Been a machinist right at 30 years of manual and cnc and it's just not a trade to be in no more so what would be good that falls along our skills so looking to advance into something better that after so long of skill building that it be worth more than 20. A hour like in our trade seems today's time people seem to think anyone can do our job and thinks it has no value.
I really (and I mean REALLY) don't mean to offend here, but if you want to advance into areas outside of machining that pay well, one thing that will help you enormously is to improve your writing. For better or worse, how we write (spelling, formatting, grammar, etc.) is important and influences how people respond to you and judge your intelligence and education.
Your post is one long run-on sentence, with grammar, spelling, and case errors. Again, not trying to beat on you, it's just that if you write like this when responding to job offerings you're likely to not be treated seriously. [Edit: I take back the spelling errors, I read your post again and didn't see any]
If your posting is how you generally write, it will help you to take some HS or college writing courses, and do some self-study by reading books on subjects that interest you. But as you read, observe the writing style, how the sentence is structured, tenses, contraction usage (making sure to get your - you're right, that sort of thing), homonyms (hey, hay - wear, where - to, too, two), and the other "fun" rules of English.
FWIW, my spelling sucks, and I dread longhand writing. If forums and email didn't have spell checkers I'd look like an idiot. But even as "just a machinist", my decades of reading for knowledge and for fun have left me with a good vocabulary and a decent handle on sentence structure. You'll note that the vast majority of the folks who post here are the same, most of the writing here is quite good.
So take the time to get better at how you write - it'll help you for the rest of your life.
[Note: yes, doubtless there's mistakes in my post, have at me good sirs]