A lot of us are freelancers here on steem so while we believe cryptocurrency has a future it's hard not to rely on USD in today's world. To make ends meet we do what? Sell our art, sell our talent, pick up odd jobs, donate plasma, anything to pursue our hobbies and passions. It's worth it in the end, the time not stuck 9-5 it is worth the extra time spent doing our creative works.
I was researching odd jobs; specifically, ones that could be done at home with small children. And came across an independent agent gig that doesn't seem too shabby. You would set you own hours, it pays roughly 300-600 dollars a day, and there are opening in every state.
Who is this work for, well that's the thing. It's for the enemy.... Wall Street dun dun dun. But not just Wall Street but the agency that oversees all of Wall Streets wheels and deals, finra.
The job is arbitration, they pay for you to become certified and then you randomly get selected for cases as they appear in your home state. The requirements are pretty low: five years working any profession, two years of college, and you have to become certified which involves a fairly simple process (2ish days of studying and a test that looks simple if you pay somewhat attention during "class time").
I think it would be interesting to get to know the financial rules, regulations, procedures of Wall Street a little better. I could see that being beneficial to my future in investing, saving, potentially making millions on cryptocurrency! Bahaha wicked evil laugh!
Seriously though, check out finra.org for more information if you don't believe me.
They are taking applications from all fifty states, provide free training, you become a certified arbitrator (which you can use elsewhere too), and they pay up to 600 dollars for a full work day.
The website itself contains lots of useful financial information and kind of let's us all know what happened to the stock market (insider business and loose regulations funded by well those same business men).
Meme was created by me on imgflip.com and information was paraphrased from finra.org.