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February 27, 2009 at 10:59 PM #357536February 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM #356962AnonymousGuest
Foolishness abounds.They should have asked the employees if they would rather have 15% lower wages for everyone or layoffs and they would have voted for the wage reductions. then they would have a full staff that could service their customers and be ready when things turn around. instead they will be slow and behind and when the economy turns, they will die on the vine as many will not work for them because of their earlier foolishness.
February 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM #357264AnonymousGuestFoolishness abounds.They should have asked the employees if they would rather have 15% lower wages for everyone or layoffs and they would have voted for the wage reductions. then they would have a full staff that could service their customers and be ready when things turn around. instead they will be slow and behind and when the economy turns, they will die on the vine as many will not work for them because of their earlier foolishness.
February 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM #357403AnonymousGuestFoolishness abounds.They should have asked the employees if they would rather have 15% lower wages for everyone or layoffs and they would have voted for the wage reductions. then they would have a full staff that could service their customers and be ready when things turn around. instead they will be slow and behind and when the economy turns, they will die on the vine as many will not work for them because of their earlier foolishness.
February 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM #357431AnonymousGuestFoolishness abounds.They should have asked the employees if they would rather have 15% lower wages for everyone or layoffs and they would have voted for the wage reductions. then they would have a full staff that could service their customers and be ready when things turn around. instead they will be slow and behind and when the economy turns, they will die on the vine as many will not work for them because of their earlier foolishness.
February 27, 2009 at 11:23 PM #357542AnonymousGuestFoolishness abounds.They should have asked the employees if they would rather have 15% lower wages for everyone or layoffs and they would have voted for the wage reductions. then they would have a full staff that could service their customers and be ready when things turn around. instead they will be slow and behind and when the economy turns, they will die on the vine as many will not work for them because of their earlier foolishness.
February 27, 2009 at 11:41 PM #356972temeculaguyParticipantWhat would we riot over? Those in power just got started and are the choice of the protest types anyway. I just don’t see the berkely types or minorities staging a protest to oust Obama, we kinda have a free pass right now. White middle aged republicans traditionally are not likely to fill the streets in protest, it’s unlikely the newly unemployed lawyers and bankers will start tipping over cars.
With regards to France, they have been having riots for a few years, this isn’t new. I used to read the papers when the economy was good and the police injuries and torched car daily totals were larger than those in Iraq. A hundred cars a night would burn. the rodney king riots have nothing on France’s troubles with it’s muslim youth.
Ireland? This is also not a new thing, maybe it was fairly peaceful for a few years but civil unrest there is practically a sport. Most of the less lethal weapons used by our police were invented because of the irish riots.
SDtransplant, I know you are far more wordly than I, this is not my arena, so I may be off base here, but isn’t this stuff always going on? If it’s not jobs, it’s religion, race or soccer. Maybe I’m just too simple, but if the governemnt tried to take away my cigars, wine, porn or espn, maybe then I’ll hit the streets, until then, it is what it is. It’s crappy economy and nobody wants it, not the corporations, not the government, not the institutions, nobody wants it. Yelling or rioting won’t change anything, the power brokers aren’t going to decide “you know, they seemed pissed, let’s push the good economy button before someone gets hurt.” It’s one thing to protest a decision that can be changed, but all the kings horses and all the kings men already tried, usually they make it worse, it would be better if the people didn’t pressure them into hasty decisions because even the well thought decisions aren’t that good, I’d hate to see them get worse.
February 27, 2009 at 11:41 PM #357274temeculaguyParticipantWhat would we riot over? Those in power just got started and are the choice of the protest types anyway. I just don’t see the berkely types or minorities staging a protest to oust Obama, we kinda have a free pass right now. White middle aged republicans traditionally are not likely to fill the streets in protest, it’s unlikely the newly unemployed lawyers and bankers will start tipping over cars.
With regards to France, they have been having riots for a few years, this isn’t new. I used to read the papers when the economy was good and the police injuries and torched car daily totals were larger than those in Iraq. A hundred cars a night would burn. the rodney king riots have nothing on France’s troubles with it’s muslim youth.
Ireland? This is also not a new thing, maybe it was fairly peaceful for a few years but civil unrest there is practically a sport. Most of the less lethal weapons used by our police were invented because of the irish riots.
SDtransplant, I know you are far more wordly than I, this is not my arena, so I may be off base here, but isn’t this stuff always going on? If it’s not jobs, it’s religion, race or soccer. Maybe I’m just too simple, but if the governemnt tried to take away my cigars, wine, porn or espn, maybe then I’ll hit the streets, until then, it is what it is. It’s crappy economy and nobody wants it, not the corporations, not the government, not the institutions, nobody wants it. Yelling or rioting won’t change anything, the power brokers aren’t going to decide “you know, they seemed pissed, let’s push the good economy button before someone gets hurt.” It’s one thing to protest a decision that can be changed, but all the kings horses and all the kings men already tried, usually they make it worse, it would be better if the people didn’t pressure them into hasty decisions because even the well thought decisions aren’t that good, I’d hate to see them get worse.
February 27, 2009 at 11:41 PM #357413temeculaguyParticipantWhat would we riot over? Those in power just got started and are the choice of the protest types anyway. I just don’t see the berkely types or minorities staging a protest to oust Obama, we kinda have a free pass right now. White middle aged republicans traditionally are not likely to fill the streets in protest, it’s unlikely the newly unemployed lawyers and bankers will start tipping over cars.
With regards to France, they have been having riots for a few years, this isn’t new. I used to read the papers when the economy was good and the police injuries and torched car daily totals were larger than those in Iraq. A hundred cars a night would burn. the rodney king riots have nothing on France’s troubles with it’s muslim youth.
Ireland? This is also not a new thing, maybe it was fairly peaceful for a few years but civil unrest there is practically a sport. Most of the less lethal weapons used by our police were invented because of the irish riots.
SDtransplant, I know you are far more wordly than I, this is not my arena, so I may be off base here, but isn’t this stuff always going on? If it’s not jobs, it’s religion, race or soccer. Maybe I’m just too simple, but if the governemnt tried to take away my cigars, wine, porn or espn, maybe then I’ll hit the streets, until then, it is what it is. It’s crappy economy and nobody wants it, not the corporations, not the government, not the institutions, nobody wants it. Yelling or rioting won’t change anything, the power brokers aren’t going to decide “you know, they seemed pissed, let’s push the good economy button before someone gets hurt.” It’s one thing to protest a decision that can be changed, but all the kings horses and all the kings men already tried, usually they make it worse, it would be better if the people didn’t pressure them into hasty decisions because even the well thought decisions aren’t that good, I’d hate to see them get worse.
February 27, 2009 at 11:41 PM #357441temeculaguyParticipantWhat would we riot over? Those in power just got started and are the choice of the protest types anyway. I just don’t see the berkely types or minorities staging a protest to oust Obama, we kinda have a free pass right now. White middle aged republicans traditionally are not likely to fill the streets in protest, it’s unlikely the newly unemployed lawyers and bankers will start tipping over cars.
With regards to France, they have been having riots for a few years, this isn’t new. I used to read the papers when the economy was good and the police injuries and torched car daily totals were larger than those in Iraq. A hundred cars a night would burn. the rodney king riots have nothing on France’s troubles with it’s muslim youth.
Ireland? This is also not a new thing, maybe it was fairly peaceful for a few years but civil unrest there is practically a sport. Most of the less lethal weapons used by our police were invented because of the irish riots.
SDtransplant, I know you are far more wordly than I, this is not my arena, so I may be off base here, but isn’t this stuff always going on? If it’s not jobs, it’s religion, race or soccer. Maybe I’m just too simple, but if the governemnt tried to take away my cigars, wine, porn or espn, maybe then I’ll hit the streets, until then, it is what it is. It’s crappy economy and nobody wants it, not the corporations, not the government, not the institutions, nobody wants it. Yelling or rioting won’t change anything, the power brokers aren’t going to decide “you know, they seemed pissed, let’s push the good economy button before someone gets hurt.” It’s one thing to protest a decision that can be changed, but all the kings horses and all the kings men already tried, usually they make it worse, it would be better if the people didn’t pressure them into hasty decisions because even the well thought decisions aren’t that good, I’d hate to see them get worse.
February 27, 2009 at 11:41 PM #357551temeculaguyParticipantWhat would we riot over? Those in power just got started and are the choice of the protest types anyway. I just don’t see the berkely types or minorities staging a protest to oust Obama, we kinda have a free pass right now. White middle aged republicans traditionally are not likely to fill the streets in protest, it’s unlikely the newly unemployed lawyers and bankers will start tipping over cars.
With regards to France, they have been having riots for a few years, this isn’t new. I used to read the papers when the economy was good and the police injuries and torched car daily totals were larger than those in Iraq. A hundred cars a night would burn. the rodney king riots have nothing on France’s troubles with it’s muslim youth.
Ireland? This is also not a new thing, maybe it was fairly peaceful for a few years but civil unrest there is practically a sport. Most of the less lethal weapons used by our police were invented because of the irish riots.
SDtransplant, I know you are far more wordly than I, this is not my arena, so I may be off base here, but isn’t this stuff always going on? If it’s not jobs, it’s religion, race or soccer. Maybe I’m just too simple, but if the governemnt tried to take away my cigars, wine, porn or espn, maybe then I’ll hit the streets, until then, it is what it is. It’s crappy economy and nobody wants it, not the corporations, not the government, not the institutions, nobody wants it. Yelling or rioting won’t change anything, the power brokers aren’t going to decide “you know, they seemed pissed, let’s push the good economy button before someone gets hurt.” It’s one thing to protest a decision that can be changed, but all the kings horses and all the kings men already tried, usually they make it worse, it would be better if the people didn’t pressure them into hasty decisions because even the well thought decisions aren’t that good, I’d hate to see them get worse.
February 28, 2009 at 12:36 AM #356997AKParticipantSpeaking of Berkeley types … I lived in Berkeley during the Loma Prieta quake in ’89. On the evening of the I walked past the offices of the local commie groups (it was on the way to a fine brewing establishment) and spied a group of aging Che Guevara wannabes crowded around a little B/W TV set.
“How’s the revolution going?” I asked.
They looked up from the images of death and devastation, smiling to the point of gloating. “We’re just waiting for the oppressed masses to rise up and riot,” they replied, earnestly.
February 28, 2009 at 12:36 AM #357299AKParticipantSpeaking of Berkeley types … I lived in Berkeley during the Loma Prieta quake in ’89. On the evening of the I walked past the offices of the local commie groups (it was on the way to a fine brewing establishment) and spied a group of aging Che Guevara wannabes crowded around a little B/W TV set.
“How’s the revolution going?” I asked.
They looked up from the images of death and devastation, smiling to the point of gloating. “We’re just waiting for the oppressed masses to rise up and riot,” they replied, earnestly.
February 28, 2009 at 12:36 AM #357438AKParticipantSpeaking of Berkeley types … I lived in Berkeley during the Loma Prieta quake in ’89. On the evening of the I walked past the offices of the local commie groups (it was on the way to a fine brewing establishment) and spied a group of aging Che Guevara wannabes crowded around a little B/W TV set.
“How’s the revolution going?” I asked.
They looked up from the images of death and devastation, smiling to the point of gloating. “We’re just waiting for the oppressed masses to rise up and riot,” they replied, earnestly.
February 28, 2009 at 12:36 AM #357466AKParticipantSpeaking of Berkeley types … I lived in Berkeley during the Loma Prieta quake in ’89. On the evening of the I walked past the offices of the local commie groups (it was on the way to a fine brewing establishment) and spied a group of aging Che Guevara wannabes crowded around a little B/W TV set.
“How’s the revolution going?” I asked.
They looked up from the images of death and devastation, smiling to the point of gloating. “We’re just waiting for the oppressed masses to rise up and riot,” they replied, earnestly.
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