I'm in the same position and feel the same way, however you might as well go for one more year to get an AA degree. At least you'll have one to make the resume look a little better.
Sometimes I wonder if I don't enjoy college cause its community but truthfully I've lost interest in pursuing a university. Only because of price though. I mean if the teachers are 50 and still paying off THEIR student loans, what does that say for us. Rather take that $200,000 to start my own business then work for someone elses. I'm plenty intelligent, just don't have the patience and don't understand certain parts of the education system.
For example, why is community college $33 a unit, but a university is 50k a year?
Why does it take 6 years to get a 4 year degree?
Why can't I learn without doing a bunch of homework? This is a big one for me. I enjoy learning but I lose all that knowledge getting stressed from doing copious amounts of homework that is borderline unnecessary. I love school til the homework comes in. That's what makes you hate classes and hate school, makes you start ditching, and eventually drop out. I bet drop out rates would be less without all the dumb homework.
As others said I feel like trade school might be better than college. At least there they have hookups for getting you into an actual job force, and the trade schools are all fairly even in power. In college all the degrees are the same (and most useless IMO) and it seems like a contest for who spent the most money is who gets the job. That Mizzou graduate looks like shit next to someone from UCLA with the same degree, who looks like shit next to someone from Princeton.
I feel like college is like investing, where you already have to be wealthy to even get into it, and once you get out you can even further increase that wealth; but it's really not accessible for a lot of people.