find something else. I simply wanted to know what the job market would be like in that field. I am actually trying very hard to be realistic in this scenario. I figured aerospace engineering would be the best degree for such an endeavor, but as I have learned here, even if I were able to secure such a job it would likely be more beneficial to have it in mechanical or electrical or something.
I am not particularly settled on what I want to get a bachelor's in, but I know one day I want a PhD, as of this point. That may change in the future. I am very interested in many of the STEM fields, particularly the esoteric unknown fields, like astrophysics or throwing something in space. Not so much the content itself, but how I would be participating in interesting, next-era stuff. Unfortunately, of course, that also so happens to be the fields where there is not many jobs...
I've been doing a lot of "soul-searching" the last few months, and I keep teetering from engineering to science. I cannot seem to find clear definitions of what exactly I can expect to do with a certain engineering degree. While these fields are often claimed to be very "broad", surely there is a limit to what they can not do...
I'm not too worried about money - I'd just like to have a job I enjoy. As of now, I do not plan on having any children, at least much earlier in life, so that may make going for a PhD more doable. If mechanical, chemical, and electrical engineering are so broad, is there a list of potential job descriptions of those who would hire one in each of these respective fields (outside of actually looking at specific jobs on a job-searching website)...
How do engineers function in the actual work setting? Are they more often doing actual work that they have learned how to do or in an office? I am under the impression that engineers who have been in the field for a while often are promoted to "Management" positions. Is this true? If so, what does "Management" entail? Do I have to play with "Finances" and "Money"? I ask this because I absolutely hate capitalist crap and worrying about "making money" and "making a profit" for the company... Nothing against anyone who does, I just cannot envision myself taking such a "Management" position seriously. I don't want to be involved in an affair that includes doing that sort of thing, UNLESS my impression of such a thing is incorrect. If someone could explain that to me without making me feel stupid or something, that would be appreciated.
That's why I keep finding myself lured back to the sciences, despite the atrocious job outlook for PhDs in such fields looking for careers in academia, I feel it is more disconnected from the business world than other fields. I think the only type of business/industrial type stuff they have to worry about is university funding, grant-writing, whatever, and a professor does what he does and only does what he does - research and teaching, if the resources are there... That is my impression of what its like - please correct me if I am wrong, in a non-condescending manner please.
Thanks for all the responses thus far, it has been very good to hear actual stories of where you guys have been and done. While I always prefer statistics to anecdotes, you cannot get the descriptive stories and background with the statistics alone, and you've all given me a lot of great information
I am really tired of looking at all this stuff, every day I come on and look at different things I could major in, different careers to pursue, I am growing tired of seeing everything interesting have some sort of caveat. What can people actually get their BS and get a job one day? Everything I've found only says engineering, nursing, and medical stuff is worth it nowadays... I don't care about the money really that much, but I still want to have a stable, decent income in a job with the field I actually studied to be in. . .