... with a degree in Economics and Business and a Masters in Education
Its humorous that you named the company Poorboys !
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... with a degree in Economics and Business and a Masters in Education
heres what a new minimum wage will buy you:![]()
Youd think & youd also think they could also hired responsible ppl too. Where I work at now its geared as a revolving door at the bottom. Its tuff to get rid of slackers w/ all the different laws now vs yrs ago.
I may concede that unions may have helped. But they have long outlived their usefulness except in things like police and fire service.
Now they are only there to up membership and get the organizers bigger $$$$$.
As far as the Walmart analogy, well what are the employees gonna do when they are replaced with machine. Wonder how many others would be employed if they didnt have self check out ?? Or the restaurants that now are using tablets...........
Its humorous that you named the company Poorboys !
As a side note I was talking to our Denmark distributor about their high taxes 60% and higher .. and he explained briefly that they pay high taxes and get free education through college , are trained for high technology jobs, have great free / or low cost medical, and have a very high pay scale due to their ability to take high end jobs. The people working the service industry are usually foreigners ... yes they are a small country, but it is something to think about ????
College as a right might be a high end dream, but not all are cut out for higher education, or cut out for white collar jobs. To quote a line from caddy Shack, "The world needs ditch diggers too".
No Im not being crass with that comment. Its a fact. People talk about how bad out infrastructure is, well............ Then it sounds like free college group believes that jobs like road pavers etc. are beneath them. Now I understand why liberals are in favor of illegal immigration. Americans are too good to do menial jobs......... Im sure we all know someone who went to school, and "cant find work" but refuses to go to McDonalds and work till they find something better. So they live in their parents basement........... They start blaming their lot in life as problems outside of their control instead of taking control of their own destiny.
So you think it is better for a fulltime Walmart worker to receive government assistance because they cant raise their family on $280 a week
So you think it is better for a fulltime Walmart worker to receive government assistance because they cant raise their family on $280 a week when Walmart makes billions in profit. So in essence, Walmart is sucking at the government tit more than that hypothetical lazy person you all seem to have some personal anecdote about. And you all seem perfectly fine that. And youre the one paying for that assistance
Unions built the middle class in America. No society had a big middle class until the formations of unions in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
College as a right might be a high end dream, but not all are cut out for higher education, or cut out for white collar jobs. To quote a line from caddy Shack, "The world needs ditch diggers too".
No Im not being crass with that comment. Its a fact. People talk about how bad out infrastructure is, well............ Then it sounds like free college group believes that jobs like road pavers etc. are beneath them. Now I understand why liberals are in favor of illegal immigration. Americans are too good to do menial jobs......... Im sure we all know someone who went to school, and "cant find work" but refuses to go to McDonalds and work till they find something better. So they live in their parents basement........... They start blaming their lot in life as problems outside of their control instead of taking control of their own destiny.
I have done my share of the ditch digging. Back in my construction days when electrical conduits had to be run under ground the ditch digging was/is part of the job. Even today I do some things that I think tedious and a trained monkey could do it. I still do those as it is still part of the job. I did not go to college as I learned a trade and either paid for the education or learned on my own or watching people that had the experience. That idiology seems to have died over the years and I see young people all the time that do not put any effort into their job. My personal belief is the world will be a much worse place when the people that have the knowledge, experience and effort retire or die.
Dave
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Your Masters in Education, gives me mixed emotions as I generally feel that those with similar credentials are driving our Education System into the Ditch.
..There are very good teachers still out there but unfortunately, I personally have seen many of them in really great schools in the Pacific Northwest for example, that come to class wearing sweatpants and sweatshirts...This is so wrong.
When I went to school back in Texas, all the teachers wore nice clothes like you would wear to Church, every day...
The women wore nice dresses or skirts with an appropriate top; the men wore slacks and a white short sleeved shirt and tie..
You looked at them and knew...
Yeah, the appearance matters. Teachers are not their students peers. A classroom isnt the Mall or a Park, let alone a beach. I still remember which teachers dressed casually when I was a kid- permanent negative impression. And "casual" back then meant a short-sleeved shirt when it was hot or a sweater in the winter.
Back when my wife and I were teaching (at a State C&T College), I was a considered unusual in that I *always* wore a suit when I lectured and I kept my (very conservative) tie snugged up and my sleeves rolled down in the Computer Lab, where other faculty dressed *very* casually. Even when the A/C broke. Winter? I wore a topcoat, not a parka. No other male on the faculty dressed like that and some of them smirked about my looking "corporate". But...
Word quickly got around that the students were *really* impressed and there was *zero* question that it made a difference to many of them. Heh heh, the comments from the female students were especially gratifying (my wife still chuckles about some of the things they said), they even noticed that I never wore a pair of rubber-soled shoes when on-campus. The professional appearance (and my generally formal demeanor) effectively conveyed that I respected both the job and the students and that I was a serious guy doing a serious job, giving them their (or at least their parents) moneys worth.
"Look sharp, be sharp" as the saying goes.