You can't blame the advanced degrees so much. Lots of folks have advanced degrees and callouses. And I don't think it gets political, though it is scary. What's scarier is that it isn't new. We have come to routinely throw things away. It's cheaper to buy a new toaster than to repair the old one. I remember going with my grandmother to get our toaster repaired. Won't happen now. The Adult Education school here used to have a small appliance repair program. Gone these past 20 years -- no market for the skills. Packing gone in that old faucet? Cheaper to buy a new one from Taiwan than to bother fixing it. Makita expects me to throw away the cordless I bought in 1986 (for, as I recall, $140) since they made the new lithium batteries so they won't fit in the old drills. It's called planned obsolescence.
Some of can be blamed on "fiscal management." At their wages, what would it cost to list these things on eBay? To follow up on sales? Ooh! Not "cost effective!" Cheaper to dump than think.
And it's not just fine tools like these. What do you think happens to books culled from libraries? They sometimes get sold for a pittance, but after the sale, they get recycled. People rip off the bindings and toss the pages into bins along with old memos and used binder paper. You want stupid? A local library sent a 1998 edition of the Oxford English Dictionary to recycling, in near new condition. Some of us may be familiar with the OED. Last I looked, an OED was priced at over $3,000. I found and rescued two of the 13 volumes of the best, most authoritative English dictionaries in the world. "Well, it didn't sell ..." Well, who knew it was available? I sure didn't!
A lot of people know the price of everything and the *value* of nothing.
AP wrote: They ain't smart enough to put it on ePay cause they don't know what the hell it is.
And they're too lazy to find out.