We're in the Far Side comic, with the lab full of mutated scientists swarming around, offering the only normal guy a hit from the flask they all drank from.
Misery loves company!
We know what we do is important to society, but we feel misunderstood and undervalued. We feel that promoting the profession to others as a job option will make us somehow more important to society at large- when in fact, the exact opposite is probably true.
To some degree, the profession and engineering academia also buy the same non-sequitur that governments buy- that since engineers are important to the economy, more engineers will make the economy better. In reality, we train too many engineers and many end up working outside the profession not by choice but by default. That makes engineering an increasingly commodified pseudo-profession, and an engineering education is reduced from training for a true profession to "the new liberal arts education". Sad, really.
For the top 10%, this is still a great profession offering plenty of opportunity, decent compensation etc. My advice to anyone entering engineering is to figure out if they have the interest and aptitude to be in the top 10% early, and if not, consider bailing to something which offers a better reward to risk ratio. Apparently this is what 2/3 of Canadians with engineering educations do. Forewarned is forearmed.