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burghMan.
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September 26, 2010 at 3:48 AM #17995September 26, 2010 at 7:25 AM #609385
urbanrealtor
ParticipantI have a first job such as a Realtor.
Though last night as I was typing a contract (10pm on a saturday) I was kind of wishing I had a job that involved slacking and reading the paper.September 26, 2010 at 7:25 AM #609472urbanrealtor
ParticipantI have a first job such as a Realtor.
Though last night as I was typing a contract (10pm on a saturday) I was kind of wishing I had a job that involved slacking and reading the paper.September 26, 2010 at 7:25 AM #610450urbanrealtor
ParticipantI have a first job such as a Realtor.
Though last night as I was typing a contract (10pm on a saturday) I was kind of wishing I had a job that involved slacking and reading the paper.September 26, 2010 at 7:25 AM #610138urbanrealtor
ParticipantI have a first job such as a Realtor.
Though last night as I was typing a contract (10pm on a saturday) I was kind of wishing I had a job that involved slacking and reading the paper.September 26, 2010 at 7:25 AM #610028urbanrealtor
ParticipantI have a first job such as a Realtor.
Though last night as I was typing a contract (10pm on a saturday) I was kind of wishing I had a job that involved slacking and reading the paper.September 26, 2010 at 8:21 AM #610032jpinpb
ParticipantI know a realtor who quit his job and is trying to be a cop. But I do know a retired cop who was dabbling as a realtor, though even during the peak, was not successful. I imagine if there were any government employees who were playing realtors during the bubble, that they have given that up by now. During the bubble we heard about all the increasing number of people becoming realtors and now we are seeing the reverse.
I know a few government employees and they don’t have second jobs. Their first job keeps them plenty busy and they barely have a life as it is.
September 26, 2010 at 8:21 AM #610455jpinpb
ParticipantI know a realtor who quit his job and is trying to be a cop. But I do know a retired cop who was dabbling as a realtor, though even during the peak, was not successful. I imagine if there were any government employees who were playing realtors during the bubble, that they have given that up by now. During the bubble we heard about all the increasing number of people becoming realtors and now we are seeing the reverse.
I know a few government employees and they don’t have second jobs. Their first job keeps them plenty busy and they barely have a life as it is.
September 26, 2010 at 8:21 AM #610143jpinpb
ParticipantI know a realtor who quit his job and is trying to be a cop. But I do know a retired cop who was dabbling as a realtor, though even during the peak, was not successful. I imagine if there were any government employees who were playing realtors during the bubble, that they have given that up by now. During the bubble we heard about all the increasing number of people becoming realtors and now we are seeing the reverse.
I know a few government employees and they don’t have second jobs. Their first job keeps them plenty busy and they barely have a life as it is.
September 26, 2010 at 8:21 AM #609477jpinpb
ParticipantI know a realtor who quit his job and is trying to be a cop. But I do know a retired cop who was dabbling as a realtor, though even during the peak, was not successful. I imagine if there were any government employees who were playing realtors during the bubble, that they have given that up by now. During the bubble we heard about all the increasing number of people becoming realtors and now we are seeing the reverse.
I know a few government employees and they don’t have second jobs. Their first job keeps them plenty busy and they barely have a life as it is.
September 26, 2010 at 8:21 AM #609391jpinpb
ParticipantI know a realtor who quit his job and is trying to be a cop. But I do know a retired cop who was dabbling as a realtor, though even during the peak, was not successful. I imagine if there were any government employees who were playing realtors during the bubble, that they have given that up by now. During the bubble we heard about all the increasing number of people becoming realtors and now we are seeing the reverse.
I know a few government employees and they don’t have second jobs. Their first job keeps them plenty busy and they barely have a life as it is.
September 27, 2010 at 11:28 AM #609826UCGal
ParticipantI’m not a government employee. But my mom worked for the county for 25 years. My dad, outside of his time in the service during the Korean war, worked in the civilian sector… but he worked for a Defense contractor… So I guess I raised on government money.
Both of my parents worked long hours. My dad *did* take the newspaper to work – to read at lunch. My mom worked through lunch most days.
I have friends who work for the federal government. My observation is that they work long hours – have to do a lot of travel, etc. A neighbor works for the FBI – his hours appear to be quite long based on when I see him leave/return.
Are you equating civilian workers who work for private defense companies (working on DoD projects) with government employees?
Are you lumping all government employees together – federal workers, teachers, county workers, TSA inspectors at airports, FDA researchers… as the same?
There are so many broad generalizations in your statements… but you seem to claim first hand expertise on all government workers. How did you come by this experience… and shouldn’t you get back to work?
September 27, 2010 at 11:28 AM #609738UCGal
ParticipantI’m not a government employee. But my mom worked for the county for 25 years. My dad, outside of his time in the service during the Korean war, worked in the civilian sector… but he worked for a Defense contractor… So I guess I raised on government money.
Both of my parents worked long hours. My dad *did* take the newspaper to work – to read at lunch. My mom worked through lunch most days.
I have friends who work for the federal government. My observation is that they work long hours – have to do a lot of travel, etc. A neighbor works for the FBI – his hours appear to be quite long based on when I see him leave/return.
Are you equating civilian workers who work for private defense companies (working on DoD projects) with government employees?
Are you lumping all government employees together – federal workers, teachers, county workers, TSA inspectors at airports, FDA researchers… as the same?
There are so many broad generalizations in your statements… but you seem to claim first hand expertise on all government workers. How did you come by this experience… and shouldn’t you get back to work?
September 27, 2010 at 11:28 AM #610374UCGal
ParticipantI’m not a government employee. But my mom worked for the county for 25 years. My dad, outside of his time in the service during the Korean war, worked in the civilian sector… but he worked for a Defense contractor… So I guess I raised on government money.
Both of my parents worked long hours. My dad *did* take the newspaper to work – to read at lunch. My mom worked through lunch most days.
I have friends who work for the federal government. My observation is that they work long hours – have to do a lot of travel, etc. A neighbor works for the FBI – his hours appear to be quite long based on when I see him leave/return.
Are you equating civilian workers who work for private defense companies (working on DoD projects) with government employees?
Are you lumping all government employees together – federal workers, teachers, county workers, TSA inspectors at airports, FDA researchers… as the same?
There are so many broad generalizations in your statements… but you seem to claim first hand expertise on all government workers. How did you come by this experience… and shouldn’t you get back to work?
September 27, 2010 at 11:28 AM #610486UCGal
ParticipantI’m not a government employee. But my mom worked for the county for 25 years. My dad, outside of his time in the service during the Korean war, worked in the civilian sector… but he worked for a Defense contractor… So I guess I raised on government money.
Both of my parents worked long hours. My dad *did* take the newspaper to work – to read at lunch. My mom worked through lunch most days.
I have friends who work for the federal government. My observation is that they work long hours – have to do a lot of travel, etc. A neighbor works for the FBI – his hours appear to be quite long based on when I see him leave/return.
Are you equating civilian workers who work for private defense companies (working on DoD projects) with government employees?
Are you lumping all government employees together – federal workers, teachers, county workers, TSA inspectors at airports, FDA researchers… as the same?
There are so many broad generalizations in your statements… but you seem to claim first hand expertise on all government workers. How did you come by this experience… and shouldn’t you get back to work?
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