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CubeParticipant
Software Engineer, ~1.5% raise, but 401K match was chopped in half, employee health plan contribution up, benefits down (higher copays, higher deductibles), some perks chopped as well.
Net, about a 7% pay cut. Good to have a job though, I suppose.
CubeParticipantI agree with XBoxBoy in part, but I’m not sure about the stove. My mom had something similar when I was growing up. She most often used it to dry shoes in the clothes dryer. It would attached to the stationary wall of the dryer and allow whatever was placed on it to sit still and not tumble. Also used for delicates and sweaters and maybe even a home dry-cleaning kit from time to time.
CubeParticipantI agree with XBoxBoy in part, but I’m not sure about the stove. My mom had something similar when I was growing up. She most often used it to dry shoes in the clothes dryer. It would attached to the stationary wall of the dryer and allow whatever was placed on it to sit still and not tumble. Also used for delicates and sweaters and maybe even a home dry-cleaning kit from time to time.
CubeParticipantI agree with XBoxBoy in part, but I’m not sure about the stove. My mom had something similar when I was growing up. She most often used it to dry shoes in the clothes dryer. It would attached to the stationary wall of the dryer and allow whatever was placed on it to sit still and not tumble. Also used for delicates and sweaters and maybe even a home dry-cleaning kit from time to time.
CubeParticipantI agree with XBoxBoy in part, but I’m not sure about the stove. My mom had something similar when I was growing up. She most often used it to dry shoes in the clothes dryer. It would attached to the stationary wall of the dryer and allow whatever was placed on it to sit still and not tumble. Also used for delicates and sweaters and maybe even a home dry-cleaning kit from time to time.
CubeParticipantI agree with XBoxBoy in part, but I’m not sure about the stove. My mom had something similar when I was growing up. She most often used it to dry shoes in the clothes dryer. It would attached to the stationary wall of the dryer and allow whatever was placed on it to sit still and not tumble. Also used for delicates and sweaters and maybe even a home dry-cleaning kit from time to time.
CubeParticipantNow wait a minute, when they’re bandying about the cost of health care as a percentage of GDP, are they using the sticker price for healthcare or the actual price paid?
I always assumed the latter, but my inner cynic suddenly saw that the former is a great way to twist the numbers to make them look much worse than they are. I hope that’s just my inner cynic and not reality.
CubeParticipantNow wait a minute, when they’re bandying about the cost of health care as a percentage of GDP, are they using the sticker price for healthcare or the actual price paid?
I always assumed the latter, but my inner cynic suddenly saw that the former is a great way to twist the numbers to make them look much worse than they are. I hope that’s just my inner cynic and not reality.
CubeParticipantNow wait a minute, when they’re bandying about the cost of health care as a percentage of GDP, are they using the sticker price for healthcare or the actual price paid?
I always assumed the latter, but my inner cynic suddenly saw that the former is a great way to twist the numbers to make them look much worse than they are. I hope that’s just my inner cynic and not reality.
CubeParticipantNow wait a minute, when they’re bandying about the cost of health care as a percentage of GDP, are they using the sticker price for healthcare or the actual price paid?
I always assumed the latter, but my inner cynic suddenly saw that the former is a great way to twist the numbers to make them look much worse than they are. I hope that’s just my inner cynic and not reality.
CubeParticipantNow wait a minute, when they’re bandying about the cost of health care as a percentage of GDP, are they using the sticker price for healthcare or the actual price paid?
I always assumed the latter, but my inner cynic suddenly saw that the former is a great way to twist the numbers to make them look much worse than they are. I hope that’s just my inner cynic and not reality.
CubeParticipantLet me amend that. It looks like 1709 was vetoed.
But AB 811 passed and signed:
CubeParticipantLet me amend that. It looks like 1709 was vetoed.
But AB 811 passed and signed:
CubeParticipantLet me amend that. It looks like 1709 was vetoed.
But AB 811 passed and signed:
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