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#1
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posted to rec.boats
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I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I
have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. One can have parts made in India and then contract to have them assembled somehwere else. No reason to have any US employees at all. All I need to do is collect royalties and cash checks now. This is the economy of the Obama years. No worries about health plans, no worries about workers comp, pensions, etc, I am free to use my mind to invent instead of doing govt paperwork. Thank You Mr Obama. Jobs? What about Jobs? Those are your problem since you voted for him. I am going sailing, thanks ofr setting me free. See, I used to think that those of us who could produce jobs were morally obligated to do so but now I have seen the light. Creating jobs has nothing to do with me and I can sleep well knowing that I am not helping any Americans find employment. Jobs are for the govt to create, not me. Time to go sailing again. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On 4/4/10 9:05 PM, Frogwatch wrote:
I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. You've eliminated employees because you don't have any work for them to do. Period. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "hk" wrote in message m... On 4/4/10 9:05 PM, Frogwatch wrote: I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. You've eliminated employees because you don't have any work for them to do. Period. It's not 100 percent Obama. His policies are simply starting to dot the "i"s and cross the "t"s in a change that has been taking place and accelerating for the past 15-20 years. Small business used to find anything for employees to do during slow periods in order to avoid layoffs. I can remember painting walls, washing trucks, etc. and did the same when I operated a company on my own. Large businesses typically had layoffs, not the small ones. Eisboch |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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"Eisboch" wrote in message
... "hk" wrote in message m... On 4/4/10 9:05 PM, Frogwatch wrote: I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. You've eliminated employees because you don't have any work for them to do. Period. It's not 100 percent Obama. His policies are simply starting to dot the "i"s and cross the "t"s in a change that has been taking place and accelerating for the past 15-20 years. Small business used to find anything for employees to do during slow periods in order to avoid layoffs. I can remember painting walls, washing trucks, etc. and did the same when I operated a company on my own. Large businesses typically had layoffs, not the small ones. Eisboch Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. -- Nom=de=Plume |
#5
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posted to rec.boats
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On Sun, 4 Apr 2010 21:14:26 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. So tell us Ms. D'Plume, exactly how many companies you have started and managed that actually had employees on a payroll other than yourself? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I suspect zero is the right number. Richard and David on the other hand have actually been there and done that. I'd listen a litttle more closely if I were you before dismissing them with some sort of knee jerk ideological reaction. |
#6
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posted to rec.boats
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On 4/5/10 12:57 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Sun, 4 Apr 2010 21:14:26 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. So tell us Ms. D'Plume, exactly how many companies you have started and managed that actually had employees on a payroll other than yourself? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I suspect zero is the right number. Richard and David on the other hand have actually been there and done that. I'd listen a litttle more closely if I were you before dismissing them with some sort of knee jerk ideological reaction. David? You mean Froggy? Froggy is nuts. He is about as disconnected from reality as, say, those who believe Sarah Palin was a good mother. Sheesh. And Richard's experience about running a business with many employees is out of date. The trend is positive, and that is going to hurt your party. After all, if it is good for America, it is bad for Republicans, eh? -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
#7
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posted to rec.boats
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"Wayne.B" wrote in message
... On Sun, 4 Apr 2010 21:14:26 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. So tell us Ms. D'Plume, exactly how many companies you have started and managed that actually had employees on a payroll other than yourself? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I suspect zero is the right number. Richard and David on the other hand have actually been there and done that. I'd listen a litttle more closely if I were you before dismissing them with some sort of knee jerk ideological reaction. Yes, you'd be wrong. I currently have employees. They get health ins. also. Bummer... sorry to disappoint. -- Nom=de=Plume |
#8
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posted to rec.boats
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On 04/04/2010 10:14 PM, nom=de=plume wrote:
wrote in message ... wrote in message m... On 4/4/10 9:05 PM, Frogwatch wrote: I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. You've eliminated employees because you don't have any work for them to do. Period. It's not 100 percent Obama. His policies are simply starting to dot the "i"s and cross the "t"s in a change that has been taking place and accelerating for the past 15-20 years. Small business used to find anything for employees to do during slow periods in order to avoid layoffs. I can remember painting walls, washing trucks, etc. and did the same when I operated a company on my own. Large businesses typically had layoffs, not the small ones. Eisboch Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. While I agree it is typical for employment to lag a GDP based recovery, it never has had this long and the spread. Certainly not in 1982 it didn't. Much of it is inflation. Just hasn't fully hit retail yet. And without the jobs, and I mean real jobs not just minimum wage part time stuff, the recovery will stall and inflation will take like the 70's all over again. I see the USD dropped again today. -- Liberal-statism is an addiction to other peoples money. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats
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"Canuck57" wrote in message
... On 04/04/2010 10:14 PM, nom=de=plume wrote: wrote in message ... wrote in message m... On 4/4/10 9:05 PM, Frogwatch wrote: I have done just what this administration has encouraged me to do, I have eliminated employees. It simply is no longer worth having them when the amount of paperwork and worry over all the govt forms is so great so you just outsource everything. You've eliminated employees because you don't have any work for them to do. Period. It's not 100 percent Obama. His policies are simply starting to dot the "i"s and cross the "t"s in a change that has been taking place and accelerating for the past 15-20 years. Small business used to find anything for employees to do during slow periods in order to avoid layoffs. I can remember painting walls, washing trucks, etc. and did the same when I operated a company on my own. Large businesses typically had layoffs, not the small ones. Eisboch Just 98.7 percent? Come on. This trend as you said has been going on a long time. It's nothing new. Times are tough. The recession is over, but job growth lags. That's typical of all recessions. But, the trend is positive, and most economists are now not predicting a double dip recession. While I agree it is typical for employment to lag a GDP based recovery, it never has had this long and the spread. Certainly not in 1982 it didn't. Thanks GWB! Rock on. Much of it is inflation. Just hasn't fully hit retail yet. And without the jobs, and I mean real jobs not just minimum wage part time stuff, the recovery will stall and inflation will take like the 70's all over again. There's very little inflation. That's just your ignorant rant. The Fed's primary job (has been for a long time) is to keep that under control. -- Nom=de=Plume |
#10
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posted to rec.boats
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On Mon, 05 Apr 2010 11:51:32 -0600, Canuck57
wrote: While I agree it is typical for employment to lag a GDP based recovery, it never has had this long and the spread. Certainly not in 1982 it didn't. really? got proof? and this bush-caused depression is much deeper than others Much of it is inflation. Just hasn't fully hit retail yet. And without the jobs, and I mean real jobs not just minimum wage part time stuff, the recovery will stall and inflation will take like the 70's all over again. really? inflation was 2% last year I see the USD dropped again today. it's called 'fluctuation' |
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