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Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/


My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.


Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.


Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody did...
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Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.


Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



You're not responding to me, **** for brains.
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Posts: 351
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.


Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.



--
Don't forget to leave a bit of beef for rec.boat's right-wing
conservatrashers and ID spoofers to feed upon. The more they feed, the
quicker rec.boats will fall into the black hole of cyberspace and disappear.
  #4   Report Post  
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Posts: 6,596
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On 14/08/2011 1:49 PM, X ~ Man wrote:
On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/




My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable
lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Just more harryk bull****. Never met a person who has developed self
worth so early that was a fleabagger. Fact is you probably wet the
bottoms of your mothers skirt hems.


--
Flea party (left) fear, begets fleaparty smear.
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Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 14:26:29 -0600, Canuck57
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 1:49 PM, X ~ Man wrote:
On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM, wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/




My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable
lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?

Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Just more harryk bull****. Never met a person who has developed self
worth so early that was a fleabagger. Fact is you probably wet the
bottoms of your mothers skirt hems.


Unlike us, I'm sure you have plenty of experience ****ing on people in
public.


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Posts: 5,868
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

In article ,
says...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Why did you wait until you were 14? I was working at 11.


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Posts: 351
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

On 8/15/11 7:41 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?

Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Why did you wait until you were 14? I was working at 11.



Oh, I worked at my father's store sometimes when I was younger, washing
and waxing the boats in the showroom. In Connecticut back then, you had
to be at least 14 to legally work a "real payroll job," and there were
serious restrictions on what you were allowed to do and the hours you
were allowed to work.



--
Don't forget to leave a bit of beef for rec.boat's right-wing
conservatrashers and ID spoofers to feed upon. The more they feed, the
quicker rec.boats will fall into the black hole of cyberspace and disappear.
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2011
Posts: 153
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

In article ,
says...

On 8/15/11 7:41 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,

says...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?

Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...


I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Why did you wait until you were 14? I was working at 11.



Oh, I worked at my father's store sometimes when I was younger, washing
and waxing the boats in the showroom. In Connecticut back then, you had
to be at least 14 to legally work a "real payroll job," and there were
serious restrictions on what you were allowed to do and the hours you
were allowed to work.


Whew, good thing you got to put that addendum on your original lies!

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Posts: 5,868
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

In article ,
says...

On Mon, 15 Aug 2011 07:41:04 -0400, BAR wrote:

In article ,

says...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?

Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...


I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Why did you wait until you were 14? I was working at 11.


So, who was willing to violate the child labor laws to accommodate
you?


Krispy Kreme and The Washington Star.

I worked in my extended family's businesses as soon as I could read a
ruler and count change, which was certainly before 11.


You could call the newspaper business the family business. Two of my
sisters and I had paper routes.

Outside of agriculture and family business, a legally employed person
had to have a worker's permit, if under a certain age (16). That
person also had to have a social security card or the employer was no
better than the assholes hiring illegals, today. Were you an illegal?


I didn't need a work permit to deliver newspapers, however, I did need
to have a bond due to the large amounts of cash I was dealing with.

I obtained a social security card when I was about 1 year old. I needed
it when a family friend gave me a bunch of stock.

I wasn't an illegal. I was born on a military base just like my
sibilings. All of the bases were in CONUS.
  #10   Report Post  
posted to rec.boats
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Aug 2011
Posts: 153
Default Rick Perry...and it gets a lot worse than this...

In article ,
says...

On 8/14/11 2:27 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
On 8/14/2011 1:51 PM,
wrote:
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011 10:21:44 -0600,
wrote:

On 14/08/2011 7:31 AM, BAR wrote:
In ,
says...

On Sat, 13 Aug 2011 19:17:40 -0400, X ~
wrote:

Under Governor Perry, Texas ranks:

while it ranks 1st in number of jobs created, it also ranks 1st in
percentage of minimum wage jobs

http://thinkprogress.org/economy/201...mum-wage-jobs/



My kid would like to get a minimum wage job. The problem is that there
aren't any available in our area.

Bull****. There wasn't many in my area as a kid and I made my own at
11. After that I rarely worked part time for a wage. Mom with 4 kids
and delinquent dad, we needed to innovate or do without. On the way to
school (no bus) I even delivered morning papers.

I sent out fliers of my own making for snow removal, lawn cutting, and
once of legal age even baby sitting. In the summer I would routinely
clock out $50/week, circa late 60's and early-mid 70's that was big
bucks for a kid. Paid for the lawn mower and gas too.

That taught me how to manage money well from 11-16 an was better than
many 40 year olds today.

Fact is people today are soft and lazy.

Mind you, some liberal looser ass hole would call that invaluable lesson
child exploitation today. Rather see the kids hang out at the mall
looking for people dropping money.

Wow! A self made man at 11 years old. Did you own a zimmermanlike
lobster boat, too?


Lot's of us started helping the family finances before we got out of
school Harry. Just because you sat on your ass playing footsie while
your pood daddy worked his ass off in the yard doesn't mean everybody
did...



I think I'll respond, even though your response was mistakenly directed
at me.

I got working papers at 14 and had an after school job at a pharmacy on
Legion Avenue in New Haven, a very tough neighborhood at that time. In
fact, the area was so bad most of it was later demolished for
redevelopment. A little **** like you would have been stabbed to death.
My job ostensibly was to work the soda fountain, but, in reality, I sold
liquor to whomever wanted it, typically half-pint and pint bottles,
mostly bloody awful wines. I also delivered prescriptions -on foot- and
sometimes bottles of booze. Selling booze, of course, was illegal, as
was my delivering it.

I worked full time there in the summers until I was 16, then I got
another after school job that was a little closer to home.

I kept a small amount of what I earned, and put the rest in a savings
account for college. Yes, even at 14, I knew that I'd want to help pay
for my college education.

What after school jobs does your motorbiking daughter have?

I also worked for my father on weekends during the spring, fall and
winter, especially the winter, when his seasonal employees weren't there.

I had grown man's industrial jobs in the summers while I was about to or
was going to college - at Detroit Steel, Shick Razor, Hull's Brewery.
The Detroit Steel job sucked, and I quit it halfway through summer for
another job at Bigelow Boiler, where I was taught how to solder and weld
and clean out boilers trucked or railed in for refurbishing. The summer
after my junior year I was hired as a reporter by the Kansas City Star,
and I kept that job while completing my senior year of college.

I probably worked more jobs in those years than you have ever held in
your life.


Okay, straw poll, who believes Harry's ****, and who doesn't.

1. I don't.


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