- This topic has 16 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 7 years ago by FlyerInHi.
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November 3, 2017 at 11:45 AM #22446November 4, 2017 at 6:19 PM #808396FlyerInHiGuest
why lol? You don’t think it’s will happen?
November 5, 2017 at 1:37 PM #808402gzzParticipantSeems like the plan is to move the HQ of the combined co to the USA, unclear if SD or Irvine. If here it would mean we would get the HQ of a 200 billion corporation. Does the qcom campus have room to grow or excess space already?
Perhaps we might get a non-stop to singapore as a result. The 777 can go that far. The LAX to BKK route failed after a few years, similar distance.
November 5, 2017 at 10:16 PM #808405exsdgalParticipant[quote=gzz]
Perhaps we might get a non-stop to singapore as a result. The 777 can go that far. The LAX to BKK route failed after a few years, similar distance.[/quote]United started a nonstop LAX-SIN route this week, and I believe Singapore airlines has plans to add another in 2018. 18 hour flight… that may need some getting used to.
November 6, 2017 at 3:14 AM #808406CoronitaParticipantI see a very long proxy fight and poison pill adoption to prevent a hostile takeover. Let’s not even talk about the anti-trust issues.
Also, of lesser concern probably to the new Qualcomm management….This sort of deal with screw just about every regular employee at Qualcomm.
Avago has a reputation of buying companies and chopping it up into pieces to boost shareholder value and than move on to another company, like a locust. The did just that to old Broadcom.
Great for shareholders. Great for old timers ready for retirement, they’ll see their stock/stock option go through the roof. Terrible for younger employees that don’t have a nice pile of stock/stock options. The net effect would be a net job loss for San Diego I think.
See the pattern here of the late? Everything is stacked against the newer/younger worker. Higher tax rate, less tax breaks, a lot of corporate deal making that will enrich shareholders and older “rest and vest” type employees which are just holding out for retirement anyway. The younger workers that didn’t get that many RSU’s/stock grants, and/or haven’t fully vested, and haven’t bought a house, haven’t built up their retirement, haven’t started a family, who were already having a difficult time saving/investing/affording a home…get the shaft.
Almost like a lot of Europe…like Spain!
November 6, 2017 at 8:06 AM #808408FlyerInHiGuest[quote=flu]
Almost like a lot of Europe…like Spain![/quote]Except Americans don’t have paid maternity, vacation, health care….
We will see many more toothless, opoid addicted, obese Americans, I’m aftraidNovember 6, 2017 at 8:29 AM #808409spdrunParticipantMaybe that will be the nudge needed to get Americans to support a bigger safety net and throw out the bootstrap fairy tale.
November 6, 2017 at 9:28 AM #808410CoronitaParticipant[quote=FlyerInHi][quote=flu]
Almost like a lot of Europe…like Spain![/quote]Except Americans don’t have paid maternity, vacation, health care….
We will see many more toothless, opoid addicted, obese Americans, I’m aftraid[/quote]Lol.
All the well educated people from Spain hate the nanny system there because despite them being well educated, the can’t get ahead with all the taxes. That’s why they are working here in the US. To translate what they said
….socialism sucks.November 6, 2017 at 9:39 AM #808411kev374ParticipantIrvine has a way better shot than SD, more tech talent and better cost to value given it’s proximity to the 2nd largest metro in the US. SD is way too expensive for what it is.
November 6, 2017 at 10:05 AM #808412spdrunParticipantYou have a biased sample — those that hate the Spanish social welfare system are more likely to come to the US vs working in Spain or elsewhere in Europe.
November 6, 2017 at 10:31 AM #808413FlyerInHiGuest[quote=flu][quote=FlyerInHi][quote=flu]
Almost like a lot of Europe…like Spain![/quote]Except Americans don’t have paid maternity, vacation, health care….
We will see many more toothless, opoid addicted, obese Americans, I’m aftraid[/quote]Lol.
All the well educated people from Spain hate the nanny system there because despite them being well educated, the can’t get ahead with all the taxes. That’s why they are working here in the US. To translate what they said
….socialism sucks.[/quote]Flu… you were talking about a pattern in the US where benefits accrue to global corporations. Low to average education Americans will be screwed because we lack a social safety net. Not so in Europe or Canada.
In the future, high education Americans can become world citizens and seek opportunities whereever, just like your Spanish colleagues. Plenty of Brits work in Dubai of Indians work in USA.
I don’t have any sympathies for deplorables because they are getting what they voted for.
November 6, 2017 at 12:31 PM #808415CoronitaParticipant[quote=spdrun]You have a biased sample — those that hate the Spanish social welfare system are more likely to come to the US vs working in Spain or elsewhere in Europe.[/quote]
Yes because the folks I work with are motivated and don’t want to sit on their ass all day, and want to keep more of they earn…i dont blame them. Not that all socialism is bad….to a point….
I mean we have a more of it going on here…a lot of you folks, once you lose the state tax deduction, and capped on mortgage interest deduction, will end up paying higher taxes…..to subsidize all those Trump voters in red states with limited education, limited skills, who probably don’t like anyone who isn’t white, don’t like regulation, don’t value education ( because that’s a liberal thing), just so they can continue to live their lives they way they want with very little effort….to make things more “equal”…
November 6, 2017 at 12:40 PM #808416spdrunParticipantDo you really think those Trump voters will be subsidized, or is this just a con job to help people at the top of connected defense contractors in red states?
Also, define motivation … not everyone is motivated to kill themselves for 60-70 hours a week at the expense of family and social life. The US (and some Asian countries) has managed to turn this into a virtue.
Basically, I have no motivation beyond enough money to maintain a home, take my family on a trip a month a year, own a used car, eat, and buy health insurance. Any additional income gains will hopefully be realized in more free time. Time is the real currency.
November 6, 2017 at 12:43 PM #808418CoronitaParticipant[quote=spdrun]Do you really think those Trump voters will be subsidized, or is this just a con job to help people at the top of connected defense contractors in red states?
Also, define motivation … not everyone is motivated to kill themselves for 60-70 hours a week at the expense of family and social life. The US (and some Asian countries) has managed to turn this into a virtue.
Basically, I have no motivation beyond enough money to maintain a home, take my family on a trip a month a year, own a used car, eat, and buy health insurance. Any additional income gains will hopefully be realized in more free time. Time is the real currency.[/quote]
And how many green jobs were created?
Time is currency. Plenty of people manage very time well and still do very well on the money side. I don’t understand why you think the two are mutually exclusive. The only thing that I find sometimes when I have too much time, is I get lazy and waste time. Usually when I start posting here again. Lol.
November 6, 2017 at 12:50 PM #808419spdrunParticipantBecause people in tech are expected to work 70-80 hours a week with a weeks vacay per year and like it.
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