Ha indeed. I have a liberal arts degree (in History no less) and I’m not sure I can articulate three causes of the French Revolution. Something about not liking cake, as I recall.
I have a BA in math (could never figure that one out - Math was in the school of Sciences, but the degree was a Bachelor of Arts); worked 20 years as an Actuary; currently work in data analytics. I used more advanced mathematics in the actuarial exams than I did in the job. What the math major really did for me was teach me how to think, how to reason, how to know when the answer was wrong. I currently do a lot of “This looks reasonable; this looks reasonable; hey, this dropped by 30% - why? Let’s dig into that!” Yeah, that’s a skill that might come from experience, but there’s a whole lot of people out there doing my job (or similar) that don’t do that.
The other parts of my degree from a Liberal Arts college made me a more rounded individual - made me appreciate the arts, improved my writing (which always helps in a business environment!), helped pique my curiosity in a number of areas. Wouldn’t swap it for the world.
I have a BA in Physical Anthropology and an MA in Anthropology. I have never made a dime working in either discipline. BUT…I got them both from prestigious universities and most potential employers don’t even look beyond the name of the university to see what the degree is. They see I’m a YYYY graduate (with honors) and skip on to the next question.
The field I’ve worked in for the last 45 years is, however, a direct result of the financial-aid package student job I had as an undergraduate. (No, I don’t clean student dining room tables.)