As you can tell by other people's reaction to your douche-ness in this thread, you're a borderline idiot. I pointed out this in particular because you "state" it as fact. I have no degree, only certs, started my IT career as a "PC Tech" and have been recruited by 2 different companies in 4 years and am knocking on a 6 figure salary in Kentucky.
Pointing out facts, by the way I never said a direct comment to anyone in this thread unlike you and one other guy above all of a sudden calling me a name, does not equate to douche-ness. Simple fact of the world is certs mean nothing. I'm willing to bet your case, as special as it is, has more to do with who you knew for those jobs than what you know.
Certs only get you a job working at geek squad. Nothing more. A kid fresh out of highschool has a better chance to earn a better job and a higher wage if they go to college instead of doing certs, or even worse, those DeVry or ITT vocational schools nowadays. That wasn't always the case, and many people 10-15 years ago DID get well paying jobs with just that. But those days are the past. Too many companies got screwed over by under-educated, incompetent IT people to go that route again. Not only that, there is too much groundwork and off the shelf solutions in today's world to have a need to hire over-priced IT techs for everything like it was done 10-15 years ago.
Basic computer tech jobs are not in demand, do not pay well, and realistically do not take much mental power to do by comparison to jobs that are higher pay and in higher demand such as computer programmers, or EEs, or something that requires a BS in something. I'm sorry if you are getting butt hurt over that fact, but it is a fact of the modern job landscape in the "IT" field. Which is a very broad category.
Besides you and a couple of others here, most of the people in this thread have all stated the same thing I have. Entry tech jobs are just barely above burger flipping in terms of pay and from now on will always be that way I would bet. If anyone is looking to earn more than that in the IT field and are just starting out then it's highly recommended to go get a degree from a reputable 4 year college for the specific type of "IT" person you want to me. Be that a developer, a network admin, a database admin, or whatever. There are degree programs for all the higher paying IT jobs out there.
Now if you have connections, then you don't have to go that route if you can leverage those connections. Who you know is always greater that what you know in terms of landing a job. Maybe not keeping the job, but landing it for sure. But not everyone has that.