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Brewing economic scandal
On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 07:22:46 -0400, "Eisboch" wrote:
"F.O.A.D." wrote in message om... On 3/18/13 3:20 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Urin Asshole" wrote in message ... On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 00:53:16 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 23:19:08 -0400, Wayne B wrote: Or work your way up the organization from an entry level job, i.e., the old fashioned way. The demand for certain technical skills is so high that any experience at all can get your foot in the door. Once hired, job performance counts a lot more than education. I've encountered a surprising number of well educated individuals who just could not apply their knowledge effectively in a work environment. Being able to apply what you know, recognizing opportunities and acting on them in a timely manner is what gets people ahead. There are also a lot of opportunities in some of the difficult, dirty, blue collar areas like refrigeration, air conditioning, plumbing, diesel mechanics, commercial electricians, etc. Those jobs are physically demanding and require a fair amount of skill but they pay very well and can lead to having your own business. I have heard the gloom and doom for anyone who didn't go to college and every year brings new opportunities for people who do not really need a degree. Now that we have US companies adopting the German model of training workers for their particular field, that may be another path for kids who don't want to start their career with a huge debt. Bull****. Just about every study available shows that a college edu makes a huge salary difference. Maybe you were able to do fine without one, but that's not the norm any more. You think factory workers are the future? Jesus H. Christ that's a narrow view. ------------------------------------------------------- Degrees and graduate degrees are fine and wonderful but if there are no jobs to be had (or just a few in very limited fields), not only is the degree non-productive there is also an almost lifetime level of debt for many. I have been shocked to learn of how many recent college grads are unemployed because they cannot find a job and of the number of older people with degrees and years of experience who are collecting extended unemployment checks. An economic recovery, if it ever really happens, isn't going to bring those jobs back. Check out these statistics: http://www.forbes.com/sites/moneybuilder/2013/02/01/alarming-number-of-student-loans-are-delinquent/ Things have changed and Wayne is correct, IMO. There isn't going to be a real economic recovery until there is a restructuring of our society. Too much of our nation's wealth is in the hands of the super rich, and the trend in that direction continues. More then they have since the 19th Century here, workers have become a disposable commodity, with more of them working without even basic protections, with a diminishing number of employers providing health care, with few employers providing defined pensions, et cetera. It's becoming much more difficult to put away a few dollars when one is facing a lifetime of really insecure employment, family medical bills, et cetera. As a society, we're on the downhill part of a roller coaster ride that sadly leads only to the bottom. -------------------------------------------------- Why is that so? I don't agree with your "disposable commodity" mentality, but I do agree that there is a shrinking middle class due to a corresponding shrinking job market. Even Al Gore warned of this way back when. So did Ross Perot. There has always been "super rich". Why is the "super rich" suddenly and primarily responsible for the job losses and resultant middle class unemployment? The primary reason is global competition for traditional manufacturing jobs in industry. As Wayne pointed out, there will always be jobs that can't be outsourced, but everyone can't be a plumber, electrician or HVAC technician. For a while, everyone and his brother was becoming an "IT" serviceperson or was setting up website creation and maintenance services. But with canned software, anyone with half a brain can create and maintain their own website. Go to an ER or hospital lately? A good number of the doctors are transplants from other countries. Cars run for 100,000 miles or more with only cursory maintenance. Used to require a tune-up every 20,000 miles. Electronic devices like computers and TV's have become disposable and cheap. No need to repair them and when they can be repaired, you can usually do it yourself. Magazines and newspapers are on the decline. Everything worth reading can be found on the Internet. No need for mechanics maintaining printing presses or truck drivers delivering bales of newspapers anymore. If you stop to think about all the technological advances made in the past 15 years or so and also consider the global competition for the manufacturing jobs, I think it becomes clear what has happened to middle class jobs. Therefore, **** college education, right? What bull****. |
Brewing economic scandal
On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 10:51:22 -0400, Meyer wrote:
On 3/18/2013 6:41 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 3/18/13 3:20 AM, Eisboch wrote: "Urin Asshole" wrote in message ... On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 00:53:16 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 23:19:08 -0400, Wayne B wrote: Or work your way up the organization from an entry level job, i.e., the old fashioned way. The demand for certain technical skills is so high that any experience at all can get your foot in the door. Once hired, job performance counts a lot more than education. I've encountered a surprising number of well educated individuals who just could not apply their knowledge effectively in a work environment. Being able to apply what you know, recognizing opportunities and acting on them in a timely manner is what gets people ahead. There are also a lot of opportunities in some of the difficult, dirty, blue collar areas like refrigeration, air conditioning, plumbing, diesel mechanics, commercial electricians, etc. Those jobs are physically demanding and require a fair amount of skill but they pay very well and can lead to having your own business. I have heard the gloom and doom for anyone who didn't go to college and every year brings new opportunities for people who do not really need a degree. Now that we have US companies adopting the German model of training workers for their particular field, that may be another path for kids who don't want to start their career with a huge debt. Bull****. Just about every study available shows that a college edu makes a huge salary difference. Maybe you were able to do fine without one, but that's not the norm any more. You think factory workers are the future? Jesus H. Christ that's a narrow view. ------------------------------------------------------- Degrees and graduate degrees are fine and wonderful but if there are no jobs to be had (or just a few in very limited fields), not only is the degree non-productive there is also an almost lifetime level of debt for many. I have been shocked to learn of how many recent college grads are unemployed because they cannot find a job and of the number of older people with degrees and years of experience who are collecting extended unemployment checks. An economic recovery, if it ever really happens, isn't going to bring those jobs back. Check out these statistics: http://www.forbes.com/sites/moneybuilder/2013/02/01/alarming-number-of-student-loans-are-delinquent/ Things have changed and Wayne is correct, IMO. There isn't going to be a real economic recovery until there is a restructuring of our society. Too much of our nation's wealth is in the hands of the super rich, and the trend in that direction continues. More then they have since the 19th Century here, workers have become a disposable commodity, with more of them working without even basic protections, with a diminishing number of employers providing health care, with few employers providing defined pensions, et cetera. It's becoming much more difficult to put away a few dollars when one is facing a lifetime of really insecure employment, family medical bills, et cetera. As a society, we're on the downhill part of a roller coaster ride that sadly leads only to the bottom. Thank god we have our great protector in the White House, eh? Thank god you're such an obvious moronic racist. |
Brewing economic scandal
On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 07:46:49 -0400, BAR wrote:
In article , says... "Urin Asshole" wrote in message ... On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 00:53:16 -0400, wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2013 23:19:08 -0400, Wayne B wrote: Or work your way up the organization from an entry level job, i.e., the old fashioned way. The demand for certain technical skills is so high that any experience at all can get your foot in the door. Once hired, job performance counts a lot more than education. I've encountered a surprising number of well educated individuals who just could not apply their knowledge effectively in a work environment. Being able to apply what you know, recognizing opportunities and acting on them in a timely manner is what gets people ahead. There are also a lot of opportunities in some of the difficult, dirty, blue collar areas like refrigeration, air conditioning, plumbing, diesel mechanics, commercial electricians, etc. Those jobs are physically demanding and require a fair amount of skill but they pay very well and can lead to having your own business. I have heard the gloom and doom for anyone who didn't go to college and every year brings new opportunities for people who do not really need a degree. Now that we have US companies adopting the German model of training workers for their particular field, that may be another path for kids who don't want to start their career with a huge debt. Bull****. Just about every study available shows that a college edu makes a huge salary difference. Maybe you were able to do fine without one, but that's not the norm any more. You think factory workers are the future? Jesus H. Christ that's a narrow view. ------------------------------------------------------- Degrees and graduate degrees are fine and wonderful but if there are no jobs to be had (or just a few in very limited fields), not only is the degree non-productive there is also an almost lifetime level of debt for many. I have been shocked to learn of how many recent college grads are unemployed because they cannot find a job and of the number of older people with degrees and years of experience who are collecting extended unemployment checks. An economic recovery, if it ever really happens, isn't going to bring those jobs back. Check out these statistics: http://www.forbes.com/sites/moneybuilder/2013/02/01/alarming-number-of-student-loans-are-delinquent/ Things have changed and Wayne is correct, IMO. My wife is an out of work Analytical Chemist with two BS degrees in the sciences and 25 years in analytical chemistry. She has been looking for a job going on 10 months now. She is competing against people with PhD's and MS's and other BS's. Some sites tell you how many people have applied for the job you just applied to and often times it lists anywhere from 150 to 300 people applying for that one position. Having a college degree is no help when they jobs are not available. You'd rather have her stupid than educated? Maybe she should flip burgers for a while. |
Brewing economic scandal
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Brewing economic scandal
Yeah, it's all about the money, then when a new techology comes around, you can kiss that job goodbye. === This is not a new thing. Talk to the buggy whip manufacturers, wagon wheel makers, blacksmiths, vacuum tube makers, Kodak film developers, etc. The time are always a-changein. |
Brewing economic scandal
On Mon, 18 Mar 2013 01:56:54 -0400, wrote:
Anyone who can fix engines in boats will always have work. ====== Yes, and at $85+/hour. |
Brewing economic scandal
Sure. Everyone should do it. Except everyone can't. Moronic point dip****. ==== There once were a lot of opportunities for people who could hunt sabre tooth tigers with a spear. Should they have been guaranteed a job for life, retrained as basket weavers or just given welfare checks? When the going gets tough, the tough get going. |
Brewing economic scandal
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Brewing economic scandal
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