![]() |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq. wrote:
Boater wrote: It's going to be a "fun fun fun" four to eight years, watching righties everywhere choking on their own bile. This does sum up your philosophy of life. Instead of enjoying watching your political party implement their agenda, that they believe will strengthening the economy, protecting Americans, while preserving the Constitution, reestablishing America as a world leader, that can build consensus to solve global problems etc., you are going to enjoy "watching righties everywhere chocking on their own bile". Have you been this way all of your life? First, Reggie, try to internalize the oft-stated fact that I don't give a schitt about what you think, feel, or do. Second, there is nothing inconsistent in believing President Obama with the help of stronger Democratic majorities in Congress will work assiduously to reverse the GOP horrors of the last eight years and improve the quality of life for most Americans and our position in the world *and* watching righties everywhere choke on their own bile. I'll be glad to see us moving away from "traditional Republican values," such as lynching blacks, beating up gays, and Latinos, and keeping the "little woman" barefoot, pregnant, and in servitude. |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
John wrote:
On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 09:01:06 -0500, "Reginald P. Smithers III, Esq." wrote: Boater wrote: It's going to be a "fun fun fun" four to eight years, watching righties everywhere choking on their own bile. This does sum up your philosophy of life. Instead of enjoying watching your political party implement their agenda, that they believe will strengthening the economy, protecting Americans, while preserving the Constitution, reestablishing America as a world leader, that can build consensus to solve global problems etc., you are going to enjoy "watching righties everywhere chocking on their own bile". Have you been this way all of your life? He is all yours. The temp is almost 40F, the winds are calm, the frost delay is almost over, and I'm going golfing! Yippee! Well, there's always hope you'll fall into a water trap... |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 09:20:34 -0500, BAR wrote: http://www.bls.gov/lpc/prodybar.htm What does "productivity in the manufacturing sector was 26% between 2000-2007" mean. Do you mean there was a 26% in crease in productivity in the manufacturing sector between 2000 and 2007? Yes. The individual worker cannot take credit for the robot's productivity. The individual worker needs to be measured individually to determine whether that individual worker has increased their productivity. Tell that to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Geez, you can go through all sorts of gymnastics to avoid the issue. Productivity has increased 20% in the non-farm business sector, 26% in the manufacturing sector, and wages have increased 1-3% depending on who you listen to. It's not a difficult concept, wages have not kept up with productivity. If the entire line is replaces all of the workers with robots is there a 100% productivity increase? In this day and age the productivity increases are due to improvements in process and technology. The rich get richer, the poor get poorer. You can't be classified as poor when you have a cellphone, cable TV and two cars in the driveway. Outstanding performers are taken care of, those who just show up and do enough to get a paycheck should work for someone else. Horse****! Why. If a guy comes to work on your house which one do you want doing the work? The outstanding performer or the guy who just kind of barely gets it done, if it needs five nails he may only put in four but thats ok it should hold just fine. |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
"John" wrote in message ... snip.. " If I have an assembly line with 10 workers, I replace five with a robot, and my output remains constant, does that mean the productivity of the five remaining workers has increased by 100%? Should I double the pay of the remaining five workers?" -- John You might have a point Johnny. Maybe the Army should have replaced half their officer corps with robots. You may have done better from the Viet Nam era forward. |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 10:20:05 -0500, BAR wrote:
If the entire line is replaces all of the workers with robots is there a 100% productivity increase? In this day and age the productivity increases are due to improvements in process and technology. That's only a part of it, and you know that. The rich get richer, the poor get poorer. You can't be classified as poor when you have a cellphone, cable TV and two cars in the driveway. Outstanding performers are taken care of, those who just show up and do enough to get a paycheck should work for someone else. Horse****! Why. If a guy comes to work on your house which one do you want doing the work? The outstanding performer or the guy who just kind of barely gets it done, if it needs five nails he may only put in four but thats ok it should hold just fine. You have an assembly line, all your workers are keeping up, how do you tell who is the "outstanding" worker? |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
Don White wrote:
"John" wrote in message ... snip.. " If I have an assembly line with 10 workers, I replace five with a robot, and my output remains constant, does that mean the productivity of the five remaining workers has increased by 100%? Should I double the pay of the remaining five workers?" -- John You might have a point Johnny. Maybe the Army should have replaced half their officer corps with robots. You may have done better from the Viet Nam era forward. They did; Herring was the prototype non-thinking robot. |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
|
Bridge loan to nowhere..
On Dec 14, 8:23*am, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Dec 2008 07:23:39 -0500, John wrote: http://www.americanprogress.org/issu...tribution.html Thunder, do you really believe the 'worker' has increased his output by 20%? Does that line make sense to you? The fact that you read it in an anti-Bush article doesn't make it true. As you are clearly too lazy to do your own search: http://www.bls.gov/lpc/prodybar.htm Let's see, 7 * 2.5 = 17.5 *You could then extrapolate, considering it is 2008. *So, yes, I do believe the 'worker' has increased his output by 20%, even though, I probably shouldn't believe anything that comes out of the Bush government. There is no way in the world the American worker of present day works harder than the guy in my dad's day. I have been victim to being told to slow down by a union. In all fairness (which we won't expect from the other side) I was also told to slow down while on piece work at Standadyne, a non union shop... |
Bridge loan to nowhere..
BAR wrote:
Outstanding performers are taken care of, those who just show up and do enough to get a paycheck should work for someone else. Conservaspeak. GOPers see the union movement as not only a natural constituency of the Dem Party, but also as one of the major—actually, the only large major organized relatively-progressive movement in the United States. And, they need to get rid of that if they are going to get power.* * Not my quote...found it on DailyKOS and it is completely true. ----------------- www.Newsgroup-Binaries.com - *Completion*Retention*Speed* Access your favorite newsgroups from home or on the road ----------------- |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:02 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com